The newsonomics of the News Corp. split

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By  on Nieman Journalism Lab, June 27 – 

Are two Ruperts even better than one? We may soon find out, as News Corp.moves forward today to clone itself.

The cloning, or splitting, of the $34 billion company certainly has its logic. Hive off those pesky newspaper assets and the company’s book arm HarperCollins into a separate company. Then let the News Corp. entertainment conglomerate — satellite, cable, broadcast, movies, and more — focus on global opportunities as both the Internet and old-fashioned pipes offer seemingly unlimited upside for the distribution of entertainment content. (Fox News, best understood for its entertainment value, would go appropriately with the entertainment company, not the publishing one. That raises the question of whether those two operations, to be owned by separate companies, would continue to uneasily share prime Times Square office space. And who gets the News Corp. name? The company with the news or the company without it?)

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Rebekah Brooks Resigns From News Corp.

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By Nat Ives on AdAge, July 15 – Days after shutting down its 168-year-old News of the World and abandoning its $12 billion attempt to buy the rest of satellite giant British Sky Broadcasting, News Corp. has absorbed another consequence of its phone hacking scandal by accepting the resignation of Rebekah Brooks, CEO of its British newspapers division.

Ms. Brooks was editor at News of the World during much of the phone hacking that has enraged Britain, but has said she knew nothing about any of it. News Corp. chairman-CEO Rupert Murdoch had stood by her even as he walked away from the paper, its 200 employees and, most recently, the BSkyB deal.

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