Press Gazette / Bron Maher
Financial Times / Hannah Murphy and Peter Andringa
Twitter is nowhere near hitting its 2024 revenue goals from political advertising →“Last year, X chief executive Linda Yaccarino told industry figures she was aiming to make $100mn annually in political ad revenues in an election year…trying to offset revenue losses caused by big brands pulling spending from the platform. However, data from X’s political ads transparency library analyzed by the Financial Times show that the company has brought in less than a fifth of its target as of October 23.”
The New York Times / Neil MacFarquhar
Media organizations criticize Israeli strike that killed three journalists →“Both Lebanon’s prime minister, Najib Mikati, and [Ziad T. Makary, Lebanon’s minister of information] called the attack a ‘war crime.’ The prime minister, who posted a statement on X, said, ‘This deliberate aggression certainly aims to intimidate the media to cover up the crimes and destruction being committed.'”
The Wall Street Journal / Isabella Simonetti
CNN’s Dana Bash, a trusted political referee, is having a moment →“Bash’s calling card among the Washington political elite is that she doesn’t play favorites. She has developed a reputation for maintaining ties on both sides of the aisle, making her part of a dwindling group of TV personalities whom big-name Republicans and Democrats seem to trust.”
Press Gazette / Dominic Ponsford
The Guardian / Keir Starmer
The Hollywood Reporter / Karin Klein
Ex-Los Angeles Times editorial writer: Why I resigned over the endorsement call →“If Soon-Shiong had decided early last spring that he no longer wanted to endorse on presidential races, that would have been fair, neutral and legitimate…But by making the decision at the 11th hour, when the candidates are in place, polls are tight and almost anything can throw the race one way or the other, Soon-Shiong’s anti-editorial stance is actually a de facto decision to do an editorial — a wordless one, a make-believe-it’s-invisible one that unfairly implies grievous faults in Harris that put her on a level with Donald Trump.”