Rabu, 06 Februari 2019

The end of an era: Spotify buying Gimlet signals the start of something new in podcasting. Is that good or bad?: The latest from Nieman Lab

Nieman Lab: The Daily Digest

The end of an era: Spotify buying Gimlet signals the start of something new in podcasting. Is that good or bad?

Welcome to walled gardens. Plus: Why you should be better at archiving your podcast, the BBC is building a show for kids, and a podcast pops up in a Super Bowl ad. By Nicholas Quah.

Researchers crunched 13 TB of local newspaper subscriber data. Here’s what they found about who sticks around.

Surprise: “Subscribers who read many stories per visit and read them thoroughly were no more likely to keep their subscriptions than those who skimmed.” By Laura Hazard Owen.
What We’re Reading
The New York Times / Kim Severson
The Los Angeles Times will revive its separate food section →
“The Los Angeles Times said Tuesday that it would resume publishing a stand-alone print section dedicated to food, and that it had added new staff members to fill its pages.”
TechCrunch / Josh Constine
Reddit is reportedly raising a huge round near a $3 billion valuation →
Reddit is reportedly raising $150 to $300 million.
Axios / Sara Fischer
The New York Times had trouble giving away 3 million free subscriptions to students →
“Some schools in some parts country are not going to want this…There’s a skepticism, [with] people asking us, what’s our ulterior motive? It was harder to give this away than [we] expected.”
The Conversation / Amy Adamczyk, Christopher Thomas, and Jacob Felson
Was it a shift in media coverage that led to more Americans supporting legal marijuana? →
“Support for legalization began to increase shortly after the news media began to frame marijuana as a medical issue.”
The New York Times / Jaclyn Peiser
The rise of the robot reporter →
“The A.P., The [Washington] Post, and Bloomberg have also set up internal alerts to signal anomalous bits of data. Reporters who see the alert can then determine if there is a bigger story to be written by a human being. During the Olympics, for instance, The Post set up alerts on Slack, the workplace messaging system, to inform editors if a result was 10 percent above or below an Olympic world record.”
Axios / Sara Fischer
Facebook adds Lead Stories, which debunks hoaxes and has a “Trendolizer,” as a new fact-checking partner →
From LeadStories.com: “Lead Stories uses the Trendolizer™ engine to detect the most trending stories from known fake news, satire and prank websites and tries to debunk them as fast as possible.”
Digiday / Aditi Sangal
The Atlantic’s Taylor Lorenz: Facebook is irrelevant to Gen-Z →
“I haven't covered Facebook in a year because that platform is irrelevant for young people and it's irrelevant to youth culture. Instagram is everything.”