Deadline Hollywood editor Nikki Finke’s next big story may be her own exit

Nikki Finke has built a must-read website for the entertainment industry, but speculation is growing that she may be departing after clashes with her boss, Jay Penske.

From her perch as editor in chief of the popular website Deadline Hollywood, Nikki Finke lives to drop bombs on the entertainment industry’s movers and shakers.

    

via L.A. Times – Entertainment News http://www.latimes.com/entertainment/news/la-fi-ct-nikki-finke-20130604,0,6046609.story?track=rss&utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=Feed%3A+latimes%2Fentertainment+%28Entertainment+News%29

Huma Abedin expected to become a stronger presence on Weiner’s campaign trail

Huma Abedin is a “constant presence” on the campaign of her husband Anthony Weiner, sources tell Page Six. We’re told Hillary Clinton’s former…

via NY Post: Page Six http://www.nypost.com/p/pagesix/trailing_spouse_HzJZNzV50UUiZP7coGqKcN?utm_medium=rss&utm_content=Page%20Six

Sean Parker fined $2.5 million for environmental infractions at Big Sur wedding

Facebook co-founder Sean Parker shelled out $10 million for his fantasy weekend wedding in Big Sur — and now, he’s being slapped with $2.5…

via NY Post: Page Six http://www.nypost.com/p/pagesix/parker_lapped_after_nups_PBaZ4I0Zd61A3WmjQ8JqhJ?utm_medium=rss&utm_content=Page%20Six

The Devil Gets Awkward

The most cringe-worthy moments from Lauren Weisberger’s sequel, ‘Revenge Wears Prada.’ By Abby Haglage.

    

via The Daily Beast – Latest Articles http://www.thedailybeast.com/articles/2013/06/04/revenge-wears-prada-the-11-most-cringe-worthy-moments.html?utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=Feed%3A+thedailybeast%2Farticles+%28The+Daily+Beast+-+Latest+Articles%29

‘Shocker’ story blows lid off Penske-Finke row

This could be the hottest Hollywood story of the summer.
A firestorm erupted between two Tinseltown tattlers when The Wrap reported that Nikki Finke, the star blogger for Deadline Hollywood, its arch-rival, had been fired.
The “shocker,” written by The Wrap’s Sharon Waxman, said Finke’s firing followed a…

via NY Post: Business http://www.nypost.com/p/news/business/hollywood_hate_B6GX2VLqW0dQHpGdf6viHJ?utm_medium=rss&utm_content=Business

Detroit Fire Sale?

The city’s bean counters have their eyes on the masterpieces at the Detroit Institute of Arts.

via WSJ.com: Arts & Entertainment http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424127887324412604578515610762790192.html?mod=rss_Arts_and_Entertainment

The Insane Growth Of China And India’s Megacities Mapped Through Satellite Imagery

These charts–made with the information from weather satellites scanning the ground–show how wide and how tall cities around the world have grown. What’s happening to the size of cities in Asia will blow your mind.

Faced with the incomprehensible scale of worldwide mega-urbanization, observers have alternately fallen back on sheer numbers or city comparisons to drive home the speed at which cities in the developing world are growing. For example, New York University’s Shlomo “Solly” Angel projects the world’s urban population will double in 40 years, while urban land cover — including everything from skyscrapers to slums — will triple in size during that span. Grasping to put such numbers into context, the McKinsey Global Institute estimates China will build the equivalent of New York every other year for 20 years, while India needs to add the equivalent of a Chicago to its building stock annually.

The mind reels, but such comparisons tell us little about the truth on the ground — is the urban future of India more likely to look like Chicago or Dharavi (Mumbai’s famous slum) or something else completely? A satellite designed to measure ocean winds offers us a clue.

Read Full Story

    

via Fast Company http://www.fastcoexist.com/1682111/the-insane-growth-of-china-and-indias-megacities-mapped-through-satellite-imagery?utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=Feed%3A+fastcompany%2Fheadlines+%28Fast+Company%29

On the Brink of a Feud With Rush Limbaugh, Bill O’Reilly Backed Down

Bill O'Reilly full full.jpg

Reuters

Almost no one remembers Bill O’Reilly’s searing attack on Rush Limbaugh-style talk radio hosts. But it happened. “These idiots,” the most popular conservative tv personality in America said. “I mean, they’re misleading you. They’re lying to you.” As he explained it, “most talk radio is conservative-dominated ideologues; Kool-Aid drinking idiots.” They’re rich guys with “big cigars,” he continued, causing many to believe he was singling out Limbaugh. “Walk away from these liars, these right-wing liars,” he warned. “Walk away from them! They’re not looking out for you.”

The response was swift.

Talk radio’s Mark Levin, a volatile man as prone to sudden, unexpected outbursts of anger as O’Reilly, hit back. “These blowhards,” he said. “You get arrogant, stupid people who get paid a lot of money to be on radio and TV to be arrogant and stupid. And one of them… is on the Fox News Channel, my favorite cable channel. And he has a fledgling radio show that has no ratings, and he’ll be off radio soon because he’s a failure. It’s the non-factor: Bill O’Reilly.” He went on to call O’Reilly a “moron, phony journalist” who is “utterly unencumbered with information.”

Amazing, right? Even titans of right-wing media believe that other titans right-wing media are disingenuous hucksters! As someone whose been making that same critique since around 2008, when that exchange took place, I can’t help but chuckle at all the times I’ve been denounced by conservative bloggers for pointing out the very truths spoken by O’Reilly and Levin: that high profile conservative entertainers regularly violate the trust of their conservative fans. Limbaugh does, in fact, mislead on a weekly basis; O’Reilly is, in fact, curiously unencumbered by facts on occasions when they get in the way of something that he “knows” to be true.

It’s just that conservatives don’t usually admit that about their entertainers. It would benefit the rank-and-file to hear about it when someone “on their side” is cynically or carelessly feeding them bad information. But conservatives who know better often stay silent. The truth is willfully suppressed. 

That last bit is the most difficult to prove. Plenty of conservatives admit, off the record, that the right is hurt by the surfeit of false or misleading information broadcast everyday in right-leaning media. Almost all are reluctant to speak up. Some conservative reformers know that their vital ideas won’t get a hearing among an already skeptical rank-and-file if they criticize certain right-wing icons, or else doubt that criticizing them is a worthwhile project quite apart from its consequences.

Why waste time on blowhards?

Others would like to speak up, but don’t want their careers to suffer, or to wade through a week’s worth of vicious emails, attacks from bloggers that border on libel, and other unpleasantness.

Who can blame any of them?

In aggregate, however, their individual decisions ensure that hucksterism goes mostly unchallenged, that the most popular conservative entertainers aren’t pressured or shamed into dispensing better information, and that the rank-and-file operates at an ongoing information disadvantage. (For an example of that information disadvantage and its consequences see November 2012.)

What Bill O’Reilly said about conservative talk radio in 2008 was brave, insofar as he was offering a critique he believed to be important and true, even though multiple incentives aligned against him doing so. It would’ve been big news, and might’ve had a huge impact if, hours after uttering that critique on his radio show, he would’ve said the same thing on his Fox News show, a vastly bigger platform. I’d never given much thought to why the conservative entertainer backed down and aborted his critique, and had long since forgotten about the whole intra-conservative spat. But Joe Muto, a former Fox News staffer who has just published a tell-all book, claims he knows the rest of the story. Here’s the relevant excerpt, as it’s posted over at Salon:

The cigar and private jet stuff was a thinly veiled swipe at Rush Limbaugh, someone O’Reilly has never liked, but also a figure who had a lot of fans at 1211 Sixth Avenue, including Roger Ailes and Sean Hannity. When word filtered to the Second Floor that O’Reilly planned on repeating some of his radio rant on the TV show that night, the order came back quickly: Absolutely not. But O’Reilly put his foot down. Neither Stan Manskoff nor Bill Shine could dissuade him, and it took a phone call from Roger himself to put the matter to rest.

Bill took the call in his office, politely but insistently pleading his case to Ailes, but Roger held firm. Bill reluctantly agreed to toe the party line, excused himself from the call, gently hung up the receiver, then loudly yelled a string of expletives that could be heard all over the seventeenth floor. But after he got it out of his system, he spiked the Limbaugh reference from the TV show.

So there you have it.

If his account is accurate, it’s the quintessential illustration of rot at the core of conservative media. O’Reilly, a broadcaster with more clout than any other on-air personality at Fox News, and one of the most prominent conservative pundits in America — a guy who wrote a book titled, “Who’s Looking out For You?” — thinks, or at least thought, that America’s most popular conservative entertainer, Limbaugh, lied to and misled his conservative audience, and that he was doing harm to his listeners and America itself at a moment of crisis. O’Reilly basically said so on the radio. He reportedly wanted to say so on television, too. But Roger Ailes wouldn’t let him.

Rather than risk the consequences of disobeying, O’Reilly reportedly censored himself. Perhaps he thought Ailes had the right to determine what airs on his network. Or that the disagreement wasn’t worth losing his hefty salary, or his ability to daily broadcast a television show he believes to be valuable. If the anecdote is accurate, it nevertheless stops short of revealing O’Reilly’s motive, and that’s okay, because I’m not here to insist that this is a demonstration of farsighted prudence, servile cowardice, or something in between. All I’m saying is that conservatives who regard Limbaugh as a destructive force, right up to the most powerful figures in the movement, can always find lots of reasons to back away from criticizing him. And that helps explain why, over the years, Limbaugh has become a less responsible broadcaster, and a bigger liability to conservatives: he’s never been reined in by peers, who seldom criticize him in a way ties his intra-conservative prestige to broadcasting defensible content.

Having known several journalists on the left and right who’ve criticized powerful people “on their own side” without untold millions to fall back on, I’d personally have more respect for O’Reilly if he followed up on his 2008 critique. Lord knows talk radio hasn’t changed, and his words, though prompted by a disagreement over the financial crisis, were general. But I fear that no one who shares my instincts on these matters would’ve made it to a prime time show on Fox. Ailes is a smart man, and presumably a good judge of who won’t cross lines in the sand that he draws. So the status quo persists, where the only people willing to tell rank-and-file conservatives the truth about their favorite entertainers are people rank-and-file conservatives don’t trust.

Today, O’Reilly is eager to convey this message: there’s no feud with Limbaugh. Does he protest too much? Or is he no longer upset by the way talk radio daily abuses the trust of its audience?

    

via Politics : The Atlantic http://www.theatlantic.com/politics/archive/2013/06/on-the-brink-of-a-feud-with-rush-limbaugh-bill-oreilly-backed-down/276449/

As Journalists Become the Story, Will the Rules Change?

Will news organizations’ boycott of the Attorney General’s ‘off-the-record’ background sessions last week change the rules of the game between government sources and media?

On the record: Doubtful, at best.

“It won’t change anything,” says Alex S. Jones, director of Harvard’s Shorenstein Center on the Press, Politics and Public Policy. “In Washington, media will continue to deal with administration sources, brokering access and information for pledges of confidentiality.

“It’s a pernicious practice, and very widespread, but it’s how business is done.”

Embattled AG Eric Holder held meetings with top Washington journalists Thursday and Friday to discuss concerns about Department of Justice guidelines for dealing with journalists in investigations of possible security leaks.

The New York Times, CNN, CBS News, NBC News and the Associated Press, among others, passed on Thursday’s meeting because of its off-the-record requirement. At that gathering, however, the DOJ blinked, and news outlets were told they could report on ‘general’ topics of discussion.

Thursday attendees included The Washington Post, Politico, New Yorker, Daily News and The Wall Street Journal. ABC News, the lone network representative last week, met with Holder Friday, along with USA Today and Reuters, which had initially said no to Thursday.

David Westin, ABC News president from 1997 through 2010, agrees with his alma mater’s decision to attend and says it was “smart” of the DOJ to modify its rule.

“News organizations are in the business of reporting news, not keeping it secret,” says Westin. “This happens from time to time. It’s part of a larger issue with the White House itself. It’s part of the normal give-and-take, back-and-forth of the press covering the administration.”

In Westin’s view, Holder’s sessions presented a particular challenge in that the news outlets were also principals in the story. “They were asked not as reporters, but as people being affected by the Justice Department.”

Going further, Harvard’s Jones, a Pulitzer Prize-winning reporter at the New York Times, says the meetings served as de facto press conferences, regardless of Holder’s intentions, and that Holder was “naïve” to think otherwise.

continued…

New Career Opportunities Daily: The best jobs in media.

via TVNewser http://www.mediabistro.com/tvnewser/when-journalists-become-the-story-do-the-rules-change_b181892

Of the Two Primary Accounts of Osama bin Laden’s Death, Which Navy SEAL Is Telling the Truth?

In an addendum to The Finish, which charts the raid on Osama bin Laden’s Pakistani compound, Mark Bowden dissects the diverging accounts of two Navy SEALs.

via The Latest from VanityFair.com http://www.vanityfair.com/culture/2013/06/two-stories-osama-bin-laden-navy-seals