Bloomberg News Suspends Reporter Whose Article on China Was Not Published

After disputing reports that top editors had killed an article on China for political reasons, Bloomberg News suspended the reporter Michael Forsythe.

    



Turkey Moves to Silence Dissenters, but With One Eye on Its Image Abroad

Turkey has mounted a balancing act, analysts say, of cracking down on critics of the government, but not so hard as to damage the country’s image abroad.

    



Editorial: British Press Freedom Under Threat

A chilling inquisition aimed at The Guardian over publishing leaks highlights how, unlike the United States, Britain has no constitutional guarantee of a free press.

    



The TV Watch: We Interrupt This Generation …

President John F. Kennedy’s assassination changed TV, and the industry is mounting a 21-gun salute to commemorate the man and the moment.

    



Les Brown, Pioneer in Television Journalism, Dies at 84

Mr. Brown founded and edited a groundbreaking magazine that followed the growth of the broadcast medium and produced an authoritative encyclopedia about it.

    



‘Anchorman’ Spoof of 1970s TV News Is Basis for Newseum Exhibition

The exhibition, based on the 2004 film “Anchorman: The Legend of Ron Burgundy,” recalls an era of heavily sprayed hair, huge egos and newsrooms with little racial and gender diversity.

    



Bloomberg Says News Service Did Not Kill Articles on China

Bloomberg News, a unit of the company owned by Michael R. Bloomberg, was accused of withholding articles that were unflattering to Chinese officials.

    



Penn Kimball, Journalist Who Sued U.S., Dies at 98

Mr. Kimball successfully sued the federal government after he discovered that secret files had identified him as a national security risk.

    



Amy Robach of ABC Says On-Air Mammogram Found Breast Cancer

Amy Robach, an anchor on ABC’s “Good Morning America” who underwent a mammography on the program Oct. 1, said she will have a double mastectomy.

    



The Media Equation: Marrying Companies and Content

The New York-based company Contently has developed a roster of writers and journalists for hire and a software application that helps companies tell their own stories.

    



Danger Persists for Reporters in Pakistan, Despite Vow to Protect Them

Five journalists have died so far this year in Pakistan, and by some accounts, the dangers of reporting in the nation have been intensifying.

    

Venezuela Releases U.S. Journalist After 2 Days

Venezuelan officials released Jim Wyss, a bureau chief for The Miami Herald, after he was detained Thursday near the Colombian border.

    



Reporter for Reuters Won’t Receive China Visa

The rejection comes amid rising tensions between foreign news organizations and the Chinese government, which has been using various means to express displeasure with coverage it deems unflattering.

    



Bloomberg News Is Said to Curb Articles That Might Anger China

Employees said Bloomberg News chose not to publish investigative articles about China’s leadership because of worries that it would be evicted from the country.

    



CBS to Correct Erroneous Report on Benghazi

The network acknowledged that it had suffered a blow to its credibility in broadcasting a report with an interview of someone who was never at the scene.

    



Accounts Differ to F.B.I. and CBS on Benghazi

Conflicting statements given by a security officer to the Federal Bureau of Investigation and to CBS call into question a “60 Minutes” report.

    



CBS News Defends Its ‘60 Minutes’ Benghazi Report

A “60 Minutes” correspondent also said the report should have acknowledged that a book written by a man she interviewed was being published by a CBS subsidiary.

    



Civil Behavior: The Changing Rules of Outing

Intention matters when a publication chooses to out a celebrity.

    



CNN Ratings Fall as Health Care Coverage Rises

CNN fell to fifth place during the week, below Fox News and MSNBC, as well as HLN and CNBC.

    



Student Newspapers Scurry to Make Ends Meet

College newspapers have until recently managed to stave off industry challenges. Now many traditional papers are struggling for survival.