Washington Post joined the 450 other daily U.S. newspapers with pay walls this week and also now offers “Sponsored Views” below its editorials. We’ll talk to Forbes media columnist Jeff Bercovici about the advantages and disadvantages of pay walls at the Post and beyond. We’ll also talk to CNET’s Declan McCullagh on new developments in the ongoing controversy surrounding NSA collection of private data from Internet companies. Finally, the digital music industry is changing as Apple hopes its new iTunes Radio will compete with Pandora, which also hopes its new terrestrial radio station will help lower royalty rates. MediaShift’s Mark Glaser will host, along with regular Andrew Lih of USC Annenberg and American University.
You can watch or listen to the podcast here:
Subscribe to the MediaShift YouTube Channel here.
Subscribe to the audio podcast here.
Listen to the Mediatwits and follow us on SoundCloud! Thanks to SoundCloud for providing audio support.
Subscribe to the Mediatwits audio version via iTunes.
Follow @TheMediatwits on Twitter.
Mediatwits Bios
Ana Marie Cox is a senior political columnist for The Guardian. She is the founding editor of the Wonkette blog and has covered politics and the culture of Washington, D.C. for outlets including the Washington Post, Playboy, GQ, Mother Jones and Elle. She is the author of the novel “Dog Days” and lives in St. Paul, Minn. Follow her on Twitter @anamariecox.
Mark Glaser is executive editor of MediaShift and Idea Lab. He is a longtime freelance writer and editor, who has contributed to magazines such as Entertainment Weekly, Wired and Conde Nast Traveler, and websites such as CNET and the Yale Global Forum. He lives in San Francisco with his wife Renee and son Julian. You can follow him on Twitter @mediatwit.
Mónica Guzmán is a columnist for the Seattle Times and Northwest tech news site GeekWire and a community strategist for startups and media. She emcees Ignite Seattle, a grab-bag community-fueled speaker series. Mónica was a reporter at the Seattle Post-Intelligencer and seattlepi.com, its online-only successor, where she ran the experimental and award-winning Big Blog and drew a community of readers with online conversation and weekly meetups. Follow her on Twitter @moniguzman.
Andrew Lih is a new media journalist, and associate professor at the University of Southern California’s Annenberg School of Communication and Journalism where he directs the new media program. He is the author of “The Wikipedia Revolution” (Hyperion 2009, Aurum UK 2009) and is a noted expert on online collaboration and journalism. He is a veteran of AT&T Bell Laboratories and in 1994 created the first online city guide for New York City (www.ny.com). Follow him on Twitter @fuzheado and buy his book here.
Special Guests
Jeff Bercovici is staff writer for Forbes, where he covers media, technology and the intersection of the two. He has covered media and entertainment over the past decade for a variety of publications, most recently AOL Daily Finance. Before that, he wrote the Mixed Media blog for Portfolio.com, the website of Condé Nast’s Portfolio magazine. Earlier, he was a reporter for Radar, where he also wrote about pop culture and politics, and Women’s Wear Daily, where he co-edited the daily “Memo Pad” column. He has written for publications including GQ, Details, Playboy, Glamour, The New York Times and the New York Observer. You can follow him on Twitter @jeffbercovici.
Declan McCullagh is the chief political correspondent for CNET, part of CBS Corporation. Previously he was a senior correspondent for CBS News’ website, and was for four years the Wired bureau chief in Washington, D.C., where he spent over a decade before moving to the San Francisco Bay Area. An award-winning journalist, McCullagh writes and speaks frequently about technology, law, and politics. Follow him on Twitter @declanm.
Podcast topics
1. Washington Post pay wall coming; “sponsored views” paid op-eds (Special guest: Jeff Bercovici from Forbes)
The Washington Post’s paywall launched June 12. Twenty articles are free to non-subscribers. But plenty will remain free. Viewers won’t be charged for looking at the homepage or section pages, at video content or at classified advertising. Plus, links from search or social media won’t count toward non-subscribers’ 20-article limit. Print subscriptions come bundled with unlimited digital access, and the most expensive unlimited digital access package is $15 a month. In addition, The Post will also begin to sell advertising space in the comments sections below articles of advertisers’ choosing. But those sponsored views may not be welcomed by readers, who show a disdain for advertising disguised as content.
Will The Post’s new plan make money? Should it be changed, or how? Will it change reading habits?
Guest: Jeff Bercovici from Forbes
2. Snowden exposes himself in shocker; tech companies want to reveal cooperation on PRISM (Special guest: Declan McCullagh of CNET)
Edward Snowden, a Booz Allen Hamilton contractor for the CIA, revealed himself as the source of leaks to The Guardian and The Washington Post of NSA’s classified PRISM program, which collects American citizens’ private records from major Internet companies. Snowden used encrypted software to speak with reporters and leak evidence of the program. A petition to the White House to pardon Snowden has accrued almost 70,000 signatures as of June 13. The high school and college dropout gave up his cushy contracting job in Hawaii and has fled to Hong Kong. Google has asked for more transparency on PRISM in hopes of disproving claims that the NSA had “unfettered access” to their servers. Facebook has made the same request.
Was Snowden right to release the information? How does this realization, as well as new questions about the extent of the access, change the discussion of NSA surveillance?
3. Apple iOS7 and launch of iTunes Radio (plus Pandora buys radio station)
Apple hopes to reestablish itself as the leader in the digital music market with the introduction of iTunes Radio. In direct competition with Pandora (who, in related news, recently bought a terrestrial radio station in order to get cheaper royalties), iTunes Radio will host curated radio stations as well as the option to find more songs by a particular artist. iTunes held about 63 percent of the digital music market in April, but Pandora’s Genome Project, Spotify’s free on-demand service and Rdio’s impeccable user interface give iTunes a run for its money. Apple stands to do well if enough people, especially those already using iCloud music storage service iTunes Match, join.
Can Apple take on Pandora, Rdio, Spotify with huge installed base, or will it face an uphill struggle against free, streamed music?
Other stories:
Media General merges with New Young (Reuters)
Gannett to buy Belo TV stations in $2.2 billion deal (USA Today)
Poll
Don’t forget to vote in our weekly MediaShift poll:
Zach C. Cohen is an editorial and podcasting intern for PBS MediaShift. He is also the editor-in-chief of The Eagle, American University‘s student newspaper, and a reporter for Latin Pulse, a weekly radio program on Latin American foreign affairs based at AU’s School of Communication. Get regular updates from @Zachary_Cohen on Twitter or on his blog.