Meet Michael Bolt. There will be red faces among Channel Ten’s website team this morning as their home page displayed a big plug to Ten’s Sunday morning rant The Bolt Report. The problem was that one link directed readers to information “About Michael Bolt” — who is clearly not the show’s presenter and namesake, Andrew Bolt. For the record, Michael Bolt was a fearsome premiership captain for NRL club the Illawarra Steelers.
Front page of the day. Apple’s headquarters are located in Cupertino, California, between San Jose and San Fransisco. The company provides countless jobs and revenue to the area. News of Apple CEO Steve Jobs stepping down has the San Francisco Chronicle asking: “What Now?” …
Nine sacks staff over chopper footage scandal
“Two journalists and a producer at Channel Nine Brisbane have been fired over the faking of news footage, while the station’s news director has quit over the scandal.” — Media Spy
Coulson’s legal fees reportedly being paid by News Int
“A leading lawmaker examining the country’s phone hacking scandal called Wednesday on Rupert Murdoch’s news empire to confirm whether it is paying the legal fees of the ex-editor of the News of The World.” — Huffington Post
NotW phone-hacking scandal: the comedy
“Drop The Dead Donkey writer Guy Jenkin is creating a TV comedy about newspaper phone hacking for Channel 4. The hour-long programme will take a ‘satirical swipe’ at the scandal when it is screened later this year.” — The Guardian
Slate lays off staff … does the model still make sense?
“Slate, one of the original internet-only magazines, has laid off four journalists, including someone whose words I often quote in this column, press critic Jack Shafer.” — Forbes
How Jobs has changed (but not saved) journalism
“Steve Jobs resigned Wednesday as CEO of Apple Inc., but his legacy will be felt in the news industry for years to come. In the past five years, Jobs’ Apple has simultaneously disrupted, transformed and aided the news industry.” — Poynter
Ads use facial recognition tools to tailor pitches
“Once the stuff of science fiction and high-tech crime fighting, facial recognition technology has become one of the newest tools in marketing, even though privacy concerns abound.” — Los Angeles Times
Amazon’s secret new tablet computer project: what to expect
“By all reports, Amazon is on the verge of releasing its first tablet. While there have been some wild theories like a hybrid eInk/color touchscreen display, we’re going to be a bit more realistic.” — Business Insider
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