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The rise of informal news networks
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Dec. 3, 2009, 6 p.m.

Links on Twitter: Trouble in the White House press pool, Dallas Morning News blurs edit and sales, YouTube slims down

Indy Star sold 1,157 four-day Thanksgiving subscriptions. Converted more than 200 customers to longer plan. http://tr.im/Gybu »

Church, meet state. Dallas Morning News sports and entertainment editors reporting to business-minded GMs. http://tr.im/Gx9O »

NY Times reporter finds TPM and Huffington Post in the White House press pool “troubling”http://tr.im/GwPk »

YouTube’s “Feather” feature strips down the site’s interface, and tosses out tools, to speed up playback. http://tr.im/GvPi »

Comcast gets 350 million views per month through video on demand. That’s TV. Not web. http://tr.im/GvIs »

POSTED     Dec. 3, 2009, 6 p.m.
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The rise of informal news networks
“Once the goal is no longer to recreate news organizations as they existed in the past, but rather to ensure that reliable news and information flows — that there is a place in people’s lives for deliberation and debate — then possibility blossoms.”
The media industry adopts an insurgent strategy
“Insurgents succeed because they know exactly what they are fighting against.”
New dimensions for news storytelling
“The bold headline grabs your attention, and then becomes a gateway to deeper exploration and understanding.”