[Nieman Lab: The Daily Digest]
Monday, November 21, 2022 [Can Mastodon be a reasonable Twitter substitute for journalists?]( Adam Davidson: “I think we got lazy as a field, and we let Mark Zuckerberg, Jack Dorsey, and, god help us, Elon Musk and their staff decide all these major journalistic questions.” By Julia Angwin, The Markup.
What We’re Reading BuzzFeed News / Katie Notopoulos
[I joined Mastodon and all it took was my sanity and self-esteem →](
“Iâm not the first to notice that Mastodon is sort of a weird sad office birthday party with four people sitting around eating sheet cake with all the lights on compared to Twitter being like Studio 54. I dunno. I did it. I was influenced. Iâm tootinâ. Do I like it? No.” Semafor / Max Tani
[The New York Times loosened its rules around staffers gambling on sports →](
“It was a compromise that came as the Times attempted to rein in sports gambling by staff at the Athletic, which the paper acquired earlier this year, and which until recently allowed its writers to gamble on sports they write about.” Drezner's World / Daniel W. Drezner
[Why do people talk to Isaac Chotiner? →](
“So why do it?…superstars evolve to the point when they tune out editors, critics, and rivals as beneath them…Maybe the explanation is simpler: age and intellectual vanity lead many people to do and say dumb things. I wish I had a definitive answer but, in the end, itâs hard to have the confidence of a contrarian.” The New York Times / Yoel Roth
[I was the head of trust and safety at Twitter. This is what could become of it. →](
“In the longer term, the moderating influences of advertisers, regulators and, most critically of all, app stores may be welcome for those of us hoping to avoid an escalation in the volume of dangerous speech online. Twitter will have to balance its new ownerâs goals against the practical realities of life on Appleâs and Googleâs internet â no easy task for the employees who have chosen to remain.” The Washington Post / Ben Strauss
[Fox’s World Cup coverage of Qatar has a notable sponsor: Qatar →](
“Qatar Airways, the state-owned airline, will serve as a major sponsor of the networkâs coverage, which means Foxâs production in Qatar is essentially being underwritten by the Qatari government…[a barebones coverage] strategy only shifted after the deal with Qatar Airways was finalized; that agreement included comped flights to Qatar…” Press Gazette / Bron Maher
[How global are Semafor’s coverage and audience? →](
“In its first four weeks, Semafor’s Flagship newsletter covered 47 countries (including Hong Kong and Taiwan) at least once â just shy of a quarter of the world’s total. The U.S. came out as far and away the most-covered country, racking up 42 stories and accounting for approximately 21% of The World Today’s focus. Next was China, which got 27 stories.” The New York Times / Emily Steel
[Why an aging casino company embraced a “degenerate gambler” and Barstool Sports →](
“Years before he became a controversy-courting media icon, gambling promoter, liquor pitchman and pizza reviewer, David S. Portnoy was drowning in debts…In one year alone, he had lost $30,000 gambling, court documents show. In January 2004, the 26-year-old filed for bankruptcy protection.” Local Media Association
[For Native American Heritage Month, four publishers serving Indigenous communities →](
“Unfortunately, the media still speaks about Native Americans in the past tense. We are still here.” CJR / Gabby Miller
[What to know about Canada’s Online News Act hearings →](
“To ensure publisher equity, the coalition is asking for a universal funding formula thatâs applied consistently and publicly.” Semafor / Max Tani
[Haikus and Instagram comments: A new vision for Washington Post Opinion raises eyebrows →](
David “Shipley beat out columnist Ruth Marcus for the job after the longtime opinion editor, Fred Hiatt, died suddenly in 2021. His mandate, two employees told Semafor, is to blow the place up.” The Washington Post / Taylor Lorenz
[Online mobs are now coming for student journalists →](
âI have absolutely no respect for you. I think youâre a scumbag, and weâll see what happens next.â The New York Times / James B. Stewart
[Was AT&T + Time Warner the worst corporate merger ever? →](
“When everyone finished reading, Mr. Stankey asked if he had made himself clear. No one said anything. But afterward, there was a flurry of profanity-laced texts. Less than four years later, all three Warner executives had been replaced. And then Mr. Stankey bailed.” The Verge / James Vincent
[Elon Musk says he’s letting Donald Trump back on Twitter →](
“The people have spoken.” (If by “people” you mean “people who follow Elon Musk on Twitter.”) The New York Times / Robert D. McFadden
[R.I.P. George Lois, visionary Esquire art director →](
“Mr. Lois was also known for the Esquire covers he designed from 1962 to 1972, acid-rain critiques on society, race, politics and war, many of them wordless. One…placed four Vietnamese children with a gargoyle-grinning William L. Calley Jr., the Army lieutenant who ordered the 1968 My Lai massacre.” The New York Times / David McCabe and Karen Weise
[Can the tech giants get even bigger? Microsoft is trying to convince the world they should →](
“Whether Microsoft succeeds in gaining regulatory approval to buy Activision…will send a message about Big Techâs ability to expand in the face of mounting fears that industry giants wield too much power. If Microsoft, whose public affairs operation has spent the past decade building the companyâs nice-guy reputation, canât get a megadeal through, can anyone?” Deadline / Dominic Patten and Dade Hayes
[A shocker at Disney: Bob Iger is back as CEO, ousting Bob Chapek →](
“Having handed over the baton as CEO in February 2020 to Chapek…Iger will be CEO for a second time for the next two years, the company says. His mission will also include identifying a successor, something Iger had difficulty doing while commanding the troops the last time, postponing multiple plans to step down during his 15 years in the top job…” Reuters / Abigail Summerville
[The Simon & Schuster/Penguin Random House merger is dead →](
After S&S owner Paramount Global decided not to appeal a federal antitrust ruling, “opening the door for a new suitor to try to clinch a deal.” Variety / Todd Spangler
[CBS News suspended posting on Twitter “in light of the uncertainty” under Elon Musk →](
But the pause only [lasted about 40 hours](. Variety / Brian Steinberg
[Michael Bass, CNN’s longtime programming chief, is out →](
He “played a role in devising the networkâs more passionate demeanor during the Trump era…[and] has played a significant role in maintaining CNNâs news presence during times of momentous stress.” The Washington Post / Reis Thebault, Brianna Sacks, and Mark Berman
[In crises, officials tweet crucial info. What if Twitter dies? →](
“‘Iâve joked that my muscle memory is not going to be, “Drop, cover, hold on,”‘ Hutton said, referring to the earthquake readiness mantra ubiquitous on the West Coast. ‘Itâs going to be, “Grab phone, tweet.”‘” [Nieman Lab]( / [Fuego]( [Twitter]( / [Facebook]( [View email in browser]( [Unsubscribe]( You are receiving this daily newsletter because you signed up for for it at www.niemanlab.org. Nieman Journalism Lab Harvard University
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