August 8, 2008
Alex Koppelman, Salon, August 8, 2008

Julia Boorstin, CNBC, August 7, 2008
Phil Rosenthal, Chicago Tribune, August 8, 2008
Jon Friedman, MarketWatch, August 8, 2008
Nick Denton, Gawker, August 8, 2008
Joe Strupp, Editor & Publisher, August 7, 2008
Barry Jackson, Miami Herald, August 8, 2008
Jeff Winbush, The Root, August 7, 2008
Kieren McCarthy, Guardian, August 7, 2008
 

Today's Lead

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Amid Layoffs and Cutbacks, Communication Grads Find Jobs

A new University of Georgia survey of recent degree recipients finds that despite the growing economic ills of the media industry, the job market for 2007 graduates was basically unchanged from a year earlier. And sometimes, the absence of bad news can be good news.

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Which Scandals Make Big News?

Last week, the indictment of seven-term Alaska Senator Ted Stevens was a major story. But he’s not the only politician to have found himself in the headlines for the wrong reasons. Here’s a rundown of the most heavily covered scandals involving public officials in the past two years.

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The Changing Newsroom

Newspapers are suffering historic cuts in staffing and drops in revenue, while technological advances are creating new opportunities. What is disappearing from newspapers and what is being added? A new PEJ report:

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Extra! Extra! McCain Makes as Much News as Obama: July 28-August 3, 2008

After accusations of pro-Obama bias and a run of media soul searching, and helped by a heavy dose of controversial attack advertising from his campaign team, Republican nominee John McCain finally forced Barack Obama to share the headlines last week.

Also Worth Noting
PEJ's News Coverage Index captures and analyzes some four dozen news outlets in real time to determine what stories the national news media is covering. The 2007 raw data is now available online; it totals 70,737 stories, and is offered in SPSS through the use of zip files along with the coding scheme.
The fifth annual State of the News Media 2008 includes a Survey of Journalists, a Year in the News, a look at the Future of Advertising, an analysis of Citizen Media sites, and more. It also analyzes the major trends in the eight main sectors of media.
The latest edition of Elements is completely updated and includes a new 10th principle--the rights and responsibilities of citizens--flowing from new power conveyed by technology to citizens as consumers and editors of their own news and information.