Silver Bulletin / Nate Silver
Nate Silver on the demise of FiveThirtyEight →“‘Data journalism’ may have been a dumb name for what we were doing — that one’s on me — and Fivey Fox aside, the Five ThirtyEight brand was never warm and cuddly. But it always found a huge audience, and coverage of polls and political data is now much smarter. Compare the extremely analytical polling deep dives that Nate Cohn is doing at the New York Times, for instance, to the vibes-based coverage of the Boys on the Bus era.”
The Hollywood Reporter / Benjamin Svetkey
Old movies barely exist on streaming services; the oldest movie on Netflix was made in 1973 →“Did the company’s algorithm truly determine that nothing made prior to 1973 was worthy of streaming in January of 2025? Not The Godfather? Not The Graduate?…the streaming revolution has been something of a disaster for classic movies. It has, in fact, been slowly and methodically wiping the collective culture’s memory of anything made before…well, 1973 seems about right.”
The Information / Stephanie Palazzolo and Cory Weinberg
Think $200 a month is a lot for OpenAI access? How about $20,000 a month? →“OpenAI executives have told some investors it planned to sell low-end agents at a cost of $2,000 per month to ‘high-income knowledge workers’; mid-tier agents for software development costing possibly $10,000 a month; and high-end agents, acting as PhD-level research agents, which could cost $20,000 per month, according to a person who’s spoken with executives.”
The Guardian / Michael Savage
Press Gazette / Charlotte Tobitt
Financial Times CEO John Ridding to step down after 19 years →“‘FT subscriptions and readership are at all-time highs, as are group revenues’…More than two-thirds of its revenues now come from digital subscriptions (both consumer and B2B) while other revenue streams include advertising, events at FT Live, research, circulation and consultancy FT Strategies.”
Journalism.co.uk / Gordon Smith
How the FT uses polls to engage readers and grow subscriptions →“Polls encourage audience engagement and habit-forming behavior. They also help a publisher build up a profile of an audience’s interests and expertise, while predictive polls can tap into the ‘wisdom of crowds’ on specialist topics and help guide editorial decision-making. After experimenting with polls on an informal basis since 2019, last year the FT expanded its relationship with Opinary, a Berlin-based poll provider across our platforms.”
Press Gazette / Dominic Ponsford
The man who helped cost Rupert Murdoch £500 million →“[Graham] Johnson came forward to police in 2013 and admitted to hacking phones when he was investigations editor of The Sunday Mirror. Since his conviction in December 2014 he has written multiple articles about tabloid criminality of the 1990s and 2000s, contributed to documentaries about the subject and published more than half a dozen books on the subject via his company Yellow Press.”
Awful Announcing / Matt Yoder
Gannett is hiring multiple “AI-assisted” sports journalists →“The Al Sports Editor job posting for Gannett’s USA Today Network carries a $80,000 to $140,300 salary range for an editor who will ‘lead a cutting-age digital news team that blends human reporting with Al technical expertise to storify data, automate content and create new reader experiences.’ The editor will ‘lead a team of AI sports reporters’ and ‘gather information to enrich Al-generated and automated content,’ according to the job posting.”
The Wall Street Journal / Jeffrey A. Trachtenberg
Serious nonfiction books now often don’t get a paperback edition →“The shift reflects changing reader habits, the popularity of audiobooks and ebooks, and the power a few major retailers hold over the publishing industry. ‘When I began in the business you could expect retailers to look at hardcover sales and order twice that in paperback,’ said Gail Ross, a literary agent at William Morris Endeavor. ‘Now it’s just the opposite — half as much, at best.'”
The Guardian / Michael Savage
The Wall Street Journal / Suzanne Vranica