Before attending the Golden Globes on Sunday night, Rupert Murdoch used his Twitter account to criticize President Obama and Google over Internet piracy. Read the full story.
- Slideshow: Golden Globe winners
- Slideshow: The red carpet

Matt Sayles / AP
Rupert Murdoch and his wife Wendi Deng arrive at the 69th Annual Golden Globe Awards on Jan. 15, 2012 in Los Angeles.
Before attending the Golden Globes on Sunday night, Rupert Murdoch used his Twitter account to criticize President Obama and Google over Internet piracy. Read the full story.
Hey, this would make a great reality TV show.
Reuters reports:
LOS ANGELES — A defiant Rupert Murdoch stood his ground at News Corp's annual meeting on Friday, fending off angry shareholders who slammed the media company's poor corporate governance in the wake of a phone hacking scandal and called for him to give up the chairman role.
British member of parliament Tom Watson led the charge against the media mogul, saying journalists at the defunct News of the World hacked computers as well as phone voice mails.
Watson said News Corp could face new investigations in the UK by the country's Serious Organised Crime Agency, caused by the actions of at least three private investigators employed by News International, News Corp's UK newspaper publishing unit.
Related: Bottom Line: Murdoch facing the wrath of shareholders at annual meeting

Nick Ut / AP
British lawmaker Tom Watson talks to reporters during a protest in front of Fox Studios in Los Angeles on Friday, Oct 21. A few dozen people showed up to demonstrate outside Fox Studios where News Corp. is holding its annual shareholders meeting.

David McNew / Reuters
Protesters demonstrate at Fox Studios during the annual News Corp. stockholder meeting in Los Angeles, California October 21.

Eric Thayer / Getty Images
Protesters demonstrate the annual shareholder meeting of News Corp at Fox Studios October 21 in Century City, California. Protesters are demonstrating against Fox and News Corp's for what they see as one-sided reporting practices.
I'm pretty sure this is just the first shoe to drop.
As msnbc.com news services reported:
Media analysts said the decision to close the newspaper appears to be a strategy to smooth the way for Murdoch’s plan to buy the 60 percent or so of British Sky Broadcasting that his media empire does not already own. The U.K. government is expected to make its final decision on the proposed deal by September.
The News of the World has been published since 1843. Rupert Murdoch acquired the newspaper in 1969 and it is currently the best-selling English-language paper in the world with a circulation of more than 2.6 million, according to recent figures.

Paul Hackett / Reuters
Two members of The News of The World staff hug outside a public house close to News International offices in Wapping, London, July 7. Rupert Murdoch's News Corporation will close its tabloid News of the World after this Sunday's edition, as a result of an escalating phone hacking scandal, James Murdoch said on Thursday.

Peter Macdiarmid / Getty Images
News International chief executive Rebekah Brooks leaves the office of The News of The World on July 7, 2011 in London, England.

Matt Dunham / AP
James Murdoch, Chairman and Chief Executive of News Corporation, Europe and Asia is driven away from the offices of News International in London, Thursday, July 7.

Kerim Okten / EPA
A man takes an issue of a free evening newspaper outside the entrance of a train station in London, England, July 7.

Indigo / Getty Images
Rebekah Brooks (formerly Wade) with Rupert Murdoch and son James Murdoch attend day 3 of the Cheltenham Horse Racing Festival on March 18, 2010 in Cheltenham, England.

Bert Hardy / Getty Images
Saturday afternoon in the newsroom at the 'News of The World' office, 18th April 1953. Printers query a print with Chief Sub 'Tiny' Lear and Editor A. G Waters stands by. Original Publication : Picture Post - 6488 - The News of The World - pub. 1953

Getty Images
News Of The World front page from 1954.

18th April 1953: A worker oiling a printing press at the headquarters of the 'News Of The World' which has a circulation of more than 8,000,000. The paper travels through this press at 10 - 15 miles an hour. Original Publication: Picture Post - 6488 - The 'News Of The World' - pub. 1953

Peter Macdiarmid / Getty Images
Dummies and puppets representing Prime Minister David Cameron (L) and Culture Secretary Jeremy Hunt (R) are held aloft by Rupert Murdoch at the launch of the campaign group Hacked off near Parliament on July 6 in London, England. The Prime Minister has promised that there will be a public inquiry into phone hacking carried out by journalists at The News of the World newspaper.
Phone hacking may have been viewed a harmless mischief when the targets were celebrities. Now that news is coming out about crime victims possibly suffering the same fate, Rupert Murdoch's News of the World is on the hot seat.