Latest from Media & Publishing Industry

Alan Cocker: Despite Murdoch the press remains a force for good
The phone-hacking scandal unfolding in Britain is now well and truly out of the bottle and its repercussions are spreading from the deceased News of the World through the British body politic.

Peter Bromhead: The Screws of the World
While not shedding any tears over the demise of the News of the World, I am still sorry to see a historic newspaper ruthlessly executed by the "Dirty Digger" - as Private Eye aptly describes Rupert Murdoch.

Trouble for heir to the empire
James Murdoch gets 'please explain' over discrepancy.

<i>Shelley Bridgeman:</i> Off the record
Mihingarangi Forbes' television interview with Alasdair Thompson raised an interesting issue.

Kiwi stepping into media lion's den
Tom Mockridge is no stranger to answering SOS calls from his boss, besieged media mogul Rupert Murdoch.

Brooks quits - Kiwi to take top job
Rebekah Brooks, Murdoch's loyal lieutenant, resigned last night as chief executive of his newspapers.

The A to Z of hacking scandal
Editors, reporters, politicians, police officers ... all are involved as a media empire's shame is exposed.

Deborah Hill Cone: Disgrace takes the fun out of Fleet St
Thanks to the Murdoch papers, clever-dick journalism doesn't look so clever any more.

Midwives attack magazine over cover
North and South magazine is defending its use of a controversial cover image.

Hacking scandal sends News shares on $8.6 billion slide
News Corp's loss of $7b in market value over four trading days shows investor concerns that the phone hacking probe could have a broader impact on the company.

Tabloid closure 'devastating' - NZer
A New Zealand journalist who works for Rupert Murdoch's axed News of the World tabloid says it's been "utterly, completely cleaned up" up over the past few years and "is not the newspaper I work for".