Showing posts with label Media. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Media. Show all posts

Monday, May 17, 2021

AT&T to merge WarnerMedia with Discovery: reports

WASHINGTON - US telecommunications giant AT&T could announce as soon as Monday a merger between its WarnerMedia unit -- which owns CNN and HBO -- and Discovery media, media reports said.

The new entity is expected to be owned by AT&T and Discovery, according to a CNBC report, but no details were immediately released. 

Bloomberg, citing people with knowledge of the matter, reported a deal "could be announced announced as soon as this week."

Contacted by AFP, neither AT&T, WarnerMedia, or Discovery had responded on Sunday evening.

The transaction could create a giant able to compete with Netflix and Disney+, which have seen their number of subscribers surge during the pandemic. 

A slowdown in the growth of the Disney empire's streaming platform between January and March, however, made investors fret and caused the group's shares to plunge last week. 

AT&T bought Time Warner in 2018 for $80 billion, then renamed it WarnerMedia, which owns HBO, Warner Bros. studios and cable channels such as CNN. 

Discovery has channels in 220 countries, according to its website. 

WarnerMedia had net sales of $30.4 billion in 2020, and Discovery -- which owns Eurosport -- of $10.7 billion.

Agence France-Presse

Thursday, April 16, 2020

Google launches ‘journalism relief fund,’ following Facebook


Google said Wednesday it will launch an emergency fund to help local news outlets struggling to maintain operations in the face of the coronavirus pandemic.

The internet giant gave no specific figure for its fund, but said it would offer grants ranging from the “low thousands of dollars” for the smallest operations to “low tens of thousands for larger newsrooms.”


The move comes with the media sector facing deep cutbacks resulting from the global consumer lockdown, an intense economic slump and a retrenchment in advertising revenues that many news outlets depend on.

“Local news is a vital resource for keeping people and communities connected in the best of times,” Google News vice president Richard Gingras said in a statement. “Today, it plays an even greater function in reporting on local lockdowns or shelter at home orders, school and park closures, and data about how COVID-19 is affecting daily life.”

Gingras said the fund will open to outlets “producing original news for local communities during this time of crisis,” with applications due by April 29.

“At the end of the process, we’ll announce who has received funding and how publishers are spending the money,” he said. “We believe it is important to do what we can to alleviate the financial pressures on newsrooms, and will continue to look at other ways to help with more to announce soon.”


The New York Times has estimated that news outlets have cut 28,000 jobs as a result of the health crisis and subsequent economic impact. Other outlets have furloughed journalists or announced pay cuts.

Facebook on March 30 said it was donating $100 million to support news organizations globally hurting from the coronavirus pandemic. This includes $25 million in grants and ramped up ad spending by the social media giant.

In recent months Facebook and Google have stepped up efforts to help news organizations, following criticism that their dominance of online advertising has made it difficult for media to profit from digital operations.

Agence France-Presse 

Wednesday, November 20, 2019

Google Assistant to be ‘news host’ on devices


WASHINGTON — Google said Tuesday its digital assistant will serve as a “news host” on its connected devices to deliver stories from a variety of its media partners.

The feature called Your News Update will be activated by asking the Google Assistant to read the news.


The artificial intelligence program will deliver “a mix of short news stories chosen in that moment based on your interests, location, user history, and preferences, as well as the top news stories out there,” said product manager Liz Gannes in a blog post.

The assistant will offer stories from partners including CBS, Politico, Fox News and CNN based on user preferences and other factors.

It can offer news, for example, about the user’s favorite sports teams or specific local or business events.

“In between stories, the Google Assistant serves as your smart news host that introduces which publishers and updates are next,” Gannes said.


The feature is available in English in the United States and will expand internationally next year, for people with compatible smartphones and connected speakers.

It is activated by saying, “Hey Google, play me the news.”

Amazon offers a similar “flash briefing” feature for its Alexa-powered devices.

source: technology.inquirer.net

Sunday, November 2, 2014

Know the higher calling of journalists


Media space and airtime are replete with the ordeal Vice President Jejomar Binay is going through in the hands of some Senators over his unexplained wealth. Fortunately enough, he is not faulting media for his current predicament.

Other officials who fell from grace with their falling approval ratings, however, are quick to blame media.

Business executives also have mixed views about media.

On one hand, they need media to enjoy the “multiplier effect” of their marketing messages. If they rely on their door-to-door salesmen or their delivery trucks, they cannot cover the marketplace with the speed necessary to outpace competition—if not simply achieving their sales targets.

On the other hand, they hate or fear media when an error, misdemeanor, or an insensitive statement is picked up by the press, and is kept burning in the news for some time.

Recently, I got hold of a book, titled “In Media Res”— subtitled “In the Middle of Things”— from the Popular Bookstore and it helps shed light on the work of journalists.

It is authored by a respected journalist and academic, former Dean and currently a co-faculty member in the UP College of Mass Communication—Luis V. Teodoro.

The book is a collection of essays, lectures, papers and speeches of Dean Teodoro over the years—and yet his comments are not dated.

He cites, for example, the virtues a journalist must possess if he is to be respected and trusted. “At the core of the best practice of journalism are the basic values and principles of truth-telling, freedom, justice, humanness, and stewardship.”

To executives listening to the Dean of Journalism in the Philippines, these are reassuring. He continues: “These are ethical principles from which the professional standards of accuracy, fairness, and autonomy cannot be separated.”

Truth-telling, he explains, is achieved through factual and contextual accuracy. Freedom is manifest when the journalist exhibits independence. Justice is realized when the reporter practices fairness and balance.

And, hear this, coming from a respected authority on Philippine journalism: You achieve “humanness” through the protection of the vulnerable and the powerless.”

So, if journalists are taking up the cudgels for the victims of the Ampatuan massacre, they are simply protecting the vulnerable and the powerless.

The theme of press freedom rings and shines through this book, even as it tackles other topics clustered under three key parts—“The Teacher Taught,” “The Terrors of a Free Press,” and “The Fourth Estate.”

Dean Teodoro points out: “Journalism teaching is about teaching skills, but it is also about teaching the kind of respect for the facts that drives the best journalists to scour musty libraries and to go over government archives, to spend hours surging the Net, and to interview dozens of people to obtain information—and then to double check its accuracy.”

Any leader-executive who reads this will have a newfound respect for the media person interviewing him or her.

And yet, that media person must seriously consider following the “Louie Teodoro Imperative, if I may say so.

One observer commented: “Nowadays, we have “press conference journalists”—they rely on the press kits, pick up some points from prepared statements —and they submit their story. That wouldn’t pass— with Dean Teodoro.

In an extended discussion on the “Terrors of a Free Press,” the Dean pointed to scary statistics on journalists killed in various parts of the country, while many more of them are threatened with being jailed or oppressed. “Living dangerously” has come to describe the journalistic profession, and Dean Teodoro underscores the need for government for a tough policy to protect journalists.

The book covers academically preparing journalists, empowering them for practice, and protecting them as they do their alternately interesting and dangerous jobs.

The book criticizes government and state policies that continue to be ambivalent about fully supporting the Fourth Estate.

The book frowns on censorship of any kind from the ruler, and cites the threats to press freedom by the conglomeration of ownership by businessmen.

Journalists are not your usual employees who churn out and sell products; render professional services.

They are workers all right, and yet their purposes and mission are latched on to the higher ideals of a democracy where freedom is defended, not by the sword but by the pen.

This book’s essays are clear-minded, lucid and honest simply because the author is a high-caliber writer and thinker whose passion and love for journalism rings true in every page.

Don’t believe your PR man who tells you how easy it is to get your story published, because he holds these journalists by the neck.

These journalists, with some exceptions, love and are always ready to defend their higher calling.

source: business.inquirer.net

Wednesday, May 7, 2014

Australia’s Fairfax to slash another 80 jobs


SYDNEY—Struggling Australian newspaper group Fairfax revealed Wednesday that another 80 editorial and photo positions are set to be axed, including at The Sydney Morning Herald and The Age in Melbourne.

In a note to staff, managing director of Australian Publishing Media at Fairfax Allen Williams said 35 editorial positions, along with 30 photo jobs and 15 in lifestyle sections would likely go.

“The changes we are proposing are similar to the more progressive and efficient models being used by other media organizations around the world,” Williams said in the note seen by AFP.

“We must deliver our high-quality content in the most efficient way possible.”

The arrangements would see more copy-editing and page layout work done by external contractors with production jobs going from Sydney and Melbourne by year end.

Under the proposal, the lifestyle-oriented Life Media would restructure some of its divisions to make greater use of freelancers to deliver editorial content while on the images side, more work will be outsourced to external service provider Getty Images.

“Our photographic needs across all platforms continue to be commissioned by editorial however most assignments will be facilitated by Getty photographers for our publications,” the note said.

Fairfax sent shockwaves through Australia’s media sector in 2012 by announcing it was sacking hundreds of staff and putting its newspapers — the only serious rival to Rupert Murdoch’s vast Australian News Corp. holdings — behind a paywall.

Like many media groups, they have struggled with the transition to digital in a bid to combat sliding print advertising and circulation revenues.

The journalists’ union said the latest redundancies represented “an assault on the quality journalism that has been the hallmark” of Fairfax for more than a century and showed the company was incapable of deciding on production arrangements and sticking with them.

“The only decision the company seems capable of making is to keep cutting staff,” said Christopher Warren from the Media, Entertainment, Arts Alliance (MEAA).

“When do we reach the point of no return? Why isn’t more effort being made to protect and promote editorial quality and utilize smarter ways of working? At what point does Fairfax stop being a news organization and merely become a commissioning agency that outsources everything it does?”

Last August, Fairfax reported annual revenues were down 8.2 percent at Aus$2.0 billion but chief Greg Hywood said the company was “meeting or surpassing all critical milestones” in its transition online, which has also seen its mastheads go tabloid.

source: newsinfo.inquirer.net

Tuesday, January 3, 2012

‘Cutest newsman’ still rocks

Seeing him in TV5 newsrooms all suited up and dapper, it’s hard to imagine that Kapatid anchor and immigration lawyer Mike Templo was once a rocker, playing lead guitars for the ’90s band Gnash. Mike’s interest in the instrument was piqued at an early age. Elder brother John was bassist for the heavy metal bands Razorback and Wolfgang.  

 “I was inspired by my kuya. I used to tag along on his gigs. I tried picking up the bass, but ended up with the guitar, para hindi kami pareho,” he told the Inquirer in a recent interview. Now in his mid-30s, Mike recalled that, while growing up, he wasn’t allowed to go out much. Instead he would spend his spare time at home, honing his guitar skills. He played a lot of ’70s and ’80s metal and hard rock. Some of his guitar idols were Zakk Wylde, Jimmy Page, Jimi Hendrix, David Aguirre and Jun Lopito. “I had a few months of formal training in classical guitar,” he said. “Then I just did it on my own. I was doing jingles … ” Mike got his first taste of band life when he joined Gnash. He was a college student at the time, taking up philosophy at the University of the Philippines in Diliman. “I had to learn the band’s entire repertoire,” he said. “We played at the Music Museum, Mayric’s, Club Dredd …” But just when it seemed like he was on his way to a music career, Mike decided he wanted to become a lawyer. He dropped everything and attended Touro Law School in New York, where he earned his Juris Doctor degree. A New York-licensed lawyer, Mike is a member of the New York State Bar Association, New York State Trial Lawyers Association, New York Country Lawyers Association and American Bar Association. “Because I was part of the band scene, everyone thought I had done drugs,” he recounted. “When college friends hear that I’m now a lawyer, they still can’t believe it.” Mike has an immigration consultancy office in the country and anchors TV5’s “Sapul sa Singko” and “Aksyon Weekend.” He also hosts Radyo Singko’s “Ibayong Pinoy,” a program tackling immigration and OFW concerns. He used to host “Crossing Borders” on ANC. He still picks up the guitar, but only to relieve stress. He’s not as good as he used to, he confessed, but still enjoys playing immensely. Not vain Meanwhile, Mike recently topped Spot.ph’s list of the country’s cutest newsmen. He said he was shocked, never having thought of himself as a looker. In fact, he added, laughing, that he used to get teased even by his family as the ugly duckling. “I do take care of myself because, on TV, you have to look good. But I’m not all that vain. As Lourd de Veyra would say, ‘Ang tunay na lalaki, walang abs!’” noted Mike, who was once linked to Claudine Trillo and Angel Locsin. Asked if he has plans of venturing into show biz proper, the son of ’70s movie star Mildred Ortega said, firmly: “Right now, it’s a solid ‘no.’ I’m where I want to be, which is law and media.

source: entertainment.inquirer.net

Tuesday, November 29, 2011

Patrice O’Neal Passed Away At The Age Of 41


Actor comedian Patrice O’Neal has passed away Tuesday from complications of a stroke he suffered several weeks ago. O'Neal passed away at the age of 41.

Patrice O’Neal was known for his stand-up comedy. He appeared in several films. He made regular appearances on the The Opie & Anthony Show. O'Neal also performed on Comedy Central's Roast of Charlie Sheen back in September which seemed to bring him more media exposure in a single night.