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Journalist's Survival Guide, Part II: What to Do When the Ax Falls
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Romenesko

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Jim Romenesko
Your daily fix of media industry news, commentary, and memos.
Updated at
8:49 p.m. ET

Newspaper bailouts?
No way!
(Reason.com)

Financial journalists surveyed
By Abrams' firm.
(Associated Press)

Gawker empire in trouble?
Denton "running scared"?
(The Independent)

USAT launches The Oval blog
Edited by Memmott.
(USAToday.com)

POSTED WEDNESDAY
Modesto Bee's new publisher
Is Eric Johnston.
(Modesto Bee)

Payne's too quiet departure
From Newsday.
(Maynard)

FishbowlDC's Gavin joins Politico
"We think this is quite a coup."
(Politico.com)

Conde Nast's "January surprise"
Staffers still waiting for it.
(NY Observer)

POSTED TUESDAY
Brief history of NYT A1 ads
Tradition goes back more than a century.
(NYTimes.com)

Forbes fires 19
From magazine and website.
(All Things D)

Gupta offered surgeon general job
CNNer wants it.
(Washington Post)

Harvard Business Review's new editor
Is Adi Ignatius.
(Boston Globe)

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Huffington Post
Dan Rather chats with Rachel Sklar about CBS News after Katie Couric: "I think they'd be better taking someone from the inside. [Scott] Pelley could do it. Now I have no idea what Pelley thinks of that -- he might think he's better off where he is." Rather adds: "I doubt that [Les Moonves will] invest in reporting resources -- what I would call the infrastructure -- which is their big need. ...a very good infrastructure still remains there, but it's been reduced to the point that it needs shoring up and rebuilding."
> CBS News once had 38 foreign correspondents in 28 bureaus (Dvorkin)
Posted at 10:45 AM on Apr. 16, 2008
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