Dan Rather Loses Lawsuit
As Dan Rather would say, this lawsuit was enough to make his fingernails sweat.
But the suspense is over. The former anchorman lost his $70 million lawsuit against CBS. The newsman sued the network after he was removed as anchor, then dumped from CBS completely.
The dispute centered on a story Rather reported on "60 Minutes II" months before the presidential election between Bush and Kerry back in 2004. The controversial report detailed how Bush was given special treatment while he served in the Texas National Guard during the Vietnam war. But the sources turned out to be inaccurate, and the show had to step back from the story.
Rather claims he was the scapegoat for the report and that his rep suffered after the network shelved him. CBS said they were within their rights. The appeals court sided with CBS. One reason: The court didn't buy the argument that the living legend had trouble finding work after the nasty ending with CBS: He is anchor of a cable news show now.
Again, to put it Rather style: "It was always a big rock up a high hill. The rock just got bigger and the hill just got higher."
Filed under: Media
Newspapers, e-Readers and Billionaire Doomsayers...Oh My
Billionaire investor Sam Zell said he "made a mistake" buying the Tribune Co. and that the "future of the newspaper industry is at risk today." Sumner Redstone, a broadcast billionaire whose father sold papers in Boston, said that while he would never die, newspapers would. Warren Buffett, who aired his doubts about the newspaper industry back in 1992, confirmed lately that his holding company wouldn't invest in the foolscap biz "at any price."
As if the litter of dead or wounded newspapers weren't enough, the stinging dismissal from the billionaire boys' club is wounding indeed. The only thing missing is Donald Trump claiming his hair would outlast newspapers and be a source of renewable energy to boot.
Of course, they're not attacking the message so much as the anachronistic medium: Plenty of eyeballs still read the news, but there hasn't been a good way to figure out how to keep the news going without starving journalists. There have been no shortage of answers (or failed solutions). Now, a bigger, buffer Kindle DX from Amazon ($489 retail, summer release) has spurred hopeful speculation that this will be the really cool device to encourage people to read (and pay) for information.
That school of thought is sort of equivalent to the iPod-as-savior model...although the music industry's not doing that well. Blogs like ReadWriteWeb and Crunch Gear have shot down the Kindle-as-newspaper-platform model almost as fast as traditional media can float the idea. And indeed, the New York Times threw out the proposal of Amazon as "electronic life preserver to old-media companies," only to trample it the very next day. Of course, the NYT company almost closed down a major newspaper itself, which just encourages not-so-idle billionaire chatter.
The Kindle, still without color or video, might have to find a savior itself. Wired reports not one but two threats: Plastic Logic's lightweight, letter-sized touchscreen sheet due out in 2010 and, even worse, rumors of Apple building a tablet-sized iPhone. So far, infamous technophobes Redstone and Buffett haven't spoken on that topic yet. But they probably know—they read newspapers every day.
Filed under: Tech, Apple Computer, Business, Books, Media, Newspapers, iPhone
Obama Photos Trigger Web Delirium
Not perhaps since John F. Kennedy's own beach photos has a nation been so stirred to seek out revealing images of the incoming commander-in-chief. Searches are soaring for "obama pictures" and, in a realm normally reserved for prepubescent idols, "obama shirtless." Yes, the man so far designated to stimulate the economy, restore American dignity abroad, and save the planet from global warming, has inspired lookups more befitting a, dare we say, heartthrob.
Reassuringly, other recent Obama searches do dwell on the more relevant issues at hand ("obama inauguration," "obama cabinet picks"). The photo exposé, however, once again underscores the celebritization of Obama (as a John McCain ad once famously pointed out).
The latest act of online voyeurism comes from a confluence of three recent pictorial events: Two include Barack Obama's return to Time magazine's cover as Man of the Year and the release of never-before-seen college photos, in which the future No. 44 posed in a Panama hat, leather jacket, and occasionally with a cigarette for a hopeful photographer's portfolio. That momentous puff induced a teacup-sized tempest as people zeroed in on the "obama smoking" pic.
The third event is his holiday trip back to his home state. The president-elect did what any red-blooded American would do in a tropical isle: He stripped down to his swimming trunks and dove right into the winter surf. The ABC video showed a fleeting rear view of Obama descending into the water, but that was enough to trigger the buzz for "obama hawaii" (+130%), "obama vacation" (+113%) and, of course, the aforementioned shirtless queries.
To those who would defend the dignity of the Oval Office and all its inhabitants, will their brains eventually soften with four years of headlines like the New York Post's "O, My Bod!" (with yet another name twist in paragraph one: "Just call him 'Ab'-bama.'"). Forget tabloids—the Honolulu Star-Bulletin reported regular citizens turning into paparazzi packs. Meanwhile, a true paparazzo snuck a shot, and the hosting site was promptly overwhelmed by political oglers.
His photogenic vim and vigor have long evoked comparisons to the charismatic Kennedy, who similarly inspired a brouhaha over his beach photo. Former Vanity Fair magazine editor Tina Brown, in a CNN interview about Obama's enormous star power, claimed that Obama is aware of his appeal and "he deliberately dials back on his charisma" to spare the masses. (Brown by the way once ventured on Greek God territory and called Obama "Apollonian.")
Indeed, the president-elect himself, while courting the exposure, showed signs of being willing to draw the line: An AFP article noted Obama saying to news photographers, "Ok guys, come on...How many shots do you need?" Doubtless once the honeymoon period is over (and technically, the wedding's not until January 20th anyhow), this rapture will be tempered.
As for the shirtless searches, a slideshow of "Other Shirtless Presidents" reveals he is not the first, nor will he likely be the last. And as for shirtless celebrities versus shirtless politicians, Obama's Web appeal runs second to "Twilight" star Robert Pattinson, thereby upholding the right and proper balance in the world.
Filed under: Politics, Photography, Media, Barack Obama
Watching the Watchdogs
Newsmakers and newsbreakers, beware: The media watchdogs are getting savvier ... and funnier.
The 2008 election fracas has proven so far to be a banner year for women, minorities, news junkies, political websites, "Saturday Night Live," and comedians poking fun at the entire process. In fact, if Wall Street had decided to buy stock in Stephen Colbert and Jon Stewart, America might not be in this economic mess.
CNN and Comedy Central are finally cashing in on the electorate's inclination to laugh at others, including the media itself. "D.L. Hughley Breaks the News" puts one of the original kings of comedy on the Cable News Network Saturday nights. News about the "News" got anticipatory searches pumping for Hughley, boosting his online profile into our top 60,000 search terms. In a TV Guide Q&A, Hughley calls it a different sort of late-night talk show with less celebs and more interesting real folk like the sheriff who refused to evict people from foreclosed homes. He also points out that he'll be CNN's first intentional comedian. (Sorry, Wolf Blitzer, you had your chance.)
His Oct. 25 premiere lags just 10 days behind David Alan Grier, one of the original "In Living Color" kings who wasn't a Wayan brother. The presidential Democratic nomination of Barack Obama spurred Comedy Central to move up the news satire "Chocolate News" from its originally scheduled 2009 debut to October 15. Grier's slant—which the Hollywood Reporter lauds as "TV's first black-supremacist parody"—is less concerned with real news than its comic essence and spoofing media, like a bit on biracial Siamese twins. Searches from the day of its premiere pushed Grier's buzz past Stewart or Colbert, and his show's buzz higher than "The Daily Show" or "The Colbert Report."
While Hughley and Grier latch onto the funnybone, armchair watchdogs may soon be able to literally highlight media bias on their own: The New York Times profiled SpinSpotter's plug-in, which allows readers to insert red flags into an online article's objectional passages and explain why in a pop-up box.
Many kinks still need to be worked out, but the Seattle company hopes to make money by selling the service ... to reporters, politicians and public relations. On second thought, someone put a watchdog on the watchdog.
Cover Shots: Best Glossy First Impressions of 2008
No matter how media evolves, the magazine's slippery, sensual, glossy appeal still beguiles. Yet an excruciating editorial science (of sorts) goes into the making of a cover, designed to draw eyeballs at the old-fashioned newsstand.
The American Society of Magazine Editors will host its awards ceremony for the most eye-catching covers of 2008. Will a cartoon of contentious bedfellows Hillary Clinton and Barack Obama reaching for a 3 a.m. phone call win the News Cover category? Could Latina's gold-hued, come-hither photo of Jessica Alba beat out a mud-splattered George Clooney and contemplative Willie Nelson? Shall a strange blend of Iranian politics and a Larry Craig restroom stall reference steal the biggest title of all?
Check out all the covers at the ASME site.
Filed under: Award Shows, Images, Magazines, Media
top movers
| Rank | Subject | 1-Day Move |
|---|---|---|
| 1 | Ford 400 | Breakout! |
| 2 | Indonesia Ferry | Breakout! |
| 3 | Jordan Chandler | 3481% |
| 4 | Evan Chandler | 2322% |
| 5 | American Music Awards | 1841% |
| 6 | John F. Kennedy | 1529% |
| 7 | Turkey Stuffing Recipes | 1361% |
| 8 | Liam Hemsworth | 1172% |
| 9 | Lou Dobbs | 1142% |
| 10 | Hendrick Motorsports | 888% |

top leaders
| Rank | Subject | Move | Score |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Black Friday | +340 | 1290 |
| 2 | NFL | +489 | 670 |
| 3 | Jennifer Lopez | +451 | 515 |
| 4 | New Moon | -67 | 250 |
| 5 | American Music Awards | +236 | 249 |
| 6 | UFC | -36 | 239 |
| 7 | Miley Cyrus | +66 | 169 |
| 8 | Hulu | -11 | 154 |
what's the buzz?
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