Jun 30, 2009

Fireflies

I spotted my first of the season a few weeks ago, but I had no idea that I was watching a combination mating call and eerily glowing epitaph. Consider this comment from an article in today's NY Times:
North American fireflies spend two years underground as larvae, then spend the final two weeks of their lives as adults, flashing, mating and laying eggs.
The next time you find yourself considering the meaning of life, remember those little lightening bugs, who get just fourteen days to do it all.

Hidden Alabama History

If you watched many FTR episodes during my tenure there, you know Alabama History was one of my favorite topics. It still is, and that's why a story in this morning's N.Y. Times caught my attention. Read the story, visit the site and then ask yourself...where are the places in our state that are not commemorated by an historic marker, but should be. (I especially love the story in the article of the brother of John Wilkes Booth saving Lincoln's son's life!) For example:
It was an Alabama woman, Mary Anderson who invented the windshield wiper after visiting New York City and seeing how much trouble streetcar drivers had in the rain. She lived at 1211 21st Street South in Birmingham. Is the address marked? She died in June of 1953. Also in Birmingham, the location of the Aeromarine gun shop where James Earl Ray bought the rifle he used to kill Rev. Martin Luther King, or the apartment on Highland Ave. where he lived before traveling to Memphis. The head of the project told me by email this morning: "I don't have my Alabama story settled yet, so any more ideas would be great, and that's the best way people can help!!" What about other places in Alabama that aren't marked, but should be? The website of the "Here is Where" project offers a way to contribute ideas, but please share them with me too!

Ted Bryant

The 1oth anniversary of reporter Ted Bryant's death arrives with the shock of time passing so quickly. I knew of Ted more than I knew him, though he was a guest on "FTR" a couple of times while I was host, and before that I would run into him in Birmingham now and then. He died a half-dozen years before the Birmingham Post-Herald went out of business.
Because I wanted to mention the anniversary of his passing on this blog, I had written down his date of death as today, June 30th, in 1999. I used as a source this article in The Southerner. Ted would have been amused, I suspect, at the error. "Can't y'all even get my death date correct?" A resolution in his honor passed by the State Legislature (which by itself would also have caused howls of laughter I'm sure) set his date of death as June 24, 1999. Another source said June 23rd, and it includes the photo I used here, a photo of his grave in Elmwood Cemetery, and a copy of the Birmingham News story about his death published on Thursday June 24th, referring to his death as Wednesday. So the 23rd of June it is (and was, my commemoration of Ted's passing is therefore late by a few days.) When I arrived at Alabama Public Television in 1998, I was told that Ted refused to be on the show anymore because of some argument or another about the show format or other guests invited a few years previous. I can't remember what the disagreement was about, but since I knew Ted from Birmingham, I apologized and talked him into coming back on. He did, several times, during what was to be his last year alive. Had he lived, don't you know he would have had fun using his character Redd Kneck to comment on all of the tomfoolery that's gone on in Montgomery during the past decade?

Jun 29, 2009

The AG's Race Online

I went hunting again, today, for the online home of the Troy King re-election campaign. Google searches turned up nada. But I did find him on Facebook (282 "supporters", including another "Troy King" in Australia), and it was there that I spotted a small link to his campaign site. It's pretty bare, just a "bio" and a solicitation for funds. Course, the primary election is still almost a year off.
King's primary opponent, lobbyist Luther Strange, is already occupying some online real estate, both a website and facebook (1,192 "friends"). I did not find any disclaimers on either candidate's facebook page...i.e., "paid for by the campaign to reelect candidate x". Does campaign finance law not cover Facebook pages on which votes or donations are solicited? The Federal Elections Commission regulations on the Internet seem to say only ads placed by one person on another person's website require the disclaimer.
I did find some journalists on the friends' lists. Is it any more appropriate for journalists to be "facebook friends" with candidates than it is for them to socialize with them in real life? I've signed up for news releases and announcements from some candidates, but is "friending" them crossing a line?
Meanwhile, smelling blood in the water, several Democrats are considering a run reports AP's Phil Rawls this morning.

MMMM # 49 Listening to Cassettes. (Yes, Cassettes!)

For a number of reasons, I found myself diving into a box filled with tapes in that old format last week, listening to mostly radio "air-checks" stretching from 1968 to 1994. One, from my first radio job, is on a small reel-to-reel. The rest are on cassette, that omnipresent tape format of the pre-CD 1970 - 1990's. Some of them were unintelligible, some of them just plain bad. But others! There was an interview with a Soviet Cosmonaut (with live translation), lots of conversations about Bill Clinton and Monica, about Richard Arrington and the always interesting Birmingham City Council. And there was a recording of a show done on the 10th anniversary of the day WERC changed formats from music to news/talk. We had on and off-air folks from the station's past visit and talk...Jesse Champion and John Bomer and Tony Giles ("The Original Trivia Challenge"!) and Kevin McCarthy and Bill Lawson (now of WZZK fame, one of the only DJ's to transition to the new format and become a talk-show host) and Karanel Ezpeleta and Lynn Sampson (who like me, went on to host For The Record) and...trivia question: who was the first person to host the morning show in the News/Talk format? Answer: It was Bob Holmes, who you might better remember for his distinctive "Long Lewis Ford" radio commercials. Does anyone remember the "Five O'Clock News at Four" or "Sunday Morning Breakdown" or "The Peoples' Journal"?
Frankly, radio doesn't have much of a memory, especially now. Conventional wisdom is that three weeks after you leave a station, nobody can remember your name. I doubt very seriously any of the people working at WERC now could easily name the date of the switchover (even the year!), and certainly not the name of the last record played (it was not casually chosen) or who played it. I'll bet there was no on-air mention made of the 20th or 25th anniversaries, which have now passed. Too bad, they could have brought in some much-needed advertising revenue.
As I listened to the dusty old cassette tapes that preserve shows I hosted over the years, I wondered about the millions of words I spoke during tens of thousands of hours on-air, and whether any of them really meant anything. Listening, I remembered the "regular callers" from back then..Don from Downtown and Roy in Hoover and "P.R." and Michael The Tree-cutter, listeners who became self-selected part of the act. Those were perhaps much more innocent times, before the razor-sharp political lines were drawn and hosts were part of one camp or the other. OK, maybe I'm looking at it through, if not rose colored, at least somewhat tinted glasses. But wasn't that a time when you would listen to shows that made 'ya think, instead of just those that reinforced what you already believed?
[NOTE: as with just about every topic, there is a website that records some Birmingham radio and TV history..."Birmingham Rewound". The WERC bumper sticker above comes from that site, I actually have an older one..with WERC AM/FM on it, but my scanner, like the rest of my computer life this week, is screwed!]
[ADDENDUM: The NY Times reports on something that bothered me as I watched the coverage of the Iran election riots. The use of material "we can't confirm"...or they found "impossible to confirm". Uh, then why are you using it?]
[The Monday Morning Media Memo is a regular feature of this blog.]

Jun 28, 2009

The Dead PC

I continue to fight my way out of this computer mess...sorry for the lack of posts here.

Jun 26, 2009

MMMM # 48 New Media Can Bite

Democratic Rep. Artur Davis' campaign for Governor took a hit when they sought to follow President Obama into the world of new-media campaigning. In announcing the opening of their website, the campaign said they wanted Alabamians to send in "ideas that will unlock the 21st Century." Fair enough. So after a few weeks 80 ideas had been submitted (they might have done better if they hadn't required full registration)...and the winner is: legalize marijuana. Worst yet, for the campaign anyway, 118 of the 2300 people voting on the ideas approved, making it the top vote getter. Whoops. and the second highest vote getter (66 votes) was almost equally controversial: allow farmers to grow hemp, the no-THC version of the marijuana plant. In third place was draw up a new constitution. So how does the candidate address the top two issue on his own campaign web site? Why, at first, he ignores it, of course. Here what the Davis camp sent out earlier this week: "Our online community produced a lot of worthwhile ideas. Some of the leading choices included reforming Alabama's outdated 1901 constitution, reforming our education system, making our tax structure less regressive, connecting our state through mass transit, and creating an environmental agency with real teeth." Oh Mr. candidate...what about the legalize marijuana vote? Mr. candidate? Silence. The idea-contest hijacking was orchestrated by some who knows a little about running for Governor. Loretta Nall, who was a Libertarian candidate in 2006. Needless to say, she's not happy that the Davis camp is ignoring her coup. She's encouraging supporters to write to Davis: "Point out all the positive things that would come from legalizing marijuana. New source of revenue for our cash starved state. New jobs when we are facing the worst unemployment rates in 25 years. Easing prison overcrowding and saving tens of millions of dollars that we spend to arrest, prosecute and incarcerate peaceful citizens for ingesting a natural plant. Point out that we should be allowed to pay tax thereby enriching the state and its citizens instead of our money going to violent drug cartels." The incident proves a couple of points. 1) Candidate Davis is going to have to attract a lot more than 2300 people in a state of 4.6 million to win the election, 2) treading in the new media without a lot of foresight (and a staff with expertise) is dangerous. And 3) self-selected polling of any kind is subject to manipulation and is basically meaningless. That's why I always scoff at the TV News polls..."Go to our website and let us know what you think!" Yea, right. Earlier today the online references to the questions about marijuana legalization and hemp were eliminated from the campaign website completely. Gone. But till then, "the ideas that will unlock Alabama's potential for the 21st century" included at the very top two ideas that he wanted to avoid like the plague. Will his opponents ignore the candidate's stumble? [NOTE: The Monday Morning Media Memo is a regular feature of timlennox.com While it obviously is normally posted on Mondays, I'm posting it today because of the computer crash this week.] [UPDATE: Tuesday, June 30, 2009: The Associated Press reports the story.]

Jun 25, 2009

24/7 & 365 too!

If I needed proof that you can't look away from your cyber homes for even a minute, the crash of my home PC proved it this week. It forced me offline for about 48 hours and look what happened while I was gone! A minister makes his call to the faithful a call-to arms. Michael Jackson and Farrah Fawcett die, leaving anyone with the word "star" attached to their names looking over their shoulders (no wait! Was Ed McMahon one of the infamous three?), It took just a couple of hours for one of the Tweeters I "follow" to post a Jackson joke, which I won't repeat here. Tough crowd out there on Twitter! Even dying doesn't spare you! City Stages, which I blogged about just before the crash, is also pronounced dead. A South Carolina Republican proves his party is diverse enough to include adulterers, and he's no less than the Chairman of the GOP Governor's Association! The U.S. Supreme Court rules 8 - 1 against high-school strip searches (by Republicans and Democrats), with Clarence Thomas the only pro strip-search vote (no, I'm not going there.), and David Letterman beat (Conan's) The Tonight Show, first time in 3 years! No vacations in cyberspace, that's for sure. Good to be back, and as soon as I can decide between a replacement PC or going to the dark side of Apple, I'll be back 100%. (-: [P.S. A good date to be welcomed back....on June 25th In 1868, Congress passed an Omnibus Act allowing for the readmission of Florida, Alabama, Louisiana, Georgia, North Carolina and South Carolina to the Union.]

I'm in recovery...

...from the crash....a friend has lent a machine and I'm trying to decide whether to bury or try to fix the old one (it probably is a failure of the Mother board, not too pricey but still...the PC is 4 or so years old...). One way or the other I'll be back posting by tomorrow....lots going on. Thanks for your patience! Tim

Jun 24, 2009

PC down!

My PC is down for the count....posting will resume ASAP! Tim

Jun 23, 2009

Montgomery's Capitol Heights

The Capitol Heights Neighborhood in Montgomery has been named as one of the 51 Best Places to Buy an old house in the U.S. by "This Old House" Magazine. The magazine describes it as
"a beautiful old streetcar suburb that's gaining favor among lawyers, teachers, architects, and maintenance workers who like the diverse, tight-knit community—and that it's five blocks from their jobs in downtown Montgomery."

Voting Award

Montgomery County, Alabama, has won a voting award reports WSFA-TV, and although I'd never heard of the group conferring it, apparently its quite an honor. The Houston, Texas based National Association of Election Officials Professional Practices Program gave it's "Democracy Award" to the county for a booklet it produced that included locally produced artwork with an election theme. Of course we might want to temper our enthusiasm for the award by mentioning that last year's winner was Chicago, Illinois, which has earned a reputation for being ground zero for election fraud.

Prisoner Rape - what will Alabama do?

A major study of the sexual abuse and rape of prisoners includes an Alabama juvenile facility. The report from The National Prison Rape Elimination Commission includes some common sense findings...that smaller, younger, gay or female prisoners are more likely to be victims. One of the institutions studied by the commission was the residential juvenile detention facility in Chalkville, Alabama. The commission report includes an incident there in which a minor juvenile was forced to a hotel by a staff member...
L.C. submitted a written complaint reporting the abuse to the facility superintendent, but he wrote back that “he could not control the actions of Chalkville Campus’ employees when they were off-site.”
The Commission is fully aware of the roadblocks in the way of reducing prison rape:
Congress conferred upon the Commission an enormous responsibility: developing national standards that will lead to the prevention, detection, and punishment of prison rape. Yet Congress also and appropriately required us to seriously consider the restrictions of cost, differences among systems and facilities, and existing political structures.
I imagine those financial and political difficulties will be especially pronounced here in Alabama, where nobody especially wants prison rape to occur, but because of those "political structures", few elected officials will stand up and endorse the spending of sparse tax dollars to reduce it either.
The Commission's full report is online.

Jun 22, 2009

Email Filtering

For the second time, an email I've sent to a particular organization has been "filtered"...i.e., REJECTED as undesirable. Here's the verbiage used when it bounced back to me:
The message carried your return address, so it was either a genuine mail from you, or a sender address was faked and your e-mail address abused by third party, in which case we apologize for undesired notification.We do try to minimize backscatter for more prominent cases of UBE and for infected mail, but for less obvious cases of UBE some balance between losing genuine mail and sending undesired backscatter is sought,and there can be some collateral damage on both sides.
Uh, collateral damage? Let me see if I can take that analogy and lay it flat on the U.S. Postal Service that everyone loves to hate. It's as if they had a camera focused on the mail as it went past on a conveyor belt, and if it LOOKED like it might have a bomb in it, or if they didn't like the way the "G" in your name was printed, it would be diverted back to you. Can't be too careful, can we? By the way, there were no attachments with my e-mail, just a plain, brief message. Then again, the email was free, whereas the stamp cost 44 cents [what DID they do with the "cent" symbol on the keyboard?]

City Stages: Dead or just ailing?

The answer to that question depends on where you went for news about the big annual music festival in the state's largest city. Headline on WSFA web page: Future of Birmingham music festival up in air Headline in Birmingham news: No swan song for City Stages, organizers say Say what? Maybe its just too soon after the last note faded for the decision to be made, but even before the first note was played, we all knew the Birmingham City Council had to pony up another $250,000 to support the event, on top of the $300,000 city taxpayers had already contributed. I'd be curious to find out if the performers were accepting smaller fees than in previous years because of the recession. I do know concert ticket prices have been depressed across the county because of the miserable economy. The 2008 single day passes for City Stages were $28.00, and that's the same as City Stages charged this year*. And still, it is likely the festival lost money, given the "sparse" crowds on Friday night.
[*Thanks to Birmingham Blogger Wade Kwon for the ticket figures]
[UPDATE: Tuesday 6/23 Birmingham News reports big drop in daily passes. "All options on the table" says founder George McMillan."]

Dilly Daly

A week ago today, PGA golfer John Daly had an encounter of a strange kind in Mobile (the movie was partly filmed in the Port City). He drove his bus/motor coach into the roof of the 12-foot high Bankhead Tunnel. Daly says the warning signs are confusing and denies there were chains hanging down from them to let drivers know their vehicles are too tall. What's truly amazing is the fact that parts of Daly's bus crashed to the ground behind him, striking another vehicle, and yet Daly didn't realize there was anything wrong till he was pulled over further down the road? UH, just how loud was that radio? The only picture of the warning signs I could find online is the one above. I don't see any chains, but gee, it sure seems well marked. I suspect the "chain sign" is earlier on the roadway, and I'm quite sure the law firm hired by the driver of the following car has a complete collection of pictures at this point. [UPDATE: DUH, NOW I see the chains in the photo, though there's no indication when the picture was taken, and Daly complains they don't give drivers enough notice. If these are the ONLY chains, he had a point. What is someone supposed to do if they hit the chains a few dozen feet from the opening? Stop and back up?]

Meeting Media

In the early 1980's I was at a retreat for employees of a Birmingham radio station when the man running the meeting paused and called out one of the people at the table, suggesting he might learn something if he paid attention. The employee was looking down, typing on a weird looking textbook-sized "machine" unlike anything anyone had seen before. It was a Radio Shack TRS-80 Model 100, the first "laptop" computer with a full-sized keyboard. "Dave" was paying attention...he was taking notes about what the speaker was saying. About 24 hours later I had my own Model 100. Too cool.
Now portable media devices are everywhere, and just about everybody's cell-phone is "smart". There's a NY Times story this morning about the etiquette of using them in meetings. Back to the future.

BINGO or SLOTS??

Which is it? A middle-aged Montgomery woman I had occasion to speak with over the weekend was telling me about her recent trip to one of the area places where gaming takes place, and whenever she mentioned the game she was playing, she referred to "the slots" or "the slot machines". Actual slot machines are illegal in Alabama, but what are the BINGO machines that look like slots? The Advertiser and other papers are carrying an AP story today about the Alabama Supreme Court case that could answer that question. And the stakes are huge...potential statewide regulation and a win/loss for The Governor or The Attorney General, old Republican friends who've fallen out. But no matter who wins or loses, for at least that one woman I spoke with, the BINGO machines aren't BINGO at all. She pulls he "arm" on the "slots". Period.

MM(S)MM # 47 - The Social Media cauldron

The "S" I inserted in the MMMM title this week is for social. The various "Social Media" today are sending and receiving about as much information as the MSM (that's Mainstream Media). And that's caused the MSM to develop policies for their employees, journalists or not. Gawker.com got hold of a memo from The Associated Press that instructs AP employees to maintain the same AP standards in their social media entries as they do in an AP story. I'm on Facebook, Twitter, and this blog....and frankly, it's about all I can do to keep up with them and several email accounts, with or without AP style. I've had emails pop up recently with friends' names with their icon/photos saying they have "Tagged" me, and ask me to click to see the photos they have sent me. I'm suspicious enough that I've avoided the click...but not everyone has. The NY Times on Friday had the story behind the "Tagged" emails. See if you buy the "computer glitch" explanation from the company owner any more than I did. Then there are the emails that use such common names that they could be anybody's friend. Like "Mary wants you to join her on M5w" or whatever. Sure. Mary! I''m getting the hang of Twitter, though I can't understand these folks who list 1,000 people they are "following", or an equal number who are "following" them. I can't keep up with a dozen friends and actual true-life family members and lifelong friends...what good is it for them to "follow" that many people? I remember the old line of advice about blogging: nobody cares what you had for lunch. Well, I had to delete one Twitterer I was following recently because I was getting fifteen updates in a ten minute stretch: a step by step description of the twit getting onto a plane somewhere. Nobody cares about that either. I try to save my tweets for things I want to share that people will, I HOPE, find interesting. Like that great Turkey on Rye on Sunday. [NOTE: The Monday Morning Media Memo is a regular feature on this bog.]

Jun 21, 2009

Happy Father's Day!

My Grandfather, who died when my father was a little boy, and my Dad, in two eras of his life.
NewSverse Yes! A Rejection! By Tim Lennox So the phone unringing and the mailbox unfilled and even the bloated email lies with echoes. Please someone? Reject me?

Jun 20, 2009

Alabama's (partly) Made-in-America Cars

The NY Times includes a neat interactive feature with a story today on how much of so-called "Made in The U.S." cars are actually U.S. made. I learned, for example, that Mercedes in Vance and Hyundai in Montgomery make their engines and transmissions back "home" in Germany and South Korea respectively, and ship them to Alabama to be plugged in at the assembly plants here. The most "Made in the U.S." of the cars from Alabama's growing auto business is Honda. According to the Times feature, the Odyssey, Pilot and Ridgeline engines and transmissions are U.S. made (it's not clear just where in the U.S), making them the most "Made in the U.S." of Alabama's vehicles. All of this is significant because of a proposed cash payment to encourage folks to get rid of gas-hungry clunkers for American Made new cars.

Summer '09

As the Summer of 2009 arrives we've been served up a huge helpin' of searing southern heat. Temps in the mid to upper 90's the past week in Montgomery and much of the state, with those "heat indexes" even higher.
It's funny how we have such short weather memories. In 2007, Alabama has severe record drought conditions, and the news was filled with stories about the "water war" underway, with Alabama Georgia and Florida fighting for water from the river basins they share. Atlanta is a thirsty place, but so to is the rest of the region. 2008 was wet, and so was the start of 2009, so we've put aside thoughts of a lack of rain and instead everyone talks about the recent flooding. You'd be hard-pressed to find a spot of Alabama that's in a drought. But during the past few weeks, the severe heat has returned...so I expect any day now the "water wars" will be the lead story on the TV news.

Jun 19, 2009

Make 'em be consistent!

Jobless rate in Alabama is highest in 25 years, reports the Birmingham News. Do NOT let the politicians deflect blame to "outside forces" and "the economy". They always brag about low unemployment rates, don't let them avoid the blame for high rates. They can't have it both ways...at least they can't if you don't let them.

144 years ago: the sinking of The CSS Alabama

It was on this date in 1865 that the Civil War raider CSS Alabama sank after an hour long battle with the U.S.S. Kearsarge. The website of a documentary we were developing is still intact, and on it you can read some of the story and find links to places and groups associated with the ship and her captain, Raphael Semmes of Mobile. If you are searching for some Summer reading, An excellent book on the subject is "Wolf of The Deep" by Stephen Fox.

Music Festival Financials

City Stages is this weekend in Birmingham, and the Montgomery Advertiser is out today with the losses for this year's May 23-24 Jubilee CityFest ($27,000). Organizers say rain did in the 2009 Capitol City event (though I think they make a mistake in not having it over three days instead of two...it helps your odds against the rain).
City Stages keeps losing money..and The Birmingham News' Joey Kennedy says it is time to pull the plug after 20 years. Imagine how much these events would lose if not for all of the volunteers who run them! I know at least two of the businesses that operate 365 days a year in downtown Montgomery that were disappointed with turnout this year.
Sure it's a nice thing to see people coming to the downtowns after dark (such a novelty!) but at what expense? Maybe if would be a better idea to hold a series of smaller events, and put an effort in to making the downtowns places where people want to go without a huge musical festival.
[UPDATE: check out Wade Kwon's blog for an excellent examination of the City Stages financial assumptions that led the city council to "contribute" another $250,000 to this year's event. You know what Mark Twain wrote about figures...there are "lies, damned lies, and statistics"...and the same is often true with mathematical projections. Another example is a recent TV story that including a politician bragging that some new jobs would be multiplied by even more jobs added in "second tier" positions. Yet you never hear them saying the loss of jobs will be even worse because of the same factors.]

Jun 18, 2009

Marion Alabama

Of all the states where I would not expect this to happen...an Alabama Police Department cheats a member of its department and violates federal law by refusing to rehire her when she returns from National Guard duty. Being the good Right-To-Work state that we are, there is almost no protection for workers in Alabama except if you are on jury duty or serving in the National Guard. And somehow Marion managed to screw up one of those by mistreating a dispatcher when she came back from National Guard Basic Training. Shame on them.

I'll tell you why there's a movie slump!

There's a summer movie slump underway, reports USA Today and The L.A. Times. Instead of the seasonal uptick the industry expected, not a single flick has made if past the $300 Million Dollar ticket sale mark so far, unusual for a season when people are supposed to be flocking to the theaters. By this time last year, there were two flicks above that mark. And the slump is not just in the U.S.: The Wall Street Journal reports "Bollywood" is hurting too.
May I suggest a reason or two, at least as far as the US goes? These are strictly personal observations. I have no research to back 'em up.
Ticket prices are high enough, even in Alabama, that it's an investment to take a family. But the salt in the wound is being forced to sit through ten minutes or more of ads, even before the gazillion trailers for upcoming shows. It's a good fifteen minutes after the published showtime before the movie starts.
And moviegoers are part of the problem too. The last movie I went to was in an almost empty theater on a Monday evening. There may have been a few folks scattered about, but not many. In comes a group of four girls and a boy who pick the seats right in front of us (naturally). They then talk and laugh through the entire show (no, it wasn't a comedy). Fortunately it was a horror movie that didn't requires paying attention to a lot of dialogue, but good grief! The boy couldn't go five minutes without pulling out his cell and opening it, shining the bright blue light in our face.
With big screen TV's and great audio systems in homes now, how much longer will folks put up with the pain of going to a theater to watch a flick? At least at home when the teenagers act up you can send them to their rooms. Plus, a bottle of water isn't $4.00. And you can even pause the whole thing to take a break.

The Senator's Private/Public Balancing Act

Since both of Alabama's U.S. Senators are Republicans , I fully expect them to take stands for industry and against government spending. "Privatize!" is generally their war cry. The only regular exception comes with government spending in Alabama. Senator Richard Shelby in particular is under fire for supporting NASA spending in North Alabama over the private for-profit space industry. NASA wants to use $150 Million of the $400 Million the agency received from the stimulus bill to help the commercial (i.e. private) development of vehicles to get from here (Earth) to there (the space station). Shelby says no. A panel named by President Obama to draw up plans for the future of America in Space held it's first hearing yesterday, and the big question is the public/private debate. The Senator's official Senate page doesn't show any news releases about NASA in almost two years, and his official statement on NASA funding is basically a re-statement of his support for spending tax dollars in North Alabama.
In April, Shelby told a meeting of the Huntsville Times editorial board there simply isn't enough money available for NASA to continue funding three big projects: the space station, the shuttle, and the Aeres Rocket development, which is a MSFC project. Any guess which one he does not want to cut?
But perhaps that's just an Alabama elected official doing his job: representing Alabama's interests and bringing home the bacon...
[NOTE: You can find chatter about this issue on an unofficial site called "NASAWatch".]

Coal Ash developments...

Two items...GQ has a cover story titled "Black Tide" on the spilling of the coal ash in Tennessee by the TVA, and the Selma Times-Journal has questioned Rep. Artur Davis about the tons of ash that will likely end up in a Perry County dump. The paper reports at one point:
Davis has no real authority over the movements by the agencies and the county, other than to voice his opinion. “While the transfer of millions of tons of coal ash may not violate Alabama’s environmental standards, it is well known that Alabama’s standards are weaker than the standards set by most of our neighbors,” Davis said Monday. “My consistent position has been that while local counties have leeway to decide whether they want to operate landfills, there are serious public policy issues at stake when potentially hazardous wastes are dumped into a community.”
Uh, "no real authority"? Two U.S. House committees keep an eye on what TVA is up to. And the chair of one of them has promised increased oversight. If a member of Congress has no real authority over TVA, then I guess nobody does. Hell, even I can "voice (an) opinion" about it. And what happens now with those serious policy issues? Also: has anyone managed to get fellow Democratic candidate for governor Ron Sparks on the record on the coal ash story?
Also this week, an audit report on the TVA's miserable communication with the public following the spill.

Jun 17, 2009

Recycle Quandry

The City of San Francisco diverts 3/4 of it's trash away from landfills and into recycling or mulching. Now they're upping the ante even more reports the NY Times. Here in Alabama there are entire counties without even a landfill to handle their own trash, and others have huge landfills that accept trash from thousands of miles away. As for me, I'm doing my best:

Jun 16, 2009

PBS OK's OLD prayers, not new...

Call it an evangelical compromise for PBS. A decision to allow stations currently carrying sectarian religious shows to continue doing so, but a NO to future programs. Frankly, it's the infomercials that bother me more than semi-religious programs at a handful of stations in the country.

MOB Scene

Drove up to Birmingham for a social gathering of the Media Of Birmingham group at Five Points South...nice to meet some new folks and renew some old acquaintances. Lots of talk about new and old media, and about ways to make a living in either or both!

Future of TV

Here's an interesting Advertising Age article about the "future of Television". Author says the nets just don't get it, that TV is where newspapers were several years ago. Not pretty. If he's right, what does "local" TV look like 20 years from now, if there still IS local TV that far in the future.

Jun 15, 2009

Despite Precautions...

The Great-nephew of one of my longest-known friends...a University of Maryland student... is in a coma in Washington D.C. today after he fell in a skateboarding accident a week ago yesterday. Matt was wearing a helmet, which is a reminder to us all that no matter what precautions we take, life is flimsy at best, and endangered every day. Matt's parents have a website set up to update friends and family...his Mom, Patti-Ann wrote last night: "Not much change today. Matt is still in a coma. He continues to respond to painful stimulation, but has not yet responded to commands. He has these outbursts where he becomes extremely agitated. His heart rate and blood pressure shoots up. He breaks out in a sweat and breathes extremely hard. It usually takes pain medication to settle him down, but he eventually does. It is very stressful watching him work through these episodes, but I really feel like he knows that I am there. " I know the family would appreciate any prayers you can offer during this difficult time. Thanks, Tim

"Literally Watch!"

It's been a while since I've heard a distinct misuse of the word, but last night on NBC News there an excellent correct usage. It was a report about immigrant Americans and their U.S. born children. The daughter of one couple from Mexico was mentioned as "from birth being defined as American, literally"...then followed the little girl introducing herself, her first name being "America".

MMMM # 46 Is Blogging The New Journalism?

You may have read by now about the blogger in Illinois who made up a story of a woman and her fetus, which was diagnosed in the womb as having a terminal illness....and how the woman gave birth anyway, winning praise from anti-abortion groups everywhere. The hoax was exposed because a photo of the "baby" actually showed a doll, and a woman who owned the same doll recognized it. That woman is quoted in the Tribune story : "She needs to be exposed and held accountable," Russell said.
Yea, you know where I'm going with this, right? How many times have legitimate newspapers made up stories? Yes, it has happened, as in the Janet Cook case. But it is such a rare event I was able to remember Cook's name without looking it up. Of course her fakery won her a Pulitzer Prize, so perhaps it is understandable I remember her.
How often do bloggers make stuff up? Hard to say, since there is no one looking over their shoulder to expose them and hold them accountable when they turn fiction into news. Are bloggers the new journalists, and blogs the new newspapers? If so, I would advise blog consumers to travel very very carefully in search of the truth. Because unlike most newspapers, the blogger has little or nothing to lose by making stuff up.
[ADDENDUM: In a Montgomery Advertiser column, John Moon blasts the textbook "scandal" at UA as a PR failure. And he takes a shot at one of my least favorite PR practices...the news conference that isn't. They bring someone out to the forest of microphones to speak and then refuse to take questions. If the media had any guts it would refuse to attend those non-events. Just send me your news release.]
[ADDENDUM: CNN criticised for its mild weekend coverage of unrest in Iran. Twitter plays a role]
[The Monday Morning Media Memo is a regular feature of this blog.]

Jun 14, 2009

Alabama The Violent

You may have read our posting here on May 8th about a Press-Register story that reported Alabama ranks second in the nation for gun deaths. This morning's Montgomery Advertiser did its own version of the story, which heavily emphasised the accidental shootings, and included a quote from a local gun merchant:

Alabama's culture, history and wide expanses of rural areas add up to mean a lot of people in the state own firearms, said the owner of a local gun store. The study backed up his assertion, showing that 57.2 percent of Alabama households own guns. "Alabama is rural," said Alan Daniels Jr. of Collectors and Shooters LLC. "Every one of the top states, except Nevada, are agrarian, agricultural, wooded and heavily focused on hunting and outdoor sports."

Yet Alabama is not a rural state. According to a University of Alabama report in 2003, the 2000 Census showed Alabama's population to more urban than rural:

"The Census Bureau says that 55 percent of Alabama’s population lives in an urban setting and 45 percent lives in rural areas."

And just having a lot of unpopulated land can't have any impact on the gun death rate because as we all know, acres don't kill people, people kill people. Explaining our high gun death rate by saying it's just rural folks owning more guns doesn't wash. It can't be a lack of punishment for the bad guys with guns. We have the 4th highest per-capita prison population in the U.S. So why do we have such a high rate of gun deaths?

Would Jesus Buckle Up?

The answer is yes, according to an unusual ad in Sunday's Montgomery Advertiser. The half page ad was placed by the city's Freewill Missionary Baptist Church, who's pastor has bought TV ads in the past to urge city residents to work together to lower the murder rate..."Enough is Enough!" was the theme of the campaign. That same phrase is included in the Sunday ad, but now Reverend Edward J. Nettles, Sr. wants folks to pay attention to much less egregious offenses: not having car insurance or a license, driving unbelted, and playing your car stereo too loud.
On a similar tact, Montgomery officials this week started enforcing a new ordinance that prohibits parking on residential front yards. If you throw down gravel and some railroad ties you can park a fleet, but park a single car on the grass and there's a $50 fine waiting for you.
Rev. Nettles' admittedly unconventional approach to ministry, and the city's new parking regulations, remind me of the clean-up New York campaign of Rudy Giuliani. He started having police enforce every violation, reasoning that the small lawbreaking contributes to the big problems. Did it work? New York's crime rate did go down, though there's disagreement whether Hizhonnor's clean-up campaign helped. Montgomery officials may be hoping Rev. Nettles campaign fails. They can't afford to lose all the revenue from those vehicle violations.

A House Saved

Work is finally underway on the historic house in Montgomery's Cloverdale neighborhood that was home to former Governor Don Siegelman and was the childhood home of former Montgomery Mayor Emory Folmar. The house played a role in the controversial Siegelman Administration when the Democratic Governor sold it for twice the appraised value, and then appointed the buyer to an unpaid position on a state regulatory board.
Last November the city's architectural review board refused to let the home's current owner demolish the house. The owner said at the time it would cost $166,000 to fix the damage to the structure, which was built in 1935 though the historic plaque outside says "early 1900's." In recent weeks, workers have started renovation of the house on Norman Bridge Road, including repairing/replacing the privacy fence that had partly fallen down.
I always believed that of all the complaints about the former Governor, the house sale was the one that most people could relate to. Your house doesn't double in value suddenly. The sale never passed the so-called "smell test". Yet the house sale was never a part of the federal charges against the former Governor. Instead, he was convicted in connection with another appointment...Richard Scrushy to the Certificate of Need Review Board. Scrushy gave a big donation to Siegelman's lottery promotion fund, and jurors decided there was a quid pro quo arrangement. Wonder if they would have found the same thing if prosecutors had included the sale of the house among the charges? Regardless of the political considerations, I'm glad to see it being saved from destruction.
[ADDENDUM: Magnolia Springs , Alabama considers ordinance to protect its historic buildings.]
NewSverse Newsumer by Tim Lennox I read birmingham news about southern living on TV. No good to be found, it seems. Magnolias wilting. Writers too.

Jun 13, 2009

The Rising Tide of Hate

Frank Rich in his Sunday NY Times column puts his finger much more precisely than I did last week on the upsurge in hate killings, and the connection to the media and politics. I connected hate, religion and guns, but Rich's column points an accusatory finger at those in the media who stir the overflowing pot of angry Americans with lies.
Is Rich being an alarmist? The TalkRadio genie is out of the bottle and I can't imagine it being put back. There are very few places left where you can hear actual discussion about the issues instead of shouting about imagined sins. (And yes, I really do believe FTR was one of those places.)
Americans listen or watch only those programs that reinforce their existing beliefs, perhaps because switching to another channel means such in-their-face vitriol that it is offensive. Now we're in a world of High Definition Digital Signals, but the HD channels we receive are carrying only Low Definition discussions.

Going down the tubes

"There are very limited consumer protection laws in Alabama...this together with a very quick and non-judicial foreclosure process is driving homeowners into bankruptcy, which may offer the only way for them to protect their homes." That's a Birmingham bankruptcy lawyer quoted in this morning's Birmingham News in a story by Roy Williams identifying Alabama as having one of the highest bankruptcy rates in the U.S. right now. That's despite the action by Congress a few years back making it harder than ever for individuals to have the same bankruptcy protection as businesses. What will state officials say about it? They'll blame the economy, as usual, though they are fast to claim credit for positive economic news that is also a product of forces they have little or not control over. Speaking of which, did you read where lame-duck governor Bob Riley is off on a world tour...three continents in all, looking for companies to come build in Alabama in the midst of the worst financial collapse since the Depression. Money perhaps better spent trying to help those Alabamians who are in court filing all of those bankruptcy papers?

Jun 12, 2009

Why The FDA/Tobacco Bill Passed.

It won approval because as much power as it gives the Food and Drug Administration, it specifically forbids the agency from actually banning tobacco products or regulating tobacco farmers. And that's about the best the tobacco industry could hope for. President Obama is expected to sign it this afternoon, despite, or maybe because of his own struggle with smoking. I'm not an anti-smoking Nazi. I quit seven or eight years ago, but generally believe people should be permitted to make their own mistakes. The law should allow restaurants to provide smoking sections. If diners don't like it, they'll eat elsewhere. And I do wonder if fatty foods will be next.
There are 15-billion cigarettes smoked every day around the globe. The U.S. provides the second highest number of smokers (after China), but there are still plenty of other smokers to keep the industry going. And worldwide, there are more smokers every year and those smokers are smoking more each year. A real growth industry, except for the fact that the product eventually kills its users. Both of Alabama's U.S. Senators voted for the bill.

Did The L.A. Times Lie?

Did you see the cover of The L.A. Times this morning? The (formerly) sacred journalistic real estate "above the fold" (and below it too) was sold as ad space to promote a TV show. What's next...sell the actual name of the Times for a fee? The L.A. Timex? The L.A. TiM&Mes? The L(exus) A(udi) Times? I suppose it is better than going out of business, but not a lot better. But wait! Before I posted this entry, I did some fact checking to make sure I wasn't the victim of a fake-photo scam. I looked at the Newseum site that displays all of the day's newspaper front pages...and no True Blood ad/photo! Yet the Times own blog "Opinion L.A." says the ad really was published. Hmmmmm. A mix of truth and lies to untangle? Was the ad the front page or not? I emailed the Newseum for comment and here's what they wrote: The simple answer to your question is that each newspaper sends us its own front page PDF file every day. So, we simply post the files that are sent to us. The version of the front page that we have posted is the version that the LA Times sent to us this morning. So, does the L.A. Times want to have its cake and eat it? Present one front page to readers (for money) and another to the Newseum to protect its journalistic reputation? I emailed their spokesman, asking which front page was the real front page. Here's what they wrote: "The “True Blood” ad wrapped today’s paper. Hope that helps, but feel free to give me a call if you have more questions." Perhaps this is a foolish time for me to be picky about the issue, since papers are failing left and right, but somebody has to do it, no?

Working Kids

Alabama's newspapers and websites this morning include the story of a fifteen year old who is recovering after falling into an auger machine at a factory in Ashford...an auger machine that turns wood into wood chips. The boy was working with his father at the facility. It is amazing that the boy didn't lose a leg...emergency workers had to take the machine apart to remove him from it. We're happy to report the boy's condition has improved, but the bigger question is why the boy was working there in the first place. State labor law is pretty clear on the under 16 crowd: When you are 14 or 15: You can work in an office, grocery store, retail store, restaurant, movie theater, or amusement park. When you are 16 or 17: You can work in any job that is not hazardous. Prohibited jobs include work in mining, logging, meatpacking, roofing, excavation or demolition. You cannot drive a car or forklift. Also, you cannot work with explosives, radioactive materials, or most power-driven machines. My Libertarian friends might argue those restrictions aren't needed, that we should let the marketplace decide. State officials are investigating the accident and will determine if any violations occurred, but what do you think? Should parents be allowed to let their kids wherever they want?

Jun 11, 2009

The Looooooooooooooooong Goodby

So. After seemingly endless special call-in programs and reports, the day TV stations pull the plug on their old analogue signals is at hand. It is estimated a couple of million U.S. residents may suddenly wake up to a screen like this one.
Where they've been during the deluge of publicity about the switch to digital I have no idea. Asleep on the couch? Reading a book? Someday a book will be written that will tell the complete story of the backroom deals that went into providing broadcasters with the frequencies for free (with the provision that they give up the old signals, which in theory the government will sell for a profit to non-broadcast entities.) One wrinkle that many of us will discover when the first hurricane threatens is the fact that those battery operated combination TV/Radio/Flashlight things sitting in the Utility Closet will be worthless, at least for TV watching. You'll still be able to use them as a rather clunky flashlight or a rather heavy radio. And that may be one little silver lining: folks who own analogue radio stations, even if they're just picking up the audio of the TV weather coverage, should have a larger audience.

Girls State 2009

A good turnout for the Girls State media panel at Troy University this morning. Two great finalists for Governor and good questions from the audience, including some about the viability of the media...from TV News to small local papers. I said thumbs down to the former unless there are serious changes and thumbs up for the latter, since their local content isn't being reproduced by anyone else online.

[Photo: Carrie Kurlander talks with fellow panelist Katie Boyd-Britt prior to the media panel.]

Jun 10, 2009

Women in Alabama Politics

While a lot of eyes are watching the candidacy of Democratic Rep. Artur Davis to see if he'll become the first black Alabama Governor, there's another area where the state is lacking. Only 12.9 per cent of the Alabama Legislature is female...putting Alabama third from the bottom nationally, ahead of only South Carolina and Oklahoma. For comparison, the top state, Colorado, has 29%...still fairly low when you consider the fact that the U.S. population is more than 50% female. But back to Alabama. We've had a female governor and Lt. Governor--once each--both the Treasurer and the Auditor's office seem to be held by women more than the other constitutional offices. Seven of the last eight State Auditors were women, as were six of the last seven State Treasurers. We have a female Secretary of State right now, Beth Chapman, but Sibyl Pool was the first woman to hold that and any other statewide elected office. She was elected in 1944. We've never had a female Attorney General. There have been 24 Agriculture Commissioners in the state. All of them men. A healthy percentage of the relative few women who have won statewide elected office in Alabama attended Girl's State when they were in High School. It's underway right now:

Read more about Girl's State here. That's Michael Bridell and Carrie Kurlander, the usual co-media panelists, though Michael is out of town this year.