Ken auletta new yorker article

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“We talked for probably an hour by the door,” Zuckerberg recalls. It turned out that Sandberg was ready for a new challenge.

Murdoch’s Best Friend

The NEw Yorker - April 11, 2011

Soon after Rupert Murdoch purchased Dow Jones and the Wall Street Journal, he transferred Robert Thomson from News Corp.’s Times of London, where he was the editor-in-chief, to New York, to become publisher of the Journal.

Up Close with New Yorker Magazine Columnist Ken Auletta

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This is a gripping conversation with Ken Auletta, who has written the Annals of Communications column for The New Yorker magazine about declining newspaper readership, the public’s loss of trust for the mainstream news media, the challenges the traditional advertising industry faces as a result of digital video recorders and audience fragmentation and the impact of all this on US politics.

Ken is also the author of ten books, including four national bestsellers:

  • Three Blind Mice: How the TV Networks Lost Their Way
  • Greed And Glory On Wall Street: The Fall of The House of Lehman
  • The Highwaymen: Warriors of the Information Super Highway
  • World War 3.0: Microsoft and Its Enemies  

SHOW NOTES  

6:07 – Ken Auletta talks about how new media technology is impacting the news media business.

Loyal to their code." Rather, it was clear, was talking about himself; it was December, and he and several CBS News colleagues were awaiting the results of an outside investigation into their work which threatened their livelihoods and their reputations.

Vox Fox

The New Yorker - May 26, 2003

Roger Ailes is a television pioneer, someone who had no background in news and yet created something different in the TV news business.

 

16:39 – Auletta on the challenges of sustaining traditional advertising models. 1942) is a journalist and author known for his coverage of political, governmental and economic matters, often focused on New York; since the early 1990s he has written mainly about the media and communications industries. But his most enduring legacy is Donald Trump, whom he took under his wing in the 1970s.

Loyal to the very end.  

26:35 – Auletta talks about how the public’s distrust of the mainstream media has impacted the Bush administration. 

End  

Photo by JD Lasica from Pleasanton, CA, US – Ken Auletta, CC BY 2.0, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=68478179

The Pirate

The New Yorker - November 13, 1995

Rupert Murdoch is sixty-four, and his shoulders stoop slightly.

 

10:36 – Auletta talks about The New York Times’s tactics for growing circulation. In Ken Auletta's 1978 Esquire profile, we meet the man who tutored the president in the dark arts of gossip, power, and politics.  

8:43 – Auletta discusses the affect of internet advertising on traditional news media outlets.

Blodget, who is forty-seven, gets up every morning at five-thirty, writes four or five blog posts a day on average, and dashes off twenty to thirty tweets.  

14:29 – Auletta on whether the news media businesses may adapt to participating in digital conversations on the internet. Eventually, Hastings was convinced, movies would be rented even more cheaply and conveniently by streaming them over the Internet, and popular films would always be in stock.

But in 2000 Netflix had only about three hundred thousand subscribers and relied on the U.S. Postal Service to deliver its DVDs; the company was losing money. This profile of Cohn is especially relevant today because it illuminates what his mentee Trump learned from his lawyer.

PLUS: on the Esquire Classic podcast, Ken discussES Cohn’s unrelenting cruelty and drive, and how it helped shape Trump

HARVEY WEINSTEIN’S LAST CAMPAIGN

THE NEW YORKER - MAY 30, 2022

How the Hollywood producer lost control of the story during his criminal trial in New York.

His hour-long program, which airs at six, features Dobbs in a role that combines Ralph Nader and Pat Buchanan.  

8:05 – Auletta discusses the financial community’s perspective on the newspaper business. In large part because of Ailes, Fox News, in its short life—it débuted on October 7, 1996—has established an unmistakable identity: it is opinionated and conservative, and its news is delivered by people who themselves are often unabashedly opinionated and conservative.

ken auletta new yorker article

The Ken Auletta papers contain correspondence, typescripts, galleys, research materials, sound recordings and a video recording representing his writings, including feature articles for The New Yorker, his Daily News column, and several books. There’s a real element of being on air when you’re at your desk.”

Paper Trail

The New Yorker - June 25, 2012

Did publishers and Apple collude against Amazon?