
Media Talk USA Podcast
1) Media Talk podcast: Washington Post sale, Mail Online breaks records
John Plunkett discusses the sale of the Washington Post with Emily Bell of the Tow Centre for Digital Journalism
2) Media Talk USA podast: CNN in decline and entrepreneurialism in journalism
The economics of online news. Plus, CNN's ratings continue to plummet; why the iPad is such a dud; and further proof that Rupert Murdoch has lost it
Media Talk USA podast: CNN in decline and entrepreneurialism in journalism
31:30 | Apr 20th, 2010
3) Media Talk USA: Amazon, iPad, and the ebook wars
What does the iPad mean for Amazon and the rest of the publishing and ebook industry? Plus, can Google crack social networking with Google Buzz? With Jeff Jarvis
4) Media Talk USA: Google takes on China
Google threatens to withdraw from China. Plus, News Corp cuts off an aggregator, and network TV plays 'personality poker'
5) Media Talk USA: Google, Murdoch and Oprah
Google takes another hit from Rupert Murdoch, Oprah Winfrey announces she's giving up broadcast TV, and AOL brings in automated editors
6) Media Talk USA podcast: A new rival for the Washington Post
Jeff Jarvis and the panel discuss whether the Washington Post is under threat from Politico's new venture in DC
7) Media Talk USA: Letterman comes clean, but at what price?
Jeff Jarvis and panellists look at the king of late night's bizarre confession, NBC's experiment in prime time talk, and the Washington Post's new Twitter guidelines
8) Media Talk USA podcast: Will hyperlocal save journalism?
Is it time for all our news to go hyperlocal? Plus, does journalism need a bailout? And 'skanky' bloggers
9) Media Talk USA: Google hits back at the Associated Press
Google News product manager Josh Cohen talks to Jeff Jarvis about the AP's complaints about copyright. Plus the Twitter leak to TechCrunch
10) Media Talk USA podcast: Jeff Jarvis discusses plans to create a BBC style broadcaster in the US
Jeff Jarvis looks at the chances of a new, publicly funded media organisation being created in the US, how Michael Jackson's death was broken, and why newspapers should sue Google