Jan 31, 2012

Walking and Biking (NOT!)

Q. Which U.S. State has the lowest percentage of folks who walk to work?
A. Alabama.
Q. Which U.S. State has the lowest percentage of folks who ride a bike to work?
A. Alabama
Q. Which U.S. State has the highest obesity rate?
A. Alabama.

Do I see a trend here?

     The new report from a walking and biking group also shows there is more biking and walking in rural America, and with Alabama being such a rural state, you would think....
     For all I know the walking and biking group is funded by bike and walking shoe manufacturers, but so what!
     The enemy really is us.

Something else to worry about!

     U.S. News & World Report includes a story that most of the U.S. States have now reported a new infection that is resistant to antibiotics...and has a mortaltiy rate of 40%+.
     Most in danger: people with compromised immune systems. And yes, YOUR state is probably on the list. Here' a map.

Recommended Reading



     The Wall Street Journal has a story that tries to explain the 2012 Teenagers Mind...a much changed entity in recent years, apparently, for some very complex reasons.

Take with one hand, reject with the other.

     This liberal diagram purports to show how many Red States get back more in Federal tax dollars than they send to Washington. I don't know about the other states on the list, but Alabama has long been on the receiving end of Big Government money, always getting back more than was sent.
     A good investment you might call it.
     But The Alabama Congressional Delegation is in the front lines of  fighting to reduce that Federal spending! Just who are they working for, anyway?

Jan 30, 2012

MMMM # 184 -- The Candidates & The Media!

     Newt and Mitt aren't running against each other. They're running against the media!
     Newt says the audiences at debates should have the right to take part in the debates. He objected when NBC's Brian Williams dared to tell the audience to "hold its applause".
     Previously, he lambasted a moderator for asking him--HIM!--a first question about his "open marriage" request of wife #2 while he was dating the woman who would become wife #3.
     This is all rather textbook politicking, and rather tiring, frankly. The fact that voters allow candidates to make the media the enemy makes me think of herds of votersheep, ready to bleat their approval of any attack against the evil reporters.
     This past weekend, the media fired back! Sorta. NBC sent a letter to the Romney camp objecting to a new campaign ad that is composed almost entirely of material from one of their newscasts. It was a story about Newt being reprimanded by a Congressional Committee. No immediate reaction from the campaign, but that's not a new issue either and the campaigns know it. Broadcast material is copyrighted, and it can't be used without permission.
     Alabama Public Television had a similar run-in during the 1990 Paul Hubbard Campaign for Governor. Video of Guy Hunt praising the AEA chief in a For The Record interview was used in a campaign ad. The campaign refused to remove the ad and actually threatened legal action against APT if they continued to try to have it pulled!
     In the end,  I think it was so close to the election date that the issue died with Hubbard's campaign.

[UPDATE: Gingrich says he will not take part in any debate in which the media moderates it. Of course he has just lost Florida tonight 1-31-12, so perhaps that won't be a problem for him?]

(The Monday Morning Media Memo is a regular feature of this website.)

Jan 29, 2012

Terrible Gainsville Florida Wreck

Nine dead, fifteen or more vehicles involved just South of Gainsville on I-75. Smoke from a brush fire may be a contributing factor.

Jan 28, 2012

Belittling The Charges

     The lawyers for the Alabama fan charged with tea-bagging a passed out LSU fan in New Orleans are belittling the charges against their client.
     I wonder how they would feel if the victim was their son or brother or father? Or their sister?
     Watch for a settlement.

The Penalty for an Early Spring

     We've had virtually no Winter here in Alabama, like a lot of the country.
     The high Thursday was 70...and it was 60 on Friday and today.
     As a result of all of this relative warmth, trees and plants are starting to bloom Below is a tree near the house...maybe a Chinese Tulip Tree? The at-freezing temps last night nipped the buds a bit, and it will be cold again tonight.
     But with February starting next week, and the forecast showing no frigid air mass in site, perhaps we can consider the non-Winter of 2012 gone?

What Me Worry?

     The Birmingham News is out with a poll/survey of Alabamians about what are the most important issues for Alabama Legislators to work on when they meet on February 7th.

     Jobs are Job #1(32%)---but after that the issues trail off.
     Immigration? Who cares (5%). 
     Constitutional Reform? Not me! (2%)
     Health Care? What's that? (2%) 
     But the second largest percentage after jobs?
     "NO OPINION"--22%.
     Perhaps too many people in Alabama are busy trying to feed their families and avoid foreclosure to worry about what the legislators will do...or they have no faith that the lawmakers who spent so much time on Immigration last session will or can do anything that matters.

Jan 27, 2012

Bus to nowhere.

This Montgomery bus is on its regular route to a nonexistent location.
 The Montgomery Mall no longer exists, at least as far as being a mall.
The city in buying portion of it for a Fire and Police facility. A church
is buying the other end of it. And the middle is being developed by a
private company that hopes to give it a medical theme.
So what should be on the bus sign instead of Montgomery Mall?


Here Come The Killer Bots!


An amazing story tells of The Pentagon developing  the first drone that has no pilot...neither in the plane nor on the ground. Shades of Terminator!!

Jan 26, 2012

Dissin' The Presidency

     The C.S. Monitor asks if the Arizona Governor's finger-in-the-face was a few inches too far when it comes to disagreeing with the President.
      The story doesn't mention it, but the in-your-face book she wrote has suddenly jumped in sales by about two-thousand per cent. So instead of an insult to the presidency, was it just a cheap sales stunt to pump up sales?

Inflating Page Views

     Am I the only person around who hates it when websites force you to look on multiple pages to see a list of some kind? Take Travel and Leisure Magazine, for example. Their list of the least and most tourist-friendly cities* caught my attention. 
     But each of the cities is on its own page, forcing visitors to click on a link to see each page...and the page is so loaded with ads and animations it can takes forever to load. Why not just print the list on one page? Because they want to increase their page views, that's why. It's artificial manipulation of Internet traffic.
     Now, if you want to see the rest of this timlennox.com rant, click here. (just kidding).

*Washington D.C. was listed as the worst

Jan 25, 2012

NASA and The Blue Marble


NASA says this is the most spectacular photo ever of our planet from space. Hard to disagree!

Jan 23, 2012

MMMM # 183 -- Machine and WRONG News Decisions

As some journalism processes have become automated, more and more examples of why a human touch is a good thing have cropped up. For example, MSNBC's Travel page last Wednesday includes this sub headline

"Getting there is half the fun, so the saying goes. MSNBC.com's travel team examines the issues of the day and, of course, the joy and hassle of traveling."

     Immediately below was a huge picture of the broken cruise liner off the Italian Coast. Oops.
     The computer programs that select photos to go with stories on journalism-lite sites like Yahoo and Charter (and, apparently MSNBC) often chose appallingly bad examples...pictures or sketches that really don't really go with the story, but which were probably "selected" by the computer.


    In a world in which all media are interconnected, from websites like timlennox.com, to the TV Networks, a tiny error can quickly be magnified. That's what happened on Saturday when a small student newspaper reported the death of Joe Paterno...who was still alive at the time*.
     CBS Sports picked up the story and ran with it, apparently without considering the source was a student paper. Pack journalism at its worst.
     Even more serious was the fake CNN News Alert that looked legit, but was not. The email made a false claim about Newt Gingrich on the day of the South Carolina Primary, which he went on to win. No media outlet apparently went with that incorrect report.
     News consumers must remember that many news sources online are reliable, others not so much, and some are outright frauds.
     The media needs to remember the same thing.

*Paterno died on Sunday.

[The Monday Morning Media Memo is a regular feature of http://www.timlennox.com/]

Jan 22, 2012

Poor Tuscaloosa Under The Gun Again


     The overall threat of severe weather covers the area in the yellow box, which includes Montogmery. Let me recommend CBS 8 as a good source of information later today and for the next 24 hours as this system moves through.
     After last April's deadly tornadoes, you know Tuscaloosa folks will be watching the skies very carefully.

ASU Stadiium Cost Up by $12-Million



The New ASU football stadium can be seen above the school's new softball complex.

     The Montgomery Advertiser has the story. Lots of rumors about money for the stadium being used elsewhere on campus, which the paper quotes ASU officials as denying.
     There's been a building boom of sorts at ASU, new student structures, new entrances to campus, the softball and football facilities, the Selma to Montgomery March interpretive Center and more. Some of the building may come from the reduced cost of construction right now, when companies are hungry for any work and will cut prices. But The University of Alabama System Board of Trustees looked at the economy and rejected a proposed Football stadium stadium for the Birmingham campus....or maybe there was more going on in that decision. Read this story by The New York Times Regional Newspapers' Dana Beyerle. He writes of a virtual rebellion by the system's Birmingham and Huntsville campuses.
     Meanwhile at ASU, it's full steam ahead. The stadium is scheduled to be finished in time for the 2012 Turkey Day Classic'

"And The Oscar (Does NOT) Go to...."

     The Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences has decided to make the list of nominated documentaries shorter by imposing new restrictions.
      One of them: If your work wasn't reviewed by The Los Angeles Times or the New York Times  then it is NOT eligible. 
     So at the exact time that the world of big screen media is opening up to more and more creative folks because the price of "prosumer" video equipment has plummeted, the Academy has decided to virtually eliminate those new bodies of work.
     Opined The Washington Post:

 But the rule might diminish the prospects of those who make smaller and less prominent movies; these filmmakers have often qualified their documentaries without the kind of commercial release that typically leads to reviews by the two news organizations

     If there are just too many entries, name panels of regional judges and let them select the ones that go to the final judging by the members. Or something. But don't give those two papers the power of life or death, the ability to shut up new emerging artists.
     Oh, that's the way it was done before the changes? I see.
     The Oscars air live on ABC February 26th. Here's a cute promotional trailer for the broadcast, hosted by Billy Crystal.

Jan 21, 2012

Military Records

     Now that Newt Gingrich has won South Carolina, let me ask if Ron Paul's criticism of him in the last debate before the Primary had merit.
     In case you missed it, Paul presented Gingrich as a military chicken hawk who never served. Gingrich said his father served, and he had a deferment because he was married with kids. Video of the exchange is here.
     Has anybody seen a fact check on the question of military service by the two? Our last three Presidents have had no military service (other than Bush's National Guard service, which virtually guarenteed he would not serve in Vietnam. In my own Basic Training in--ironically, South Carolina--the Drill Sergeants referred to National Guard members as "N-G, as in No Good", and mocked them.
     Nowadays, the opposite is true. National Guard troops have been almost assured a tour or tours of Iraq or Afghanistan for the past decade.
     I expect the next crew of presidential hopefuls in 2016 and 2020 will include at least some veterans of Iraq and Afghanistan.

Coming Up Sunday on TimLennox.com

  • One positive from the Great Recession: construction costs are down. Is that the reason for the building boom at Alabama State University in Montgomery?

  • PLUS: Just as the lower cost of almost-professional video equipment has made it possible for an average Joe or Jill to make an Oscar worthy documentary, The Academy has changed the rules.

Barbour's Bias?

     The Christian Science Monitor has raised and sought to answer to an interesting question about Mississippi Governor Haley Barbour's pardons. Why were they so disproportionately issued to white inmates?
     The story goes below the surface answer (Mississippi is a racist state).

Jan 20, 2012

Friday Notes

A few notes I've wanted to post, but time, as it sometimes does, got away.

  • Etta James has passed. I blogged about her poor health recently, with her sons being hopeful, but alas and At Last, it was not to be.
  • We aired a story on CBS 8 News that gives a peek into the building process at the site on Harrison Road in Montgomery in which CBS 8, ABC 32, and The CW will share quarters later this year. You can watch it here if you are so inclined.
  • My question about what if the Bourbon Street tea-bagging incident had a women as the victim? Well late last night the suspect was charged with sexual battery and obscenity, despite comment like "oh it's just frat boy pranks."
  • And who knew that President Obama could sing? He did Al Green one better---well, not really, but just as the rich man's jokes are always funny, the leader of the free world's entertainment is always entertaining.
Have a great weekend! Spring is right around the corner!

Jan 19, 2012

Red Tails

     The movie, which opens Friday, tells the story, more or less, of the Tuskegee Airmen, the first black combat pilots in the U.S. Military.
     The folks at Alabama Heritage Magazine offer up their non-dramatized story of the airmen as a primer before you go see how Hollywood handles it.

     The movie is doing quite well, despite critics, like this one for The Associated Press, who finds it a poor telling of the real drama behind what the men accomplished in the air over the theater of war and back home on the ground in America. He did, however, like the aerial scenes.
     The Boston Globe review finds the making of the movie depressing because he believes moviegoers will be foreced to support it, despite the fact that it is not a very good movie. And he writes that it stalls in the aerial scenes.

     My Father was in The Army Air Corps in World War II, the all-white Army Air Corps.
     He and I never talked about that aspect of the war, in fact not much about the war at all. But my Mom told the story of traveling to Florida from New York to visit him during one part of his training.
     She got on a city bus in or near Miami and grabbed a seat at the back. You guessed it, the driver told her to move because that wasn't where she belonged. I would love to finish that tale with a reverse Rosa Parks moment, but alas, Mom did as told and moved to the white section.

[NOTE: The CBS 8 Newsroom reports Red Tails sold out at The Rave Theater Friday night.]

SCOTUS says No to Alabama Prosecutors

      The U.S. Supreme Court has ordered a new hearing for an Alabama Death Row inmate who was never informed of a court decision against him, because his lawyers had left their firm and never received word of the decision. Corey Maples (left) missed an appeal deadine because of the miscommunication.
      Alabama prosecutors seem to have really gotten their backs up about this, appealing it all the way to the highest court, at who knows what expense. Why the state didn't simply agree to a rehearing is beyond me. Clearly the inmate was treated unfairly through no fault of his own...why not admit that, espcially in a case in which the inmate's life is at stake?

[PLUS: The Atlantic magazine has an interesting article looking at the Scalia vs Ginsburg arguments in the decision.]

Ink NOT

     A Cobb County, Georgia ten year old asked his Mom if he could get a tattoo with the name of his brother, who had been killed in a car wreck,  on him. She thought about it and said yes. The State said Oh No You Don't and sent her to jail.
       I mean, really? JAIL? What ever happened to small government staying out of people's lives?

Jan 18, 2012

Birmingham vs Atlanta Economy

     The Brookings Institute  has a new study of global large city economies, and it ranks Birmingham higher than Atlanta. 

         Birmingham was the only Alabama city included in the study.
Follow the link for an interactive map showing the other world cities that were included.

Jan 17, 2012

Obit: Kim Price

     The publisher of The Wetumpka Herald has passed, and journalism has lost a steady, reasoned voice.
     I'd known Kim Price since my earliest days in Birmingham, when he was an AP reporter and I was a fledgling member of the Alabama AP Broadcasters Association.
     Kim was a regular and always welcomed guest on the old For The Record on APT too, and I could always count on him bringing a passionate and thoughtful commentary to the table.
     Kim leaves behind his wife and three children, to whom I send my deepest sympathy. He was 57.

Crimson (Faced) Tide

     Is it just some intoxicated Alabama fans having fun at the expense of a barely conscious LSU fan on Bourbon Street...or evidence of a sexual assault?
     That may depend on the report you read. Here's WWL-TV's report on the incident at a Krystal following the Alabama victory...an incident being investigated by the New Orleans Police. Here's an AP report in The Tuscaloosa News.
     The Alabama fans toss food and trash on the LSU fan, stick fingers in his ears and nose, and then one man in an Alabama Jacket unzips and simulates a sex act, touching the unaware LSU fan with his genitals in the process.
     That WWL report does NOT include the video. You can however find it here and elsewhere online. The apparent Alabama fan is perfectly identifiable, though I have not seen him named anywhere so far.
     And here's a question: if the passed out LSU fan were a female, would there be any doubt that a crime occurred? So why not now?

Jan 16, 2012

Governing by camera.

     Starting today, tickets will be issued to the owners of cars caught speeding by hidden cameras in Montgomery.

     It's an extension of the red light cameras now in use at numerous intersections in Montgomery, Selma and other Alabama cities.
Red Light Camera
     In both cases the tickets go to the owner of the vehicle, not the driver. Does that not seem like a violation of due process? (Proof, if any was needed, that Tim did not attend law school?)
     The speed-cameras will be "hidden" inside out-of-service police cars, so city officials argue that you deserve the ticket if you're so stupid as to speed past a marked police car.
Speed Cameras
    The red-light cameras have a mixed history, with some cities tearing them out after citizen complaints, and after studies suggested the companies that collect the revenue had an unfair incentive to interpret the photos against drivers and for the city (and themselves).
     If Montgomery residents are unhappy about the use of the cameras, there is a rather simple way to eliminate them. Start mobilizing like-minded citizens, send petitions to members of the council and the mayor, and make sure they know that they will be unelected if they don't pull the plug. They're betting people will forget by the time the next election comes around, and there is no power of recall in Alabama that would allow them to be removed before the election. 
     But a patient electorate, and a campaign of ads against those who voted for the spy cams, could work. 
Warning Signs
     Or the voters could do the opposite, rise up in support of the cameras and demand even more be installed, to catch jaywalkers and litterers and people cursing or violating the new ban on smoking in public buildings and....

MMMM # 182 -- They know It When They Hear or See It

     The Supreme Court heard arguments last week over nudity and/or "obscene" language on broadcast radio and TV. Think Janet Jackson (and why is Justin Timberlake always left out of the telling of that Super Bowl incident?) 
    Among the points made:

"...the FCC had received complaints about the opening episode of the last Olympics for showing statues with bare breasts and buttocks."

     Yet cable TV channels, one click away on virtually all TV's from their broadcast cousins, can show virtually anything they want. Watch some True Blood or Shameless for examples.
     The only real difference between one channel and the other is that you pay to bring cable in, while broadcast is free. Does the public really see a significant difference between cable channel 4 and channel 400?

"...I know it when I see it..." (Justice Potter Stewart, 1964, in an opinion on what "hardcore pornography is".)




     Nonetheless, the current Supremes seem inclined to not only maintain the current FCC regs, but maybe even expand on them, probably on a 5-4 vote, as usual. And the cable companies hope that is exactly what they do.

ALSO: a reader spotted what certainly seemed like a great story for the MMMM...it said a Christian Talk Radio Network had been airing the same programs over and over on a 365 day cycle, since 1988. On first read I though, hmmmmm. On reflection, I recognized it as satire. All things online are suspect, including this one.

[The Monday Morning Media Memo is a regular feature of http://www.timlennox.com/]

 

Jan 15, 2012

Ships At Sea


    Twice recently, really big ships, presumably with the latest in modern navigation, have run aground.
    First it was a container ship that broke up off New Zealand several months ago, and now, of course, the cruise ship that capsized off the Coast of Italy.
     At least Titanic--- almost exactly 100 years ago---lacked most of that modern equipment.

     According to last night's CBS News, the company that owns the passenger ship has had a history of problems, and the Captain is in police custody for abandoning ship before many of the passengers were evacuated.
     If we ever need proof that life is fragile, that even the most routine activities can go bad, stories like those are more than ample.

[UPDATE: The best navgation equipment in the world won't do any good if the Captain intentionally steers close to shore so the family of one of his crew can see the ship from their coastal home.]

Jan 14, 2012

Paula's Diabetes

     The Queen of Southern Fried Foods has joined the large per centage of Southerns who are diabetic.
     Sure, genetics play a role, but diet---and weight--play a bigger part.
     We loved Paula Deen's fried-everything, but can we have seconds now please? Second thoughts?

Jan 13, 2012

King quote to be changed.


     The Washington Post, ABC and others are reporting that the disputed quote on the MLK Memorial will be changed to better reflect what he actually said.
     Monday is the King Holiday, of course...as well as the Alabama State holiday for Jefferson Davis. The inscription on the left is part of the Civil War Memorial in Montgomery.
     We love our dichotomy here in Alabama. 

Jan 12, 2012

Honor and Decorum for Dead Terrorists

     When soldiers of any nation are trained, they are trained to kill.
     To kill.
     That's not exactly something that comes naturally (or is it?).
     Even in my very Basic Training in South Carolina a while back, the Drill Sergeants expected me to be fairly unthinking in my ability to open fire on people with an M-16 or grenade ( and I wasn't even going into The Infantry).
     Now comes the story of U.S. Marines urinating on the bodies of some Taliban terrorists who they had killed, and the Pentagon is in an uproar and high level government officials are demanding their heads.
     So let's see. These are men--U.S. Marines no less---trained to kill in whatever vicious manner we've selected, trained to hate the enemy so much that a blade to their throat or a bullet to the head at close range is more than they deserve. But once the children-killing, puppy-gutting, WMD-making bastards are dispatched to wherever it is they are going, our military is supposed to treat them  like saints or little children and give them a reverential funeral and wire flowers from FTD?
     If it had been the other way around, I'd be calling for the heads of every Afghan alive, but I would also understand that war is a crappy institution in which people are trained to act against the best instincts of humanity.
     We're supposed to be angry enough to kill 'em, but not to disrespect 'em?
     The Marines didn't help the peace process, or U.S./Afghan relations. But in the killing part of armed diplomacy, that's not their job.

The Death Penalty

     If you listen to opponents of Capital Punishment, the tide is turning against the use of the death penalty.
    But a new Pew study finds little change in recent years. A majority still favor it.

Jan 10, 2012

Russia points a finger at The U.S.

     All of those problems the Russians are having keeping space-craft going in the right direction, and staying where they are supposed to?
     Maybe it's the CIA or The Pentagon, or the Boy Scouts of America! The Russian space folks are hinting that outside forces may be to blame for some of their failures. No, they really don't name the Boy Scouts, but they may as well. When things to awry, it seems to be a particularly Russian reaction to blame others. Maybe you just screwed up Mr. Cosmonaut?

Not in Alabama, for Sure!

ESPN: LOWEST RATINGS EVER FOR A BCS CHAMPIONSHIP.




     What's going on here? Bias against the SEC? Did viewers expect the same result as the previous Alabama-LSU game so they didn't need to watch? Was Monday night a bad night?

[PLUS: Read USA Today's take on what it is about Alabama that makes it such a college football powerhouse...(though I'm not sure they found an answer as much as they asked the question in-depth.)

Jan 9, 2012

MMMM #181 The New Year



     2012 is going to be a landmark year for the media in Montgomery.
     The gathering of WAKA CBS 8, WNCF ABC 32 and WBMM CW 22 under one state of the art roof will offer tremendous opportunities. Construction is progressing and we'll be in the new HD facility on Harrison Road in plenty of time for the Fall 2012 TV Season.
     TV and just about all other media continues to flow to smartphones, keeping people in touch all day every day.
     The challenges that have faced print aren't going away. The Montgomery Advertiser saw additional layoffs in 2011, a shrinking of the paper's width, and a tightening of the overall operation.
     Prime Montgomery Magazine  published for its first full year in 2011 (The 2 year anniversary is in April) and is going strong.    
     Alabama Public Television closed its Montgomery Studio and production facility on Madison Avenue in 2011, firing all but one employee, an engineer. I understand APT has started hiring some people in recent weeks to operate its studio in the Alabama Statehouse when the Legislative session begins next month. It's unclear what programs they will air and when. Their website appears to be down this Sunday evening.
     Online media continues to grow, though profits are another story. Some local Montgomery sites are doing a good job covering events in the Capitol, like MidtownMontgomeryLiving.com
     Radio is still struggling too, with the usual format changes and consolidation of stations (not unlike what's underway with CBS 8).
     In the Fall of 2012, this website will celebrate its 5th Anniversary...Lord willing and the creek don't rise. Which on a rainy night like tonight seems like a distinct possibility!

[ADDENDUM: The U.S. Supreme Court will consider whether to stop regulating speech on Broadcast TV tomorrow. Broadcasters argue in a multi-media world, they are being treated unfairly.]
[The Monday Morning Media Memo is a regular feature of this website!]

Jan 8, 2012

The Long Haul of Joblessness

     The Wall Street Journal says the impact of the U.S. unemployment resulting from the Great Recession will be felt for a long time, pehaps for generations.
     And since Alabama's unemployment rate has been higher than the national average....

When Getting There is NONE of the Fun.....

     Picture this:you are walking in one of the urban areas of Alabama...Birmingham, or Montgomery..maybe Huntsville or Mobile, and you are not familiar with the streets.
     So you ask your GPS enabled smart phone-pad-flash-drive-cassette to create a route for you. And you want it to include a stop at a hot dog place.
     Microsoft has patented a program that will do just that...avoiding "bad neighborhoods" and giving preference to hot-dog places that just happen to be advertisers on the program.
     There will be some unhappy business owners if the smart-machine decided their hot dog stand is located in a  "high-crime" area and sends the user away...conveniently to the competition.
     I'm actually surprised there isn't already a program identifying homes for sale where violent events, criminal or otherwise, or even just plain natural deaths, have occurred (for the poltergeist phobic among us)...and that rate various neighborhood blocks on a ten scale for the number of break-ins that have occurred to homes or vehicles.
     Programs like this tend to have a self-fufilling feature. Like the Top-Ten Stories list in newspapers, which increase the rankings for those stories by attracting more readers, insuring they will stay in the top ten longer.

Jan 7, 2012

Equal Protection Against The 5 Iron

      I overheard two women talking on Friday about Elin Nordegren using a bulldozer to tear down the Florida mansion she and Tiger Woods lived in before the cheating and the divorce. The comments were positively gleeful, picturing her driving a huge yellow machine of destruction through the multi-million dollar home to punish her cheating spouse. You go Elin! Then one of the women added how happy she was when Elin had attacked Tiger with a golf club too, and the other agreed. When I raised a question, they were "just kidding", of course.

     I had not read anything about the mansion destruction at that point, but as I usual, I started asking myself questions. Does she own the place? Fine, tear it down, burn it, do whatever she legally wants to. But if it's jointly owned with her ex? No way.
     And about the golf club assault...which as far as I know was never verified...if the situation had been reversed, and it had been Elin cheating on him, would it have been a cause for celebration if Tiger had taken a club to her? Of course not.
     I'm not advocating or excusing cheating, just suggesting equal treatment.
     The subject of spousal abuse was fresh on my mind because of an interview I did over the holidays with the Executive Director of the One Place Family Justice Center in Montgomery. He told me about the percentage of men who are abused physically and verbally by their wives, and how difficult it is for them to report it. With some folks cheering the beating of a male spouse, cheater or not, I can understand why.
     When I finally did read the mansion story, it was much less dramatic. There was no vengeful hard-hat wearing Elin, her fist raised in victory as she drove a bulldozer through the home. Instead, she's tearing down the 1932 house that had termite damage to build a new one. And it was a demolition company doing the destruction, contributing whatever could be salvaged to Habitat For Humanity.

Jan 6, 2012

Welcome to New Orleans (NOT)--UPDATED!

 
  New Orleans Times-Picayune reporter Ted Lewis has a welcome to The Big Easy article for the Crimson Tide and fans today. It places Football in Alabama (or, Alabama Football, if you will) and The Civil Rights struggle, on parrallel time tracks. He quotes Historian Taylor Branch:
"Football and segregation were parallel manias in Alabama in the 1960s," Civil Rights Era historian Taylor Branch said. "And they were so imbedded with the idea of segregation, they couldn't find a way out of it except through football.

To his credit, Lewis mentions that LSU had it's first black player after UA.
Roll Tide?

UPDATE: Not to be outdone, The Wall Street Journal has a story about LSU with the headline "You Can't Spell Lush Without L-S-U." Really!

Weight Watchers PR Problem





The problem's name is Charles Barkley....a paid spokesman for the company who describes the company as a "scam" in on off-air but recorded chit-chat during a game. I'm sure there's a PR way to turn it around that doesn't involve the obvious...firing Barkley. Suggestions?

Jan 5, 2012

Business

     BEST BUY Executives must be having a terrible morning after this morning's online Forbes article.
     Ouch....the story of a retailer who was perfectly positioned to slide into the online environment, and yet, according to the writer, failed.
     What other companies have taken the same journey to online failure?

Jan 4, 2012

Gene Bartow

     I'm not a sports reporter (there's an understatement!) but over the years I've covered a variety of sports stories, mostly because I was the last person left in the newsroom. (Remind me to tell you about the time I filled in for Eli Gold on the old WERC "Calling All Sports" show.)
     The death of Gene Bartow reminded me that I had covered the announcement that the was leaving UCLA after just two seasons and coming to UAB to launch a basketball program. It was 1977, and I had been in Birmingham for about a year when the news conference was called. The details are fuzzy, but it was such a big announcement that even sports neophyte me could sense the impact it would have. The room was packed with reporters from everywhere.
     I hadn't thought about that event probably at all since it happened, but today's story of his passing brought it flashing back. If there were negative stories or controversies about him (other than leaving LA for Birmingham, of all places!) I don't remember them. He brought a ton of class to sports in Birmingham, and helped put UAB on the sports map. Rest in Peace, Coach.
   

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Taliban agrees to open office in Qatar.