Times on the Net: You can’t beat the traffic

The New York Times is the newspaper with the best website and gets around four million daily unique visitors (estimated cookies) – way above the other newspapers I checked on Google Trends and Double Click Ad Planner. (See the charts at the end of this post.)

The Straits Times resembles the American, not the British, newspapers shown in the charts in one way.

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Pulitzer for Hank Williams

Country music legend Hank Williams has been awarded a special citation in this year's Pulitzer Prizes more than 50 years after his death.

The Pulitzer Prize Board pays tribute to his "craftsmanship as a songwriter who expressed universal feelings with poignant simplicity and played a pivotal role in transforming country music into a major musical and cultural force in American life".

The Board, which chose the prize winners, included New York Times columnist Thomas Friedman and  Politico executive editor and co-founder Jim VandeHei.

This video is grainy but it's the best I could find.

Williams was only 29 when he died in 1953. Yet his legend lives on because of the enduring appeal of his songs. They include classics such as Hey Good Lookin', Your Cheatin' Heart, Jambalaya and Cold, Cold Heart.

Here's the full list of Pulitzer Prize winners announced by Columbia University on the recommendation of the Pulitzer Prize Board with links to the winning entries for journalism.

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The ultimate inside media story

For any political junkie who wants his daily fix of the US presidential race, the go-to place is not the Huffington Post, not the Daily Kos, not the Drudge Report, but Real Clear Politics. Note that every one of them is a website. The 2008 election is a tipping point in American journalism, writes Financial Times editor Lionel Barber: “We are witnessing a shift in the balance of power towards new media…”

Bloggers and journalists –- both wannabes and ares:) –- will love this insider account of American media and British media. I won’t spoil the readers’ pleasure by divulging whether the Yanks or Brits are better in Barber’s opinion. He is a Brit himself. The Americans are more professional, the Brits more colourful, he quotes fellow-Brit Bill Emmott, the former Economist editor, as saying.

But the Mount Rushmore of journalism definitely was the post-Watergate Washington Post, lovingly described by Barber:

In the summer of 1985, when I arrived in the capital of the United States, The Washington Post was one of the finest newspapers in the country. Ben Bradlee, its executive editor, who was best known for driving coverage of the Watergate scandal of just a decade earlier, dominated the newsroom with his gravelly voice and infectious smile. Even the lowliest copy boy called him “Ben”…

Entering the Post newsroom was like walking on to the set of All the President’s Men , the 1976 film starring Robert Redford and Dustin Hoffman as the Post’s own Bob Woodward and Carl Bernstein, with its row upon row of reporters, each with their desk-top computers. (At the FT, we still bashed away on typewriters.) Bradlee’s glass office stood in the centre of the newsroom. Woodward’s investigative team was tucked away at the back. There was a swagger about the place that was irresistible.

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