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Where does local TV news fit in the digital age? Tegna, a year separated from Gannett, has some ideas
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Where does local TV news fit in the digital age? Tegna, a year separated from Gannett, has some ideas
“By following the lead of our employees to create content that is digital first, it frees them up from the sameness of format that is plaguing local television news.”
By Shan Wang
Report: The New York Times is expanding to Australia and Canada
Having faced some difficulties with an earlier era’s attempts in large non-English markets, the Times is turning its focus next to more familiar territory.
By Joseph Lichterman
Hot Pod: Can a political podcast avoid being overtaken by events?
Plus: Vox Media’s making moves in audio, more podcast/broadcast partnerships, and the importance of sound design.
By Nicholas Quah
Why this Mexican sports site is experimenting with as many new story formats as it can
From Facebook-only verticals to Telegram bots to an in-house Snapchat imitator, Juanfutbol is trying to thread the needle between social distribution and site loyalty.
By Joseph Lichterman
It’s time to apply for a Knight Visiting Nieman Fellowship
The Nieman Foundation for Journalism at Harvard wants to hear your idea for making journalism better. Come spend a few weeks working on it in Cambridge. Deadline: October 14.
By Ann Marie Lipinski
Fusion’s newsletter strategy trades automated feeds for human curation and reporters’ voices
“There’s a thematic through-line and a coherence that you get from reading the intro and the email all the way through. This is not something you’re going to create by just sending out a email RSS feed or using an algorithm.”
By Ricardo Bilton
What it takes to manage a daily popup Snapchat channel from the 2016 Olympic Games in Rio
A dozen producers from BuzzFeed are working around the clock to curate the channel, with access to NBC footage.
By Shan Wang
“It’s a little bit of a crazy concept”: Three women’s newsletters on the decline of the glossy magazine
How the perceived lack of authenticity in women’s magazines is leading readers (and writers) to personal newsletters.
By Taylyn Washington-Harmon
NPR is retiring the comments section on its story pages (because of disuse, not just garbage fires)
“Those who comment are not wholly representative of the overall NPR audience.”
By Shan Wang
Where does local TV news fit in the digital age? Tegna, a year separated from Gannett, has some ideas
“By following the lead of our employees to create content that is digital first, it frees them up from the sameness of format that is plaguing local television news.”
By Shan Wang
Report: The New York Times is expanding to Australia and Canada
Having faced some difficulties with an earlier era’s attempts in large non-English markets, the Times is turning its focus next to more familiar territory.
Hot Pod: Can a political podcast avoid being overtaken by events?
Plus: Vox Media’s making moves in audio, more podcast/broadcast partnerships, and the importance of sound design.
What We’re Reading
Vanity Fair / Emily Jane Fox
BuzzFeed is dividing its news and entertainment divisions in a company-wide reorganization
BuzzFeed Entertainment “will serve as an umbrella for all its entertainment content, including short- and long-form video, lists, quizzes, and micro-content.” BuzzFeed News “will expand under Ben Smith…bringing its health team, global news operation, and video news under his purview.”
CNN / Evan Perez and Simon Prokupecz
The FBI is investigating Russian hacks targeting New York Times reporters
“News organizations are considered top targets because they can yield valuable intelligence on reporter contacts in the government, as well as communications and unpublished works with sensitive information, US government officials believe.”
Mashable / Ariel Bogle
Facebook is testing autoplaying videos with sound
“It’s an intriguing trial run, given Facebook’s own research has found 80 percent of people react negatively when mobile video ads play loudly without warning.”
Medium
Necessity, invention and The Daily Tar Heel
Among many changes at the University of North Carolina’s independent student paper, detailed by new general manager Betsy O’Donovan: It’s eliminating Tuesday print edition, adding engagement, wedding, anniversary, and obituary sections, and piloting a creative services agency.
Search Engine Land / Barry Schwartz
Google warns it will crack down on “intrusive interstitials” in January
“Google will reinforce its emphasis on the mobile search experience with a new penalty affecting “intrusive interstitials” on mobile web pages.”
The Verge / Casey Newton
Pinterest acquires Instapaper
“The goal is “to accelerate discovering and saving articles on Pinterest,” the company said in a statement. It will continue to operate as a standalone app, and the Instapaper team will work on both that app and on Pinterest generally. Terms of the deal were not disclosed.”
The Ringer / Bryan Curtis
What happened to the St. Louis media when the Rams skipped town to L.A.?
“In between moments of genuine sadness, the St. Louis media has allowed itself to indulge in a little schadenfreude.”
Today
NBC’s Today now has a recipe bot for Facebook Messenger
“Thanks to the the mad geniuses from our innovation lab, we’ve launched the brand new Today Food Bot on Facebook Messenger to answer the very important question: what should I eat now?”
Medium / Jeff Jarvis
Is native advertising another false messiah?
“I have long wondered whether native advertising would do what advertising is supposed to do: drive sales. What is the efficacy of replacing five-word banners with 500-word stories? Perhaps we are beginning to find out.”
Digiday / Jessica Davies
How Trinity Mirror raised its programmatic ad yields by 40 percent
“To start it on the right track, it’s rejigged internally, creating a centralized programmatic team of 20 people. Each specializes in a specific area, like video-on-demand, data, ad tech, sales, all overseen by director of programmatic Amir Malik, a former Googler inherited from Trinity’s £220 million ($290 million) acquisition of regional publisher Local World last November. They’ll then feed into the rest of the commercial division.”
Nieman Lab is a project to try to help figure out where the news is headed in the Internet age. Sign up for The Digest, our daily email with all the freshest future-of-journalism news.