4/23/2009 2:12:39 AM
I don't know why he's getting into it. His political career is pretty much over, he doesn't stand to gain much by pocketing a media outlet.
4/23/2009 2:58:05 AM
John Kerry's plan is awesome simply because it will elicit hysterical crying like this^^ everywhere on the internet. Epic trolling, GG kerry.[Edited on April 23, 2009 at 9:04 AM. Reason : s]
4/23/2009 8:57:29 AM
I agree EarthDogg.Washington should have learned something from Bush's auto bailout. He put $$ into a failing system to avoid bankruptcy and all he did was prolong the inevitable. All he did was waste millions of taxpayer dollars! These failing industries have to restructure and repackage themselves to become profitable again. This is free market 101.
4/23/2009 9:05:38 AM
4/23/2009 9:36:41 AM
my godhave we not discussed this yet?it's been talked about for monthsoh that's right"new subject" same fucking horseshit from the lot of you[Edited on April 23, 2009 at 10:16 AM. Reason : why aren't you in charge you fucking genius?]
4/23/2009 10:14:47 AM
^^ yeah, i heard an interview the other day by a former journalist (it was actually David Simon, the creator of The Wire) who made the point that while newspapers like to blame all their woes on the Internet, they've been shrinking their staffs and coverage considerably since the 80s. He was laid off from a Baltimore paper in 1995, in the 3rd round of layoffs in the previous 5 years, clearly before the internet started making a splash. He said that it's been a long time that newspapers have simply been a way to sell ads, and they have to find someone to write content to fill in the blank spaces. And now that ad prices are tanking, their chickens are coming home to roost, so to say. Also, he makes an interesting prediction based on the demise of all the local papers and basically all local reporting. Local reporters used to be the watchdogs of city councils and mayors. Now, most small and medium cities, and even several large ones, don't have a single journalist who follows what happens in local politics. That gap is going to be taken advantage of, and local/state politicians are going to start getting more and more dirty and corrupt, since apparently no one is looking.
4/23/2009 10:22:02 AM
that's fucking old hatthis shit is no mysteryit's been happening since the 90sthe public desires no public watchdog, otherwise they'd still buy newspapersbut let's throw a fucking tea party and suck each others dick for a day an pretend we're just now becoming outragedand then go to burger king and put on some weight
4/23/2009 10:35:16 AM
4/23/2009 10:35:17 AM
maybe we should privatize everything so pepsi cola can tell me how to feelor maybe you can blame the government for all your woesor just blame liberals since it seems they're somehow driving all the right-wingers from journalism into business schoolgotta blame somebodycause it obviously can't be you
4/23/2009 10:37:51 AM
I was going to respond later, but shit like this
4/23/2009 10:58:16 AM
4/23/2009 11:02:42 AM
don't worry, i'm keen on thatthe bottom line is advertising... selling shit to vapid fleshbags for example, fox news claims frustration with the way things are in the countrybut not to the extent to take down their parent company, one of the largest peddlers of the shit they "loathe"morality indeedpeople like the way things areif they didn't they'd be out in the streets right nowbut i guess noti'm too busy crying on tww[Edited on April 23, 2009 at 11:12 AM. Reason : +]
4/23/2009 11:09:52 AM
4/23/2009 11:17:30 AM
4/23/2009 11:19:28 AM
you know what's better than network news?PBS newsOH GOD THAT'S RIGHTTHE NEXT LOGICAL STEP WILL OBVIOUSLY BE "THE DAILY WORKER"[Edited on April 23, 2009 at 11:23 AM. Reason : lol NPR]
4/23/2009 11:21:00 AM
If Barack Obama gets his way, all news except for The Daily Kos will be banned. Write a letter to your editor now and let them know that Obama and George Soros and probably Hugo Chavez don't run America.
4/23/2009 11:27:53 AM
THE FINAL SOLUTION!as it is implied in the first post
4/23/2009 11:32:02 AM
4/23/2009 11:36:48 AM
4/23/2009 11:38:35 AM
4/23/2009 11:42:28 AM
online media is overtaking print media?[OMG NEW]gg John Kerry]
4/23/2009 11:48:59 AM
online media is only overtaking print media in terms of volume and "loudness", not in terms of quality or actual journalism.
4/23/2009 1:24:58 PM
4/23/2009 1:49:45 PM
4/23/2009 3:15:35 PM
ya this is pretty rediculous.
4/23/2009 3:49:21 PM
4/24/2009 3:10:51 PM
online media is taking over print media in terms of everything
4/24/2009 3:23:15 PM
hell no![Edited on April 25, 2009 at 4:58 PM. Reason : w]
4/25/2009 4:58:02 PM
4/27/2009 9:09:21 AM
4/27/2009 9:33:35 AM
Things to Come was a pretty good movie. HG Wells basically taking on the forces that would slow progress, whether it was war or neo-Luddite sentiments.
4/27/2009 1:10:30 PM
4/28/2009 4:57:45 PM
4/28/2009 5:17:24 PM
Egon Spengler said it best: "Print is dead."
4/28/2009 8:45:09 PM
^^ Neither the New York Times or the Chicago Tribune are national papers. USA Today is not going anywhere.
4/29/2009 12:40:41 AM
My point is that cable tv and the internet have severely decreased circulation of print papers...while some might always exist, many large regional papers and local papers have already limited or stopped publication and this will continue...why should i subscribe to a newspaper when i can pull up all the articles online in 5 seconds? print newspapers are dying due to technology, who knows if they ever die out completely but they've certainly been decreasing at a large rate
4/29/2009 9:54:49 PM
most print newspapers need to move to friday through/ or sunday only and focus on the interactive side during the week with video, link resources and of course comments/blog discussionbut in the print editions.... they need to have things that can't be found in an online paperlike fold-out maps, document reproductions, "gift cards" and subscriber codes with access to on-line mp3s, movs, etc, samples of products, collected & magazine style archives of what they've written for the week, more emphasis on photography and illustrationsome of this is already happening, but they didn't move on it til the bitter endbut honestlynewspapers and internet don't mean a thing if people don't do anything but complain
4/29/2009 10:33:05 PM
bump
9/21/2009 8:06:12 AM
Obama open to newspaper bailout bill09/20/09
9/21/2009 8:23:43 AM
9/21/2009 9:19:39 AM
^ kooksaw things Obama hates white peopleā¦ do you really expect any part of his brain to work rationally?
9/21/2009 9:21:26 AM
Why would they need a bill? Are not non-profits already tax free?
9/21/2009 9:39:17 AM
i don't know how non-profit newspapers work, but non-profit radio stations are limited in how they can advertise which might limit the possibility of a non-profit newspaper to raise enough revenue. so maybe they are hoping to tailor a non-profit status for print/web news? i don't know.
9/21/2009 9:56:14 AM
9/21/2009 10:49:27 AM
^x5 yes, now you have it--how dare he.^^^^ hooksaw's a poopyhead! S. 673A BILLTo allow certain newspapers to be treated as described in section 501(c)(3) of the Internal Revenue Code of 1986 and exempt from tax under section 501(a) of such Code.
9/21/2009 12:10:43 PM
this, of course, should not happen, primarily because newspapers are liberals but also because newspapers are liberals.
9/21/2009 12:18:58 PM
The term bailout doesn't really apply to the proposed bill, at least in the common usage and recent examples of bailout being a cash hand out from the government.The rolly-eyes don't really explain a lot--why is the creation of a non-profit newspaper under 501(c)(3) bad?
9/21/2009 2:52:56 PM
^ For starters, ever heard of competition? Despite socialist drivel, it actually makes companies better. What will be the incentive to compete for, say, firsts in breaking news, accuracy, balanced coverage?[Edited on September 21, 2009 at 3:12 PM. Reason : And concerning "bailout," take it up with The Hill. ]
9/21/2009 3:10:28 PM
The market is good at allocating resources, but that doesn't change the fact that it's only as smart as the people acting within it, and unfortunately too many people are as irrational as lemmings.How about this: do you think that people should have to have a monetary incentive to tell the truth? How can competition ensure that people will get the truth as opposed to just whatever is the most fun to look at. Come on now, you can't seriously think that most profitable=most educational. If that was true, then Transformers 2 wouldn't have been the biggest movie of the summer.And also, how are newspapers being run as non-profits bad? Should we have a running policy of forcing all institutions to compete for profit? How about charities? Schools?
9/21/2009 3:31:26 PM