Newsweek Interviews Tim Geithner Live on Facebook

May 18th, 2009 | by Adam Ostrow

mashable.com
We’ve talked a lot recently about how brands can use Facebookfor engaging with their customers. Today, a glimpse of how media companies can further interact with their audience on Facebook by way of Newsweek, who is using their Page on the social network to broadcast a live interview of Treasury Secretary Tim Geithner with Editor Jon Meacham.

The video itself – which is being filmed at the National Press Club – is being delivered by UStream. The Facebook component, however, works just like the Pages of brands. Newsweek has developed a custom tab on their Page that includes the video stream, and under it, is allowing Facebook users to leave comments.

Further, like the updates that brands push out to their fans, Newsweek’s message that they’re interviewing the Treasury Secretary is visible to the magazine’s fans on Facebook via their homepage.

As Justin Smith notes, this interview likely appeals to a “slightly different demographic than your ‘traditional’ Facebook user.” And Newsweek seems like a relative newcomer to Facebook, sporting only a bit more than 3,000 fans.

But it’s yet another example of how big brands are using Facebook Pages to connect with customers, and how we’ll increasingly see applications integrated to make Pages not just a medium for broadcasting messages, but also destination sites for providing content and interaction.

via Newsweek Interviews Tim Geithner Live on Facebook.

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Google Talking To New York Times, Washington Post About… Something | Peter Kafka | MediaMemo | AllThingsD

Remember last week, when Google was forced to explain why it wasn’t single-handedly destroying American newspapers?

Turns out the company is in talks with some of the country’s biggest newspapers to… well, save them isn’t the right phrase. In fact, it’s not clear how to describe the talks. But we do know that Google GOOG is chatting with both the Washington Post WPO and the New York Times NYT, because that’s what employees of the Washington Post and the New York Times are reporting today.

Here’s the Post’s Howard Kurtz, in column this morning castigating newspapers for being too slow to react to the Web:

Post Co. chief executive Donald Graham and Google chief executive Eric Schmidt and their lieutenants have been holding talks about a possible collaboration. This could range from creating new Web pages to technological tools for journalists or readers. Hanging over the talks is the reality that the search giant, while funneling vital traffic to news sites, vacuums up their content without paying a dime.

Post executive Philip Bennett confirmed the discussions, saying: “We’re talking to each other about improved ways of creating and presenting news online.” He calls it “an informal collaboration” that “has produced some interesting ideas already. I’d say that on the journalism side of the conversation we’ve learned a lot.”

Here’s a Google spokesperson’s description of the meeting, for what it’s worth: “This was an informal meeting, and we’re always talking with publishers to find new and creative ways to help them make money from compelling online content.”

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