Tuesday, June 12, 2007

Tony Soprano whacks Lebron James


Big Tony really outdid himself this time, pulling off one of the biggest hits of his career. According to the police blotter, er, the Media Biz blog, Tony Soprano and crew buried Lebron James and his Cleveland Cavaliers in the ratings game, garnering nearly 4.5 million more viewers Sunday night than the NBA finals. Capiche?

Journalists, don't worry ...

... about that little thing called the Internet. It won't be around that long anyway. That's one of the revelations in Michael Rosenberg's funny new column about the nine secrets of journalism.

5. Internet, Schminternet. It will be gone in five years. People will always love reading a newspaper -- and so will you, our intrepid reporter, once you accept our buyout offer.

Thanks to Doug Fisher of Common Sense Journalism, one of my new favorite media bloggers, for pointing this out.

Monday, June 11, 2007

Going head over heels for the Phrase Finder

Whether you're a word nut like me or just want to resolve a friendly argument over the origin of a saying, The Phrase Finder will make your day. It's the bee's knees! That's my two cents worth.

Sunday, June 10, 2007

Hilarious! HILARIOUS!!! ... The next YouTube?

Funny or Die!

It's not an ultimatum. No. It's the hilarious new online video site that some say could become the next YouTube. The site, which was started this spring by comedians Will Ferrell and Adam McKay, features a mix of user-generated content and videos made by the "pros."

Will Ferrell's "The Landlord" video, which I've posted below, is a must-see. Be forewarned, the site contains adult language. But it's used to good, no, scratch that, great effect.

According to Media Biz by Paul R. La Monica "The Landlord" was viewed nearly 13 million times in the first few days of its posting. The site includes several other riotous clips, including Jenna Elfman's "Mama Jams." According to La Monica, if traffic for the site keeps growing, Funny or Die could become the next big thing in Internet video sites.



Thanks to Nikki Corliss for pointing this out.

Saturday, June 9, 2007

The fate of journalism


Dan Gillmor's recent article in the San Francisco Chronicle is a must-read for anyone concerned about the future of journalism and public discourse:

"Journalism's old guard is in a panic. With the latest bad news -- massive editorial staff reductions coming at the San Francisco Chronicle and believable rumors of similar cuts at an already shrunken San Jose Mercury News, among other things -- it's no wonder that people who care about the traditional journalism business are frightened.

But if the issue is the future of journalism -- as opposed to corporate business models -- there's at least as much reason for optimism as paranoia ..."

Click on the link to Gillmor's article to read more.

Also watch this video on the future of journalism and "participatory media":

Are We Rome? The Fall of an Empire and the Fate of America


In the new book Are We Rome?: The Fall of an Empire and the Fate of America, Cullen Murphy, former managing editor of Atlantic Monthly, draws some striking parallels between ancient Rome and modern day America and raises issues that beg our consideration.

Here are a few of them as presented by Gary Kamiya of Salon.com:

(Among the similarities between Rome and America) Murphy cites massive privatization and its attendant sins, corruption, the loss of faith in government and the degradation of civil society. To my mind, this is the most original and compelling part of his book. "Rome had trouble maintaining a distinction between public and private responsibilities -- and between public and private resources," Murphy writes. When this happens, "central government becomes impossible to steer. It took a long time to happen, but the fraying connection between imperial will and concrete action is a big part of What Went Wrong in ancient Rome." Similarly, "America has in recent years embarked on a privatization binge like no other in its history, putting into private hands all manner of activities once thought to be public tasks." Murphy says that "the privatization of power isn't a phenomenon of the margins, a footnote to history -- it's a central dynamic of American public life."

The result, he argues, is not only corruption, the what's-in-it-for-me mentality epitomized by the sleazy likes of Jack Abramoff, but loss of government's "management capacity." In part this is because private contractors don't answer to the same laws and regulations that government ones do; in part it's because government itself is simply vanishing. The loss of efficiency and command and control is bad, but still worse are the intangible ramifications of privatization: "the loss of civic engagement and loyalty across the board is a very real threat." Murphy declines to explicitly single out the Bush administration, and in a larger sense the small-government ideology of the Republican Party, as largely responsible for this trend. But that does not alter the fact that his book is a blistering implicit refutation of the GOP's anti-government ethos, and the still more degraded crony capitalism practiced by Bush.

...

(Murphy argues that) America needs to "stop treating government as a necessary evil, and instead rely on it proudly for the big things it can do well ... The Social Security check every month, the safe drugs and highways, the guaranteed student loans, the heath-care safety net in old age, the sandbags when the rivers flood -- their inherent benefits aside, these things promote a sense of common alliance and mutual obligation that dwarf narrow considerations of 'efficiency.'"

We should institute a program of national service for all young people, "which would revive the militia ethic of long ago. 'We're all in it together' is a spirit that Rome lost."

...

As the late Senator Paul Wellstone said, "We as a society need to be encouraging people to focus not just on individual wants but on serving the larger community."

(Watch Cullen Murphy's recent interview with Stephen Colbert.)

Thursday, June 7, 2007

A little inspiration for those considering a finals-week all-nighter


Is a finals-week all-nighter the only means of salvaging your term? If so, here's a little inspiration for you: "A man in Cornwall, England, actually went 11 consecutive days without a wink of sleep." -- Read the rest of the story on Howstuffworks.com