Pretending to heal

It’s very nice that Raines and Boyd have stepped down from the Times, where the entire paper had become an extended editorial rant on Raines’ obsession du jour, ranging from rich white Southern golfer ladies to imaginary Bush criticism from the likes of Henry Kissinger, but it doesn’t do much for the cause of media … Continue reading “Pretending to heal”

It’s very nice that Raines and Boyd have stepped down from the Times, where the entire paper had become an extended editorial rant on Raines’ obsession du jour, ranging from rich white Southern golfer ladies to imaginary Bush criticism from the likes of Henry Kissinger, but it doesn’t do much for the cause of media diversity. The Times was losing circulation and credibility under Raines, and had he stayed on the job for another year, it would have been regarded as just another paper. Now they’ll be able to pretend to reform while doing pretty much the same as always. As Ben Domenech points out, the Times’ credibility recession began under acting exec editor Lelyveld.

I never did like sacrifical lambs, but I also don’t like biased media that pretend to be impartial. If the Times were really serious about reforming itself, it would have been Maureen Dowd’s head on the block alongside Raines, not Boyd’s.

Some controversy

Speaking of Jarvis, this little post just might spark a little controversy: As for the anti-big-media bashing we’ve seen from webloggers — inspired lately by the FCC and by the New York Times screwups — I’ll argue that they are essentially jealous. Webloggers are nanomedia moguls with big-media aspirations. Most of them are conservative or … Continue reading “Some controversy”

Speaking of Jarvis, this little post just might spark a little controversy:

As for the anti-big-media bashing we’ve seen from webloggers — inspired lately by the FCC and by the New York Times screwups — I’ll argue that they are essentially jealous. Webloggers are nanomedia moguls with big-media aspirations. Most of them are conservative or libertarian and thus should abhor regulation, even of media. But in this case and this case only, they endorse regulation. Why? Because they hate big media. And they hate big media because it has the resources and the distribution and the audience they don’t have. Hell, big media pays; blogging doesn’t.

Isn’t it odd that only a tiny number of bloggers favor media deregulation?

End of the warblog

Maybe Dave Winer* is right, and warblogs are so last week. We need a new kind of blog, so this whole thing doesn’t degenerate into a bunch of teenaged girls all trying to be Rebecca Blood, so how about wood blogs? Woodblogging is manly, world-changing, technical, and already established, so it’s got all the ingredients … Continue reading “End of the warblog”

Maybe Dave Winer* is right, and warblogs are so last week. We need a new kind of blog, so this whole thing doesn’t degenerate into a bunch of teenaged girls all trying to be Rebecca Blood, so how about wood blogs? Woodblogging is manly, world-changing, technical, and already established, so it’s got all the ingredients of The Next Big Thing.

And besides, nobody ever booed a woodblogger off the stage like they do some people I could name. What kind of moron invites a commercial software merchant to keynote an Open Source conference anyway?

See also: Carnell’s comments.

*Winer’s still upset that blogging didn’t go mainstream until Sept. 11, 2001, and when it did it was on the back of Blogger, not Radio. Such is life.

Miss Vermont

Ken Layne is devoted to Katy Johnson, Miss Vermont. It’s his kind of story, by gum. Here’s your Google cache link for the sordid details. Sorry, judge, but Google doesn’t do censorship, even when it should (not that that rule applies here, mind you.) Now for a little wet, um, cat: (“Pussy” is not the … Continue reading “Miss Vermont”

Ken Layne is devoted to Katy Johnson, Miss Vermont. It’s his kind of story, by gum.

Here’s your Google cache link for the sordid details. Sorry, judge, but Google doesn’t do censorship, even when it should (not that that rule applies here, mind you.)

Now for a little wet, um, cat:

fluffybath.jpg

(“Pussy” is not the polite word to use here, of course.)

FCC Rules

After watching the FCC ownership rules hearing on C-Span, and listening to as much of the commentary by folks like KKK alumni Fritz Hollings and Trent Lott as I could stand, I came away with the belief that the uproar over these rule changes is groundless. Lawrence Lessig said: “The FCC will liberate the networks … Continue reading “FCC Rules”

After watching the FCC ownership rules hearing on C-Span, and listening to as much of the commentary by folks like KKK alumni Fritz Hollings and Trent Lott as I could stand, I came away with the belief that the uproar over these rule changes is groundless.

Lawrence Lessig said: “The FCC will liberate the networks to consolidate because the FCC feels pressured by the courts” and some other stuff, but the rules expressly forbid mergers or takeovers between the Big Four TV networks, so that’s clearly hooey. The big changes were easing of the limit on local stations a network can own (which brought existing ownership into compliance) and relaxation of the rule prohibiting newspapers, TV, and radio from being owned by the same company in the same market. ClearChannel doesn’t gain by the rules, and may have to shed some stations.

So if the opposition to these rules isn’t rational – and at least some of it isn’t (Susie “Medea” Benjamin, trust fund activist, got herself arrested again at the hearing), then what’s it based on? A lot of folks were comfortable with the way things were in America when TV news came from the three networks plus CNN, the same stories with the same liberal/centrist spin. Then along came Rupert Murdoch and we got the Fox News Channel, the New York Post, and the Fox Network, and the traditional liberal agenda got some competition. Fox isn’t always, or perhaps even often right, but it is a counterbalance and a different point of view.

The opponents of the rule change are scared that people like Murdoch will alter the media landscape at the level of local print news and broadcast news, an area still controlled by the liberal oligarchy. I hope they’re right, because I’d like to have a TV channel or a daily paper in the Frisco Bay Area with a centrist or right-wing orientation, and it certainly appears that we’d never get one under the old rules.

I don’t believe for a minute that opponents to these ownership rules from the left care about diversity of opinion, which is sure to be enhanced by allowing Murdoch to buy more media properties in more markets. More power to him.

Blackout continues

The news blackout of new FCC media ownership news continues apace. The only live coverage of the hearing itself will be on C-SPAN, starting at 9:30 AM EDT, and only available to people with access to cable TV, satellite TV, or the Internet. Obviously, the evil VRWC doesn’t want you to know what’s going on, … Continue reading “Blackout continues”

The news blackout of new FCC media ownership news continues apace. The only live coverage of the hearing itself will be on C-SPAN, starting at 9:30 AM EDT, and only available to people with access to cable TV, satellite TV, or the Internet. Obviously, the evil VRWC doesn’t want you to know what’s going on, right?

UPDATE: Howie Kurtz discussed the pending rule change today on his “Reliable Sources” show on CNN; he clearly didn’t get the memo. Shhh…..Howie, this is supposed to be a secret.

ANOTHER UPDATE: Lou Josephs blogged it live. Local radio ownership rules were actually tightened, much to the dismay of Clear Channel, and newspapers were allowed easier access to TV and radio stations. I don’t see why this was a big deal.

Worst-kept secret in history

CNN finally breaks the blackout in the proposed FCC rule changes on media ownership: WASHINGTON (CNN) – The Federal Communications Commission has received so many public comments on its Web sites regarding Monday’s vote on media ownership consolidation that the agency is having “problems” with its server, an FCC official said Friday. And the messages … Continue reading “Worst-kept secret in history”

CNN finally breaks the blackout in the proposed FCC rule changes on media ownership:

WASHINGTON (CNN) – The Federal Communications Commission has received so many public comments on its Web sites regarding Monday’s vote on media ownership consolidation that the agency is having “problems” with its server, an FCC official said Friday.

And the messages aren’t just coming via e-mails. The official said the FCC is experiencing problems with their voice comment phone line, which has also been swamped.

The official said the agency is working to fix the problems.

As blackouts go, this one was pretty lame, but it does prove one thing: there are so many alternative sources of news these days, it doesn’t matter how concentrated media ownership is in the big cities. The news gets out anyway.

Times revisionism

Jarvis reported on a complaint from NY Daily News columnist Zev Chafets on Maureen Dowd’s use of ellipses to alter the meaning of a statement by the president on Al Qaeda: Here’s what she wrote: “‘Al Qaeda is on the run,’ President Bush said last week. ‘That group of terrorists who attacked our country is … Continue reading “Times revisionism”

Jarvis reported on a complaint from NY Daily News columnist Zev Chafets on Maureen Dowd’s use of ellipses to alter the meaning of a statement by the president on Al Qaeda:

Here’s what she wrote:

“‘Al Qaeda is on the run,’ President Bush said last week. ‘That group of terrorists who attacked our country is slowly but surely being decimated … they’re not a problem anymore.'”

Here’s what Bush actually said:

“Al Qaeda is on the run. That group of terrorists who attacked our country is slowly but surely being decimated. Right now, about half of all the top Al Qaeda operatives are either jailed or dead. In either case, they’re not a problem anymore.”

The Times has now altered the on-line version of the offending Dowd column to restore the President’s actual quote, to wit:

“Al Qaeda is on the run,” the president said in Little Rock, Ark. “That group of terrorists who attacked our country is slowly, but surely, being decimated. Right now, about half of all the top Al Qaeda operatives are either jailed or dead. In either case, they’re not a problem anymore.”

This correction was done silently, so the reader has no clue as to what Dowd actually wrote in the first place. Somebody needs to give those folks an ethics course, and any number of bloggers could teach it.

But now that the Times is re-writing columns in response to emailed complaints, some major rework of the Krugman, Kristoff, and Rich oeuvre is surely in progress.

UPDATE: See comments by Robert Cox of The National Debate, who broke the story initially.

Instapundit backup site

Hosting Matters is down, and with it a number of blogs such as Jeff Jarvis and Instapundit. There is an Instapundit backup site if you can’t live without your hourly fix of Professor Reynolds. Oddly, the Hosting Matters status page is silent about the problem, which has persisted for several hours. They must have pissed … Continue reading “Instapundit backup site”

Hosting Matters is down, and with it a number of blogs such as Jeff Jarvis and Instapundit. There is an Instapundit backup site if you can’t live without your hourly fix of Professor Reynolds. Oddly, the Hosting Matters status page is silent about the problem, which has persisted for several hours. They must have pissed off Stacy Tabb, who would naturally destroy them for that offense.

On the plus side, the evil Vodkapundit is also down.

UPDATE: Jarvis is up now.