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Chinese journalists strike for second day
Interview with
Jan 8, 2013
Chinese journalists protesting against government censorship hold a second day of strikes in the southern province of Guangdong.
What Al Jazeera needs to do to make it in the U.S.
Interview by
Jan 3, 2013
Al Jazeera buys Current TV but will American audiences tune in?
Out of bankruptcy, Tribune looks to sell off newspapers
Interview by
Dec 31, 2012
After four years the Tribune Company emerges from bankruptcy today. The media conglomerate includes the L.A. Times, the Chicago Tribune, a handful of TV stations and a big slice of the Food Network.
UK press may face tougher regulation after hacking scandal
by
Nov 29, 2012
UK officials are expected to recommend a new, tougher media regulatory body following a series of phone-hacking, bribery, and data theft abuses by the country's newspapers.
Left, right or center: Time for CNN to rethink its brand
Interview by
Nov 28, 2012
On the verge of hiring former NBC head honcho Jeff Zucker, cable news expert Gabriel Sherman thinks it's time for CNN to do a branding exercise.
Newsweek magazine calls it quits
Interview by
Oct 18, 2012
Digital media advocate Jeff Jarvis talks about the announcement that Newsweek will cancel its print issue and go digital-only.
Twitter CEO Dick Costolo on Jack Dorsey, ad revenue, going public
Interview by
Oct 13, 2012
Twitter CEO Dick Costolo discusses the role of the social media site in today's world, whether it will go public, and how it deals with privacy issues.
Village Voice to cut ties to sex ad business
by
Sep 24, 2012
The decision is a hit to revenue. But other alternative weeklies are surviving without adult classifieds.
Facing Isaac, Times-Picayune looks to digital to cover hurricanes
Interview by
Aug 29, 2012
How have the changes to New Orleans' newspaper affected its ability to cover Hurricane Isaac? NOLA.com's James O'Byrne discusses the Times-Picayune's digital strategy.
Scaled-back newspapers leave older readers behind
by
Aug 20, 2012
As more newspapers scale back production to just three or four days a week, what will come of subscribers who prefer paper to pixels?












