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    The Cutline

    FINAL CUTS: Print is back!; Glenn Beck’s New York digs

    Here's our list of headlines that managed to evade the full-on blog treatment today:

    • Something doesn't smell right about AOL and Arianna Huffington's new hyperlocal news partnership with Newark Mayor Corey Booker, says James Rainey. (Los Angeles Times)

    • A 38-year-old Maine man is in jail after threatening to kill or harm two NPR hosts. (The Smoking Gun)

    • Newspaper advertising has sunk to a 25-year low. (AP)

    • Hearst had the most significant 2010 ad page gains in the magazine industry. (minOnline)

    • And perhaps that's because print is in Vogue again. (Women's Wear Daily/Memo Pad)

    • In other magazine news, lady journo Ann Friedman weighs in on her new gig as executive editor of GOOD. (GOOD)

    • "The theory of [famed New York Times fashion photog] Bill Cunningham is democratic and objective; the practice is autocratic and subjective. That is: he's a journalist, a real one. He imposes his sensibility on the world with severe neutrality," writes Tom Scocca. (Capital New York)

    • Take a tour of Glenn Beck's New York City apartment. (Business Insider/The Wire)

    • Trish Regan is out at CNBC. (TV Newser)

    • The Daily will soon be available in western Europe. (paidContent)

    • Playgirl is offering $10,000 for a naked photo of Anderson Cooper. (Business Insider/The Wire)

    • Jimmy Finkelstein, owner of The Hill and an investor in AdWeek, has personally acquired media news aggregator I Want Media. (New York Post)

    • The AP has settled its litigation with Obey Clothing over Shepard Fairey's 2008 "Obama Hope" design. (paidContent)

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