Dec 31, 2011
Consumer Wars on the Eve of 2012
The WSJ has a story about the increasing number of customers fleeing expensive cable TV plans, or at least negotiating their own rates downward. From the article:
Really? In my last negotiating session, I spent time arguing with the agent about the benefit (to customers) of cafeteria pricing..letting us select what channels we want and paying only for them. I told him I wanted basic plus one HBO and one SHOWTIME, but was told that wasn't possible. He insisted it would be more expensive for customers. Hmmmm I'll have to look into that Federal regulation to quote it next time around.
Related: by now I'm sure you've read of Verizon's capitulation of it's $2 a month fee for customers who pay online without setting up an account or who pay by phone. I loved the tortured language used by the CEO to make the announcement that they were listening to customers:
How many suits and lawyers does it take to say we screwed up? About a hundred, if that's the best writing they could agree on.
And Verizon isn't alone...as I've blogged about before...AT&T charges a $5 fee if you want to pay your bill by phone using an actual real-live person. How is that not discriminatory against seniors, who may be more likely to need assistance with the complex bills companies use these days?
Add the bank's retreat from their monthly debit card fees and the lesson for 2011 is this: Social media is teaching companies how quickly their customers can turn on them.
Although cable operators don't widely market it, a federal law requires them to allow consumers to tack on premium channels such as HBO or Showtime for roughly $17 a month, even if they only have the most basic cable package.
Really? In my last negotiating session, I spent time arguing with the agent about the benefit (to customers) of cafeteria pricing..letting us select what channels we want and paying only for them. I told him I wanted basic plus one HBO and one SHOWTIME, but was told that wasn't possible. He insisted it would be more expensive for customers. Hmmmm I'll have to look into that Federal regulation to quote it next time around.
Related: by now I'm sure you've read of Verizon's capitulation of it's $2 a month fee for customers who pay online without setting up an account or who pay by phone. I loved the tortured language used by the CEO to make the announcement that they were listening to customers:
"Based on their input, we believe the best path forward is to encourage customers to take advantage of the best and most efficient options, eliminating the need to institute the fee at this time."
How many suits and lawyers does it take to say we screwed up? About a hundred, if that's the best writing they could agree on.
And Verizon isn't alone...as I've blogged about before...AT&T charges a $5 fee if you want to pay your bill by phone using an actual real-live person. How is that not discriminatory against seniors, who may be more likely to need assistance with the complex bills companies use these days?
Add the bank's retreat from their monthly debit card fees and the lesson for 2011 is this: Social media is teaching companies how quickly their customers can turn on them.
Dec 30, 2011
The Most Ridiculously Priced Stuff
There are a number of articles and lists like this one on the web that list the most overpriced things we buy.
Curiously*, the one linked to above omits the top item on many other lists: printer ink. One site estimates the ink cartridges costs the equivalent of $64,000 a gallon!
Other lists also include mattresses. In fact I found a site devoted to that one topic: how not to get ripped off buying one!
* maybe not so curious. It is an AOL page, and AOL is owned by....Time-Warner, which owns, well, so much stuff that it's not possible to figure out if there is a conflict of interest in their ink page.
Dec 29, 2011
A Leaf Drives in Montogmery
I met the owner of the only all-electric car in Montgomery today...at least she's pretty sure that's the case. She had to buy it in Auburn at the Nissan dealership there after a wait of a couple of years. The local dealer has not had any to offer to far.
I learned long ago to be careful about any news story that includes a superlative...best, oldest, only...so if someone else does have one, my apologies.
The owner runs a committee that promotes, appropriately enough, planting trees in the Capitol City!
I learned long ago to be careful about any news story that includes a superlative...best, oldest, only...so if someone else does have one, my apologies.
The owner runs a committee that promotes, appropriately enough, planting trees in the Capitol City!
Dec 28, 2011
A N.Y. Times Oops
I thought something was up when the NY Times emailed and offered a special 50% off rate if I would not cancel my home delivery subscription. Continue your subscription and you’ll keep your free, unlimited digital access, a benefit available only for our home delivery subscribers. You’ll receive unlimited access to NYTimes.com on any device, full access to our smartphone and iPad® apps, plus you can now share your unlimited access with a family member.†
First off, I haven't had a subscription to the NY Times since...well, even when I lived in Manhattan I didn't have a subscription. So then I figured it was a scam, or perhaps their email list was compromised. But there was no stern warning, or suggestion that I click on a link and provide my credit card info to a guy in a hut in Nigeria.
Turns out I, and 7,999,999 other folks had received the message by mistake. It was supposed to go to just 300 people. Oops.
But thanks for the offer anyway.
The 1% Don't Give a Crap
The wealthiest Americans have had it, and they're not going to take it anymore.
Really.Hour(s) Lost
We're used to losing and gaining an hour when we switch from Daylight Savings to Standard Time (and back) each year. But in Samoa Thursday night at Midnight, they'll lose 24 hours.
Chief editor,speler speller-guy and supporter of charities Jay pointed it out to me.
Samoa has decided to move to the other side of the nearby International Date Line (which always sounded to me like a bad game show name). They'll go from 12:00:00 PM Thursday to 12:00:00 AM Saturday. So long Friday!
NPR explains why here.
[PLUS: There's also a plan being proposed elsewhere to change the calandar so your birthday would always fall on the same day of the week, as would all of the holidays. And an extra week would be added every 5 or 6 years to make it work!]
Chief editor,
Samoa has decided to move to the other side of the nearby International Date Line (which always sounded to me like a bad game show name). They'll go from 12:00:00 PM Thursday to 12:00:00 AM Saturday. So long Friday!
NPR explains why here.
[PLUS: There's also a plan being proposed elsewhere to change the calandar so your birthday would always fall on the same day of the week, as would all of the holidays. And an extra week would be added every 5 or 6 years to make it work!]
Dec 27, 2011
The Mall of Ameriterror
It doesn't take much, really to kill a Mall.
Some fear, and an alternative will do it.
That's what emptied out the Montgomery Mall for a decade, leaving it to be twisted soon into some kind of city-controlled combination police and fire station cum church + other stuff.
Maybe.
Eventually.
The events in the early 2000's that helped bury it started with young people, some fighting, a police riot force surrounding the property, blocking all goers, and fear.
Now the Mall of America in Minnesota has had its own fright session...bigger, naturally, than anything that happened in Alabama's Capitol. The Monday night events come (of course) with their own homemade shaky cell video, making it all seem bigger and worse, like something from that fake/real-looking witch movie.
Was it just an out of control flash mob having fun? A mass-robbery attempt? A glimpse of an unhappy future? Kids looking for a rumored free concert?
Doesn't matter really.
Because all it takes to kill a mall is an equal measure of fear and rumor and overreaction and lack of communication (MOA management issued its first statement about 9:00pm. An eon in social media time.)
Alternatives like buying online next time. Or a new Mall down the highway.
Dec 26, 2011
The Right To Work Un-unionized
Forbes Magazine includes an interesting piece that tries to answer this question: How do German firms manage to build more cars than U.S. companies, while paying the autoworkers in Europe twice what they pay workers at their U.S. plants? And they're profitable to boot!
Dec 24, 2011
Quiznos
Quiznos has always been like that to me. Too many kinds of items, and too many sizes and combinations of those items, prepared in too many ways. I'm exhausted by the time I get through the process!
Now comes word the Quiznos chain is close to bankruptcy. I've never managed or even worked in a restaurant, so what do I know! But perhaps a simplified menu might have helped?
Er, NASA.....
...are you really, really sure you want to continue sending U.S. Astronauts up on Russian ships to the International Space Station? At the rate their space agency is failing to launch correctly, it's only a matter of time.
Pieces of the most recent failure dropped on a street named for the Russian Cosmonauts.
I know, if we were to ask the NASA head that question at a news conference, he would assure us that everything is just fine.
But at home, where nobody can hear him...he has to be thinking WTF?
Bring back the shuttles! At least the US had 133 successful ups and downs with them.
[UPDATE: on 1/7/12, a Voice of America blog raised some of the same questions, but they got in touch with folks who should have the answers. Here's the blog entry.]
Pieces of the most recent failure dropped on a street named for the Russian Cosmonauts.
I know, if we were to ask the NASA head that question at a news conference, he would assure us that everything is just fine.
But at home, where nobody can hear him...he has to be thinking WTF?
Bring back the shuttles! At least the US had 133 successful ups and downs with them.
[UPDATE: on 1/7/12, a Voice of America blog raised some of the same questions, but they got in touch with folks who should have the answers. Here's the blog entry.]
Under The Tree (NOT). The Nay-pad
I was asked if I would like an eye-pad for Christmas, and I said no...vaguely wondering if, deep down, I really did want one?
I have an admitted anti-apple bias (the opposite of the pro-apple cultish and slavish affection some folks exhibit, and just as acceptable), but even if I did not, I have just not been able to figure out what I would use an eye-pad (or any pad) for!
This morning: The the L.A. Times to the rescue. No, not explaining why I should have one, but a columnist who feels the same ambivalence as I!
Anyway, the pads are another chapter in the subscription economy that I try so hard to avoid. Pads and a billion other products try to force you to continue buying things assoiated with the main purchase.
I have an admitted anti-apple bias (the opposite of the pro-apple cultish and slavish affection some folks exhibit, and just as acceptable), but even if I did not, I have just not been able to figure out what I would use an eye-pad (or any pad) for!
This morning: The the L.A. Times to the rescue. No, not explaining why I should have one, but a columnist who feels the same ambivalence as I!
Anyway, the pads are another chapter in the subscription economy that I try so hard to avoid. Pads and a billion other products try to force you to continue buying things assoiated with the main purchase.
- This is the best razor in the world...buy it for just $5 (but the blades will be $6 each for as long as you use it!)
- Just using a mop on the floor is not good enough, but this great cleaning devise (and buy our overpriced pads for it forever!)
- The eye-pad is the next best invention in the world (and you have to continue to spend money for "apps" and subscriptions from then on!)
Dec 23, 2011
Media Noise
On this eve before The Eve, there's the usual amount of noise being broad and narrow cast, though I suspect only the deepest die-hards are paying much attention to the media babble or the media rabble.
Do you care that kind-of-bizarre Ron Paul spouted some racist and paranoid nonsense to sell a newsletter thirty years ago?
...that Kim Jon ll is changing the weather from beyond the grave?
...that the pigeon is as smart as chimps when it comes to understanding math?
...that for a family hit by a home invasion in Montgomery, it was the third time?
I could go on. But let me just suggest you take a deep breath and relax for the weekend. Best wishes to each and everyone of you! In this case, no news is good news.
Tim
Do you care that kind-of-bizarre Ron Paul spouted some racist and paranoid nonsense to sell a newsletter thirty years ago?
...that Kim Jon ll is changing the weather from beyond the grave?
...that the pigeon is as smart as chimps when it comes to understanding math?
...that for a family hit by a home invasion in Montgomery, it was the third time?
I could go on. But let me just suggest you take a deep breath and relax for the weekend. Best wishes to each and everyone of you! In this case, no news is good news.Tim
Dec 22, 2011
Are North Koreans brainwashed, or just plain stupid?
South Koreans seem to be astute businesspeople, well versed in arts and language, science, food production and sports. But a stone's throw away it's a Stone-Age blind obedience to a demi-god.
Then again, we have candidates for the U.S. presidency who say they are answering a divine calling by entering the race, and people will vote for those "Dear Leaders" too.
Dec 21, 2011
EPA vs Power Plants
The EPA is out with it's long expected rules limiting the release of mercury and other toxins from coal-fired power plants.
Coal-ash is only one of the problems resulting from burning all that coal to produce electricity. And some health experts say what goes out the smokestacks is much worse that what falls to the bottom. At right is the cleanup of the TVS coal Ash spill three years ago tomorrow.
Alabama Power and other Southern Company subsidiaries have lots of coal-fired plants, six in Alabama, and had battled against the regulations for decades.
Coal-ash is only one of the problems resulting from burning all that coal to produce electricity. And some health experts say what goes out the smokestacks is much worse that what falls to the bottom. At right is the cleanup of the TVS coal Ash spill three years ago tomorrow.
Alabama Power and other Southern Company subsidiaries have lots of coal-fired plants, six in Alabama, and had battled against the regulations for decades.
.4 % growth in Alabama Population
The Census Bureau out with data showing the population gains and losses by the states between 2010 and 2011.
Texas is proclaimed the population winner (I guess these would be people who live to inhale smoke 24/7?) while Alabama showed minimal growth...4/10 of a per cent. Perhaps those fleeing "illegal" immigrants hurt our numbers?
Michigan and a chunk of other Upper Mid-West states lost population...that might be all of those unemployed folks fleeing the Rust Belt? Despite Alabama's new status as a car-manufacturing magnet, the former Detroit residents aren't coming to Bama. That may be because of the difference in their (former) union jobs and the new (very-much non-union) jobs here.
Look at the map..the light-green-shaded states had the least increase, while the dark-green-shaded states attracted the most new folks.
(More maps here.)
It's interesting that, except for Mississippi (TGFM), Alabama is surrounded by States that had better population growth in 2010-2011.
And those folks going to Washington State can't have seen that new TV series The Killing, in which it rains rain and blood 24/7.
Coincidentally, United Van Lines is out today with their own annual migration study, based on the number of people moving to and from various states. Their study agrees Alabama is...flat, but North Dakota is losing folks. So go (or come) figure.
Texas is proclaimed the population winner (I guess these would be people who live to inhale smoke 24/7?) while Alabama showed minimal growth...4/10 of a per cent. Perhaps those fleeing "illegal" immigrants hurt our numbers?
Michigan and a chunk of other Upper Mid-West states lost population...that might be all of those unemployed folks fleeing the Rust Belt? Despite Alabama's new status as a car-manufacturing magnet, the former Detroit residents aren't coming to Bama. That may be because of the difference in their (former) union jobs and the new (very-much non-union) jobs here.
Look at the map..the light-green-shaded states had the least increase, while the dark-green-shaded states attracted the most new folks.
(More maps here.)
It's interesting that, except for Mississippi (TGFM), Alabama is surrounded by States that had better population growth in 2010-2011.
And those folks going to Washington State can't have seen that new TV series The Killing, in which it rains rain and blood 24/7.
Coincidentally, United Van Lines is out today with their own annual migration study, based on the number of people moving to and from various states. Their study agrees Alabama is...flat, but North Dakota is losing folks. So go (or come) figure.
WIRM
What It Really Means: This sign is promoting a carpet cleaner, but there are thousands of other like it in the right-of-way across Montgomery. And what they are really saying is this:
...we don't much care about the looks of our community. We'll put up this litter-on two metal sticks anywhere...we'll keep your carpets clean but your streets dirty!Where you find one of these, others soon pop up. And they are illegal! Ironically, a top city official told me the biggest violators are non-profit groups. One had a sign advertising an event right near the commercial sign shown above, and ever more ironically, that non-profit is located in a beautiful setting where signs like this are banned.
[WIRM is a regular feature of this website. It's an effort to point our the less-than-obvious message some signs and other things send.]
Dec 19, 2011
By age 24, what percentage of young Americans have been arrested at least once other than for minor traffic offenses?
41% !!!
41% !!!
reports ABC news.
And What Will YOU Do Next Weekend?
Survey by the religion polling company PRRI shows more people will watch It's A Wonderful Life than go to church:
Another poll result provided by The Montgomery firm Anzalone-Liszt shows historic low opinions for Congress (11% approval) so lumps of coal for all of them!
Americans who celebrate Christmas do so in a variety of ways. Among Americans who celebrate Christmas:
* More than 8-in-10 (83%) say they typically watch Christmas movies like “It’s a wonderful life” or “A Christmas Story.”
* Roughly two-thirds (66%) report that they usually attend religious services on Christmas Eve or Christmas Day. Roughly 6-in-10 (59%) say they sing Christmas carols as part of their holiday celebration. Only about 1-in-4 (26%) say they light advent candles.
* Roughly equal numbers say they read “’Twas the Night Before Christmas” (43%), the famous Santa Clause poem, as read the biblical story about the birth of Jesus (40%) as part of their traditional Christmas celebrations.
Another poll result provided by The Montgomery firm Anzalone-Liszt shows historic low opinions for Congress (11% approval) so lumps of coal for all of them!
MMMM # 180 Size Does Matter!
This is a reproduction of the Doonesbury from a week ago or so in The Montgomery Advertiser.
I saved it to illustrate the incredibly shrinking newspaper cartoon. I've tried to make is as accurate in size as possible.
I've worn glasses since 8th grade, but my corrected vision is close to 20/20. and the captions have shrunk to a size where they are unreadable!
Is this another step toward the inevitable elimination of newspapers in printed form?
[The Monday Morning Media Memo is a regular feature of this website. My editors have insisted I take next Monday off, thinking my eyesight and temperment might improve. So the MMMM will be back on 2/2/12.]
I saved it to illustrate the incredibly shrinking newspaper cartoon. I've tried to make is as accurate in size as possible.
Honest: can you read Doonesbury without zooming (a feature my eyes lack)? I included a portion of Foxtrot below it for comparison.
I've worn glasses since 8th grade, but my corrected vision is close to 20/20. and the captions have shrunk to a size where they are unreadable!
As newspapers have diminished in income over the last few years, they've gotten narrower too, to save ink. That's forced editors to squeeze stuff in, but if readers can't read it, what's the point?
I'm sure the Advertiser gets lots of complaints about Doonesbury's content anyway---way too liberal here in the Deep South---so just eliminate it if it's going to shrink to microsize anyway! Or attach plastic magnifying lenses each Sunday!Is this another step toward the inevitable elimination of newspapers in printed form?
[The Monday Morning Media Memo is a regular feature of this website. My editors have insisted I take next Monday off, thinking my eyesight and temperment might improve. So the MMMM will be back on 2/2/12.]
Dec 17, 2011
Appeals Court Rejects Mail Bomber Walter Leroy Moody Jr.
On Friday, the Alabama Court of Criminal Appeals rejected an appeal by Walter Leroy Moody, the man convicted of assassinating U.S. Circuit Judge Robert Vance in 1989. The judge was killed, and his wife seriously injured, in their Mountain Brook, Alabama, kitchen when the judge opened a package disguised as a Christmas present.
Moody remains on Alabama's death row.
The Friday decision came, perhaps coincidentally, exactly 22 years after the killing.
This video tells the story of the murder, investigation, and arrest.
Geographic Misadventure
I'm not sure what I did before GPS, other than get lost a lot. The service is a blessing, even if it does sometimes send us around the world to get around the corner.
I couldn't find a copy of it to include here*, but back in the day there was a distorted cartoonish map of New York City that made it appear the city was 99% of the United States. The rest of the world to the west was compressed into a sliver of land. It may have originally be a New Yorker magazine cover.
It came to mind this morning when I heard about some event occurring in New York in which the woman being interviewed on the radio said visitors were expected from all of the city Boroughs, New Jersey and even Connecticut!
I've heard news reporters express the same astonishment, saying such and such a person had traveled to Alabama all the way from California, as though that's another planet, as opposed to a State a few hours away.
Everything is relative.
Some people are coming to Alabama all the way from New York today to march from the Alabama State Capitol to the Governor's Mansion in protest of the Immigration Bill. I can only hope they've brought their passports.
And a promo: I'll be anchoring the news on CBS 8 (6:00 and 10:00) and FOX (9:00) tonight, and we'll have coverage of the march and the rest of the day's news.
* (See comments)...here's a link to the map I was talking about, and it was a New Yorker Cover! Thanks Trent!
I couldn't find a copy of it to include here*, but back in the day there was a distorted cartoonish map of New York City that made it appear the city was 99% of the United States. The rest of the world to the west was compressed into a sliver of land. It may have originally be a New Yorker magazine cover.
It came to mind this morning when I heard about some event occurring in New York in which the woman being interviewed on the radio said visitors were expected from all of the city Boroughs, New Jersey and even Connecticut!
I've heard news reporters express the same astonishment, saying such and such a person had traveled to Alabama all the way from California, as though that's another planet, as opposed to a State a few hours away.
Everything is relative.
Some people are coming to Alabama all the way from New York today to march from the Alabama State Capitol to the Governor's Mansion in protest of the Immigration Bill. I can only hope they've brought their passports.
And a promo: I'll be anchoring the news on CBS 8 (6:00 and 10:00) and FOX (9:00) tonight, and we'll have coverage of the march and the rest of the day's news.
* (See comments)...here's a link to the map I was talking about, and it was a New Yorker Cover! Thanks Trent!
M (S) MMM # 178 -- Buy These Toy$!
I'm a fan of On The Media, a weekly Public Radio program that critiques the industry I've made my living in for a lot of years.
This week's show included a segment on payola...the process by which individuals on TV are paid to promote certain items without any disclosure to the viewers. At one point, the hosts play a segment from the ABC program "The View" in which a "toy expert" named Elizabeth Werner and the guests are babbling on about the supposedly "hot" toys for kids this Christmas. On The Media asks guest/Washington Post reporter Paul Farhi if Werner is a legitimate expert or a shill for some toy companies, to which Farhi comments "It's hard to tell".
Huh? Here's On The Media calling out Television with a clip and all, and then dropping the ball?
Sorry Paul (And OTM hosts), it's not that hard. In 2.2 seconds worth of Googling, I found a Los Angeles Times article from last year in which that paper reports lawyer and "toy expert" Elizabeth Werner is paid--- $11,000 for each toy she promotes--- during her TV tour.
As The Times also reports, the fact that she's being paid to promote specific toys is supposed to be disclosed to viewers, but sometimes isn't.
And another point: The View is called that because it is NOT journalism. It's an opinion show to which the largely female audience tunes for opinion. Does OTM really consider it a news program?
[The Monday (and sometimes Saturday) Morning Media Memo is a regular feature of this website.]
This week's show included a segment on payola...the process by which individuals on TV are paid to promote certain items without any disclosure to the viewers. At one point, the hosts play a segment from the ABC program "The View" in which a "toy expert" named Elizabeth Werner and the guests are babbling on about the supposedly "hot" toys for kids this Christmas. On The Media asks guest/Washington Post reporter Paul Farhi if Werner is a legitimate expert or a shill for some toy companies, to which Farhi comments "It's hard to tell".
Huh? Here's On The Media calling out Television with a clip and all, and then dropping the ball?
Sorry Paul (And OTM hosts), it's not that hard. In 2.2 seconds worth of Googling, I found a Los Angeles Times article from last year in which that paper reports lawyer and "toy expert" Elizabeth Werner is paid--- $11,000 for each toy she promotes--- during her TV tour.
As The Times also reports, the fact that she's being paid to promote specific toys is supposed to be disclosed to viewers, but sometimes isn't.
And another point: The View is called that because it is NOT journalism. It's an opinion show to which the largely female audience tunes for opinion. Does OTM really consider it a news program?
[The Monday (and sometimes Saturday) Morning Media Memo is a regular feature of this website.]
Dec 16, 2011
Say what?
Two references in news stories this past week had my head turning.
The Media Department of The Muslim Brotherhood
and The Aerospace Division of The Revolutionary Guard.
Honest. The scientific research divisions of TimLennox.com told me so.
The Media Department of The Muslim Brotherhood
and The Aerospace Division of The Revolutionary Guard.
Honest. The scientific research divisions of TimLennox.com told me so.
Busy!
Like most of you, for me this is an especially busy time of year, so please forgive my lack of posting on the site!
And to balance the sad news below about Etta James, a Christmas picture from my childhood.
And to balance the sad news below about Etta James, a Christmas picture from my childhood.
The Christmas Tree at the upstate New York High School I attended.
Many of the students have been reunited online, and there have been reunions too, though I've not been to one. Just today one of my former classmates asked to be connected in LinkedIn.
Don't virtually all Christmas tree photos look alike after a while? And why did we have theater ropes keeping people away. Paparazzi?
Dec 13, 2011
Collez une fourchette dans lui. Mitt Rommey fait !
It's one thing to be a Mormon.
...or to sit down wtih a gay veteran in a coffee shop.
But speaking French?
But speaking French?
Homeless Kids
Bad enough to be a homeless child...just try not be be one in Alabama! The state is ranked 50th---worst in the nation---for child homelessness.
Schools & Hunting: too close for comfort
Texas is not exactly a small state, yet apparently there isn't enough room to keep hunting areas away from schoolyards.
Two students were hit by hunter's bullets...and one of them is in critical condition. Did those kids playing basketball on an outdoor court look like deer?
Two students were hit by hunter's bullets...and one of them is in critical condition. Did those kids playing basketball on an outdoor court look like deer?
Dec 12, 2011
The Movie Recession
CBS is reporting a ten year low in movie attendance this past weekend.
Just what is wrong with you people???
Just what is wrong with you people???
- Just because it is now an investment to take a family to see a flick? The national average in January of this year was $7.89 per, but prices are higher locally and for 3-D films.
- Is it because the theater owners make you sit through fifteen minutes worth of commercials and reminders not to throw popcorn around before you see the first frame of the movie?
- Are you disenchanted with the movies themselves? The best movie turnout of the weekend was for 'New Years Eve", which brought in a paltry $13 Million. Perhaps the fact that just about everybody who's seen it hates the flick has something to do with that?
- And finally...are home TV sets now of such quality, with HD and huge screens, that's it simply easier and cheaper to stay at home?
MMMM # 177 --- www.CrimsonTide.xxx ???
The xxx extension for websites opened up last week, for companies or people who want to advertise their site's sexual nature.
But before the average Joe was able to register names with an xxx on the end, businesses and institutions were given the right to reserve their own identifying names for two months, to block anyone else from using them. So http://www.auburnuniversity.xxx/ is blocked. So is http://www.universityofalabama.xxx/ . and http://www.asu.xxx/
Yet not all. Someone named Zach Moffett in Ashburn, Virginia managed to reserve http://www.crimsontide.xxx/, and if you want it, you can register http://www.birminghamsouthern.xxx/ or http://www.samforduniversity.xxx/ or http://www.troyuniversity.xxx/
http://www.girlsofthesec.xxx/ available (so is the version with boys).
http://www.wareagle.xxx/ is taken, probably by the school.
You could register some of those names, at least in theory. But they are also copyright protected, so you might have a legal battle on your hands if you tried to open a site using those xxx addresses you bought.
Nonetheless, a lot of colleges have paid for the xxx extension with their names and nicknames attached just to prevent anyone else from using them.
If you have time to waste, as I apparently do, go to this site and try filling in your favorite team or school names to see if they are available for x-rated sidelines web addresses.
[The Monday Morning Media Memo is a regular feature of this website.]
But before the average Joe was able to register names with an xxx on the end, businesses and institutions were given the right to reserve their own identifying names for two months, to block anyone else from using them. So http://www.auburnuniversity.xxx/ is blocked. So is http://www.universityofalabama.xxx/ . and http://www.asu.xxx/
Yet not all. Someone named Zach Moffett in Ashburn, Virginia managed to reserve http://www.crimsontide.xxx/, and if you want it, you can register http://www.birminghamsouthern.xxx/ or http://www.samforduniversity.xxx/ or http://www.troyuniversity.xxx/
http://www.girlsofthesec.xxx/ available (so is the version with boys).
http://www.wareagle.xxx/ is taken, probably by the school.
You could register some of those names, at least in theory. But they are also copyright protected, so you might have a legal battle on your hands if you tried to open a site using those xxx addresses you bought.
Nonetheless, a lot of colleges have paid for the xxx extension with their names and nicknames attached just to prevent anyone else from using them.
If you have time to waste, as I apparently do, go to this site and try filling in your favorite team or school names to see if they are available for x-rated sidelines web addresses.
[The Monday Morning Media Memo is a regular feature of this website.]
Dec 11, 2011
Dog Bites Girl
...make that POLICE dog bites girl.
A Police Dog that escaped from a patrol car.
A girl in her Arizona High School.
Who ran when she saw the dog.
Police say
True. Once the dog had bitten her and she was on the ground. But are they trained to take down anybody who runs?
A Police Dog that escaped from a patrol car.
A girl in her Arizona High School.
Who ran when she saw the dog.
Police say
"We were extremely lucky. The dog is trained to bite and pull," he said. "That didn't happen. It appears in this case the dog realized the girl did not pose a threat."
True. Once the dog had bitten her and she was on the ground. But are they trained to take down anybody who runs?
Humility key to effective leadership
When is the last time there was an elected official in Alabama who you would describe as
HUMBLE?
Here's a story about a study that indicates humble people make better leaders.
HUMBLE?
Here's a story about a study that indicates humble people make better leaders.
Dec 10, 2011
The Worst Lies in The World
1) A woman fakes her own rape so her husband will agree to move.
2) A man publishes his Mother's obit to get time off from work. She was alive.
Whatever happend to "the dog ate my homework" and "It's not you, it's me"?
2) A man publishes his Mother's obit to get time off from work. She was alive.
Whatever happend to "the dog ate my homework" and "It's not you, it's me"?
Too Soft on Muslims!
The Washington Post reports that's the reason a right-wing TV watchdog group threatened advertisers who were buying commercials on TLC's All-American Muslim reality show.
Had the show depicted Muslims as bomb-throwing radicals out to destroy America, I guess if would have been OK.
But reality TV is never truly reality on TV anyway. Even back to the PBS's 1973 An American Family, the presence of cameras changes everything. And what is or is not on-camera diminishes or enlarges.
How many times have you see a house fire story on TV, with the flames and the flashing lights and the fearful eyes...only to see if as a two paragraph story in the next day's newspaper?
Are there hateful Muslims in America. Sure. There are also hateful Christians and Atheists. The dislike for a soft-handed presentation may say more about the complainers than about the program's subjects.
Had the show depicted Muslims as bomb-throwing radicals out to destroy America, I guess if would have been OK.
But reality TV is never truly reality on TV anyway. Even back to the PBS's 1973 An American Family, the presence of cameras changes everything. And what is or is not on-camera diminishes or enlarges.
How many times have you see a house fire story on TV, with the flames and the flashing lights and the fearful eyes...only to see if as a two paragraph story in the next day's newspaper?
Are there hateful Muslims in America. Sure. There are also hateful Christians and Atheists. The dislike for a soft-handed presentation may say more about the complainers than about the program's subjects.
Dec 9, 2011
Rodents Care!
The Washington Post has a fascinating article about a simple experiment involving--what else---rats! And it seems to prove that they exhibit empathy. That's better than some people!
Dec 7, 2011
WIRM # 3 ----&DG@%$%@((!!!!!!
WIRM: Here's what we expect from the people entering our offices.
[WIRM stands for "What it Really Means". It's a regular feature on this website, explaining what stuff really means, frequently not at all what was intended, and often not the truth! Submission gladly accepted! Sent to timothylennox@charter.net]
Sweeeteet!
Back in radio days, I remember interviewing two research/authors at UAB who had written a book (PyschoDiatetics? Something like that). I can't remember their names*, but I recall one shocking fact.
Today the Environmental Working Group has released a report on the best and worst children's cereals, which says the worst include cereals that are more than half sugar. More than half! Fruit Loops (original) was among the worst. at 41.4% sugar.
Makes me wonder if parent would be better off blending the box for breakfast!
* Google to the rescue. Here's the 1977 book for sale--used-- on Amazon. I had the title right, and the authors name's are: Dr. E. Cheraskin and W. M Ringsdorf Jr.
They talked about a study in which one group of rats were fed a common breakfast cereal, while another group was fed the box the cereal came in. You guessed it, the box was as good or better for them!
Today the Environmental Working Group has released a report on the best and worst children's cereals, which says the worst include cereals that are more than half sugar. More than half! Fruit Loops (original) was among the worst. at 41.4% sugar.
Makes me wonder if parent would be better off blending the box for breakfast!
* Google to the rescue. Here's the 1977 book for sale--used-- on Amazon. I had the title right, and the authors name's are: Dr. E. Cheraskin and W. M Ringsdorf Jr.
Inside the wreckage of The USS Arizona
Another video to commemorate the 70 th Anniversary of Pearl Harbor,
70 Years after the attack.
December 7, 1941
A question:...in 2071, will people commemorate the 9-11 attacks with as much intensity as we remember the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor seventy years later ? More?
Dec 5, 2011
Outsider Alert! Outsider Alert!
The Tuscaloosa News reported over the weekend that the per-centage of students in the 2011freshpeople class at The University of Alabama that ain't from around these parts rose to above fifty per cent for the first time in the University's almost-forever history.
What will we do?
Those are Alabama Tax Dollars going to fund thatfootball team university! Do we want our tax dollars funding educations for them foreigners from California and other heathen places? Some of them are even from other countries...like those Hispanics from Mexico and New Mexico that we're chasing out, except maybe legal. Some of them might even be from communist places like Cuba or China or...whatever other Communist places are left. Oh yea, Venezuala. And probably Rhode Island too.
Come to think of it, those outsiders are probably also using our Alabama-tax-dollar-built interstate welcome centers too!
Good thing the legislature will be coming to Montgomery on February 7th! They'll fix it!
What will we do?
Those are Alabama Tax Dollars going to fund that
Come to think of it, those outsiders are probably also using our Alabama-tax-dollar-built interstate welcome centers too!
Good thing the legislature will be coming to Montgomery on February 7th! They'll fix it!
MMMM # 177 ---Look, Up in The Air! A Reporter!
The Washington Post reported on Sunday about the inevitable use of drone aircraft by the media, including the fact that a website used a drone to report on the Tuscaloosa tornadoes.
The FAA is scheduled to release regulations about the non-military use of the unmanned aircraft next month.
Reporting on stories from above is nothing new.
Broadcasters have been using helicopters to cover news for decades, but as the story points out, the relative cheapness of a drone makes it a very attractive tool. The actual history of aerial photography dates to 1860! That's the first photo in the U.S. to the right.
During the 70's and '80's, I flew in a helicopter for traffic reports on WERC Radio in Birmingham. When we saw a fire or other newsworthy event, describing it was part of the job.
But drones are much smaller, quieter, fly much lower, and are less likely to be noticed by people on the ground. At what point will the use of drones violate privacy? Can a station's drone fly over an individual's deck and take video of...well, the things people sometimes do on decks. How about shooting through a window. Some of this is already established law, but the drone aspect kicks it all up a notch, into relatively uncharted territory.
Which Alabama TV station will be the first to invest in a drone, once the FAA regs are published? Give it five years, and the top stations in every market will have one. Or two!
[The Monday Morning Media Memo is a regular feature of TimLennox.com]
The FAA is scheduled to release regulations about the non-military use of the unmanned aircraft next month.
Reporting on stories from above is nothing new.
Broadcasters have been using helicopters to cover news for decades, but as the story points out, the relative cheapness of a drone makes it a very attractive tool.
During the 70's and '80's, I flew in a helicopter for traffic reports on WERC Radio in Birmingham. When we saw a fire or other newsworthy event, describing it was part of the job.
But drones are much smaller, quieter, fly much lower, and are less likely to be noticed by people on the ground. At what point will the use of drones violate privacy? Can a station's drone fly over an individual's deck and take video of...well, the things people sometimes do on decks. How about shooting through a window. Some of this is already established law, but the drone aspect kicks it all up a notch, into relatively uncharted territory.
Which Alabama TV station will be the first to invest in a drone, once the FAA regs are published? Give it five years, and the top stations in every market will have one. Or two!
[The Monday Morning Media Memo is a regular feature of TimLennox.com]
Dec 4, 2011
Back on the streets
I'll be back out raising money on Tuesday, December 6th. It's part of the CBS-8 assistance for the Salvation Army this season.
Many of the on-air and off-air employees at the station are spending time at the red kettles.
Come by The Wall-Mart on Ann Street in Montgomery on Tuesday, between Noon and 2:00pm, and say hi! Our weather folks have rain forecast, but I'm pretty sure the kettle is under cover.
Many of the on-air and off-air employees at the station are spending time at the red kettles.
Come by The Wall-Mart on Ann Street in Montgomery on Tuesday, between Noon and 2:00pm, and say hi! Our weather folks have rain forecast, but I'm pretty sure the kettle is under cover.
When's The Last Time You Paid This "Low" for Gas?
This is a station on Norman Bridge Road in Montgomery today. According to one web site, it is almost the lowest average price this year. But again, it sure didn't take us long to get used to paying over $2 a gallon, did it!
Dec 3, 2011
Obama's Christmas Immigration Lesson
TIME makes the connection between the President's Christmas remarks and the immigration debate.
Will his comments resonate here in the Bible Belt?
Will his comments resonate here in the Bible Belt?
George McGovern
The 89 year old former Democratic Presidential nominee took a fall near his home in Mitchell, South Dakota, just before an appearance on a CSPAN program Friday.
McGovern was in Montogmery this past week, and spoke at the new Cloverdale Playhouse theater.
McGovern was in Montogmery this past week, and spoke at the new Cloverdale Playhouse theater.
Dec 2, 2011
Montgomery Christmas Parade
I'm in good company on a CBS 8/WNCF ABC 32 entry in the Montgomery Christmas parade.
Meteorologist Marcy Novak, myself, and WNCF Reporter Lisa Blackwell, trying to stay warm and getting ready to throw candy to the crowds along the parade route.
For those who didn't realize it, WNCF, WAKA, and WBMM (The CW station in Montgomery) are now corporate siblings and will be in the same building in the Spring.
Immigration Critique
When even The Wall Street Journal is writing critical articles about a new state law, is it time to pay at least some attention to the growing discontent?
The Journal's story today doesn't cover new ground, but tells of the arrests of the Mercedes and Honda employees for failure to produce a drivers license. And it discusses the looming impact on future economic development efforts.
It also quotes Sen. Gerald Dial, a Lineville Republican who seems to be the only legislator willing to say the law was a mistake and we ought to "fess up."
Proponents of the law are quick to seize on the small drop in the unemployment rate, saying it was the result of the illegals fleeing, opening up jobs for real Alabamians.
Law enforcement has not been enthusiastic about the new law, and I found myself wondering if the high-profile arrests were a way for lawmen to illustrate the law's failures.
When the legislative session begins, there will be a bill introduced to kill the new law completely. That bill probably doesn't have a chance, but at the very least, legislators are sure to change some aspects of it.
The Journal's story today doesn't cover new ground, but tells of the arrests of the Mercedes and Honda employees for failure to produce a drivers license. And it discusses the looming impact on future economic development efforts.
It also quotes Sen. Gerald Dial, a Lineville Republican who seems to be the only legislator willing to say the law was a mistake and we ought to "fess up."
Proponents of the law are quick to seize on the small drop in the unemployment rate, saying it was the result of the illegals fleeing, opening up jobs for real Alabamians.
Law enforcement has not been enthusiastic about the new law, and I found myself wondering if the high-profile arrests were a way for lawmen to illustrate the law's failures.
When the legislative session begins, there will be a bill introduced to kill the new law completely. That bill probably doesn't have a chance, but at the very least, legislators are sure to change some aspects of it.
Dec 1, 2011
New State Cheer*
We're 36th!
Go Alabama!
We're 36th!
Yay Mama!
According to the website 247WallStreet.com, Alabama is among the worst run states in the U.S., ranked 36th.
They write:
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
State debt per capita: $1,738 (7th lowest)
Pct. without health insurance: 14.6% (tied for 24th highest)
Pct. below poverty line: 17.4% (7th highest)
Unemployment: 9.8% (12th highest)
Alabama only has a AA credit rating, but it maintains one of the lowest debts per capita in the country, at just $1,738 per person. Also, foreclosures are near the average. Otherwise, the state performs among the worst in the country in nearly every considered metric. The state has the fifth-lowest median household income in the country, as well as a poverty rate of 17.4% — the seventh-highest in the country.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Go Alabama!
We're 36th!
Yay Mama!
According to the website 247WallStreet.com, Alabama is among the worst run states in the U.S., ranked 36th.
They write:
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
State debt per capita: $1,738 (7th lowest)
Pct. without health insurance: 14.6% (tied for 24th highest)
Pct. below poverty line: 17.4% (7th highest)
Unemployment: 9.8% (12th highest)
Alabama only has a AA credit rating, but it maintains one of the lowest debts per capita in the country, at just $1,738 per person. Also, foreclosures are near the average. Otherwise, the state performs among the worst in the country in nearly every considered metric. The state has the fifth-lowest median household income in the country, as well as a poverty rate of 17.4% — the seventh-highest in the country.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
I might only add this:
a) Is pct. really an abbreviation for %?
b) I've never heard of the website before now. And
c) the reason for the low per-capita debt is constitutional. The state charter requires balanced budgets, which is why we keep having to cut education funding mid-year.
Speaking of that, an auto dealer in Montgomery is conducting a paper drive for the area public schools. Bring in reams or boxes of copying paper so the students will have something to write on. As opposed to funding the schools properly in the first place. And let's get those kids out selling candy and magazines and whatever to help make up the difference too. It can be a lesson for them! No public trough for you, little boys and girls! And don;t forget to being your own toilet paper each day!
(*Thanks to Chief Editor Person Jay for locating this ranking.)
Immigration
The Anniston Star publishes some of the finest written editorials in Alabama.
Many writers consider Alabama a dream assignment, because we always seem to provide ample material to keep editorial writers employed.
The immigration law has been mined repeatedly since it was a bill in the legislature. But the Star's latest effort deserves special praise for the message, and for the crafting of that message.
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