- Will Netflix offer a “streaming only” subscription?
Sounds like it’s coming. Netflix now has 16.9 million subscribers according to the company’s earnings report out today. - Are readers capable of being civil in the online comment sections of media sites?
Apparently not. The Portland (Maine) Press Herald (which we talked about a couple of weeks ago in relation to its end-of-Ramadan story that ran on 9/11) has shut down its comments section because of “vile, crude, insensitive, and vicious postings.”Update: Comments are now back with moderation, according to Romenesko.
- Will anyone win in battle between Cablevision and News Corp.?
Certainly not sports fans. The battle over how much Cablevision will pay to retransmit the Fox Network’s on-air programming has kept Fox off the cable company that serves the New York area. (They’ve been playing a little baseball there this week….) Fans of the Phillies did have the rather unsatisfying if somewhat surreal option of following the Phillies/Giants game on the FCC’s Twitter account. Don’t think that was much comfort, however. - When will legacy media realize they can’t pretend the 21st century isn’t happening?
The Washington Post, my personal favorite newspaper, has now told its staffers not to engage with the public via Twitter to discuss controversial stories. Hello…. Is anyone there paying attention to the whole concept of social media? Oh, apparently not. Back in October of 2009, reporters were told:“Nothing we do must call into question the impartiality of our news judgment. We never abandon the guidelines that govern the separation of news from opinion, the importance of fact and objectivity, the appropriate use of language and tone, and other hallmarks of our brand of journalism.”
Former WP media reporter Howard Kurtz, who is now working for the website The Daily Beast, gave at the time his personal rules for Twittering that make a lot of sense:
a) Don’t say something that makes you look like a blithering idiot.
b) Don’t appear to be in the pocket of Democrats or Republicans (or birthers or truthers).
c) Stick to subjects on which you actually have a clue.
d) Refrain from boring people with the minutiae of your daily life.
e) Don’t say anything you couldn’t defend as fair analysis in print or on the air.
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