I've finally achieved consistency in my life. Any person of average or above intelligence can predict what I will say next with unerring accuracy. And what I say will always be wrong.

Thursday, May 12, 2005

[CanYoAssDigIt] Fwd: DN!: The Future of Public Broadcasting//Importance of Media Reform as

Tavis Smiley: "…this conservative agenda does not allow for us to
have conversations on public radio or public television that are,
pardon the phrase, fair and balanced."

I turned on KUOW this morning and they were discussing urgent and late
breaking developments in outdoor eateries in Seattle. I turned it off.

This afternoon I turned it on and they were discussing the urgent and
pressing issue of gardens on Bainbridge Island. I turned it off.

Then I opened my e-mail and read this:

---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: Democracy Now! <digest-service@list.democracynow.org>
Date: May 12, 2005 11:52 AM
Subject: DN!: The Future of Public Broadcasting//Importance of Media Reform as
To: digest@list.democracynow.org

DEMOCRACY NOW! DAILY EMAIL DIGEST
May 12, 2005

= = = = = = = = =
TODAY'S DEMOCRACY NOW!:

* A ŒRight-Wing Coup¹ at PBS & the CPB? A Roundtable Discussion on the
Future of Public Broadcasting *

On Wednesday, Reps. David Obey (D-WI) and John Dingell (D-MI) called for an
investigation of the Corporation Public Broadcasting. This comes following
accusations that the CPB has been largely taken over by conservatives who
are influencing programming and hiring decisions. Obey requested that the
Inspector General for the CPB, investigate whether the CPB is violating the
Public Broadcasting Act of 1967 that prohibits interference by federal
officials over the content and distribution of public programming, and
forbids "political or other tests" from being used in CPB hiring decisions.

We speak with Obey as well as PBS host Tavis Smiley, PBS board member Norman
Ornstein, Jeff Chester of the Center for Digital Democracy and media analyst
Robert McChesney, who is organizing this weekend¹s National Conference on
Media Reform.

Listen/Watch/Read
http://www.democracynow.org/article.pl?sid=05/05/12/1426203

* Rep. Bernie Sanders on the Importance of Media Reform As A Political Issue
*

In this broadcast from the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign we
hear an excerpt of a speech by Rep. Bernie Sanders, an independent from
Vemont. He spoke at the conference "Can Freedom of the Press Survive Media
Consolidation?"

Listen/Watch/Read
http://www.democracynow.org/article.pl?sid=05/05/12/1426211

***

A 'Right-Wing Coup' at PBS & the CPB? A Roundtable Discussion on the
Future of Public BroadcastingOn Wednesday, Reps. David Obey (D-WI) and
John Dingell (D-MI) called for an investigation of the Corporation
Public Broadcasting. This comes following accusations that the CPB has
been largely taken over by conservatives who are influencing
programming and hiring decisions. Obey requested that the Inspector
General for the CPB, investigate whether the CPB is violating the
Public Broadcasting Act of 1967 that prohibits interference by federal
officials over the content and distribution of public programming, and
forbids "political or other tests" from being used in CPB hiring
decisions. We speak with Obey as well as PBS host Tavis Smiley, PBS
board member Norman Ornstein, Jeff Chester of the Center for Digital
Democracy and media analyst Robert McChesney, who is organizing this
weekend's National Conference on Media Reform. [includes rush
transcript]


Rep. Bernie Sanders on the Importance of Media Reform As A Political
IssueIn this broadcast from the University of Illinois at
Urbana-Champaign we hear an excerpt of a speech by Rep. Bernie
Sanders, an independent from Vemont. He spoke at the conference "Can
Freedom of the Press Survive Media Consolidation?" [includes rush
transcript]

Thursday, May 12th, 2005
A 'Right-Wing Coup' at PBS & the CPB? A Roundtable Discussion on the
Future of Public Broadcasting

Listen to Segment || Download Show mp3
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On Wednesday, Reps. David Obey (D-WI) and John Dingell (D-MI) called
for an investigation of the Corporation Public Broadcasting. This
comes following accusations that the CPB has been largely taken over
by conservatives who are influencing programming and hiring decisions.
Obey requested that the Inspector General for the CPB, investigate
whether the CPB is violating the Public Broadcasting Act of 1967 that
prohibits interference by federal officials over the content and
distribution of public programming, and forbids "political or other
tests" from being used in CPB hiring decisions.
We speak with Obey as well as PBS host Tavis Smiley, PBS board member
Norman Ornstein, Jeff Chester of the Center for Digital Democracy and
media analyst Robert McChesney, who is organizing this weekend's
National Conference on Media Reform. [includes rush transcript]

Yesterday, two congressmen called for an investigation into reports
that the Republican Chairman of the Corporation for Public
Broadcasting, Ken Tomlinson, is pushing for political control over
public broadcasting. The Corporation for Public Broadcasting or CPB is
a private, nonprofit entity financed by Congress to ensure the
vitality of public television and radio. CPB develops programming for
National Public Radio, Public Radio International and PBS. Appointees
of President Bush currently control the majority of seats on CPB's
eight-member board.
Wisconsin Democrat, David Obey, and Michigan Democrat, John Dingell,
requested that the Inspector General for the CPB, investigate whether
the CPB is violating the Public Broadcasting Act of 1967. This act
prohibits interference by Federal officials over the content and
distribution of public programming, and forbids "political or other
tests" from being used in CPB hiring decisions.
The letter from the congressmen came after a flurry of high profile
personnel changes and revelations that have sparked controversy and
charges that CBP is moving to the right. In April, the CBP board did
not renew the contract of its chief executive, Kathleen Cox. Board
Chairman Kenneth Tomlinson tapped Ken Ferree -- a former top aide to
Michael Powell at the Federal Communications Commission – to be her
temporary replacement. Ferree alarmed many when he suggested in a
recent New York Times magazine article that he didn't watch much PBS
or listen to NPR.
Also in April, CPB appointed a pair of veteran journalists to review
public TV and radio programming for evidence of bias - the first time
in CPB's 38-year history that it has established such positions. In an
article in the Washington Post, an anonymous senior FCC official was
quoted as saying that the CPB, "is engaged in a systematic effort not
just to sanitize the truth, but to impose a right-wing agenda on PBS.
It's almost like a right-wing coup. It appears to be orchestrated."
And last week, a report in the New York Times revealed that Tomlinson
hired an outside consultant last year to keep track of the political
leanings of guests on the PBS program Now! With Bill Moyers. The paper
also reported that Tomlinson had worked to kill a legislative proposal
that would have required more radio and TV veterans on the CPB Board
and he has made clear that a former co-chairwoman of the Republican
National Committee, Assistant Secretary of State Patricia Harrison, is
his preferred choice for the vacant CPB presidency.
In response to the Times article, Tomlinson published an Op-Ed in the
Washington Times writing "To me and many other supporters of public
broadcasting the image of the left-wing bias of "NOW" -- unchallenged
by a balancing point of view on public broadcasting's Friday evening
lineup -- was unhealthy. Indeed, it jeopardized essential support for
public TV."
· Robert McChesney, professor at the University of Illinois at
Urbana-Champaign and the author of eight books including Rich Media,
Poor Democracy: Communication Politics in Dubious Times. He is the
co-founder of Free Press which is organizing this week's National
Conference on Media Reform here in St. Louis.
· Jeffrey Chester, Executive director of the Center for Digital Democracy.
· Norman Ornstein, resident scholar at the American Enterprise
Institute for Public Policy Research. He is a member of the Board of
Directors of the Public Broadcasting Service (PBS)
· Tavis Smiley, hosts Tavis Smiley which airs nationally on PBS
stations , and a radio show, The Tavis Smiley Show broadcasted by
Public Radio International.
· Rep. David Obey, Democratic Congressman from Wisconsin

RUSH TRANSCRIPT
This transcript is available free of charge, however donations help us
provide closed captioning for the deaf and hard of hearing on our TV
broadcast. Thank you for your generous contribution.
Donate - $25, $50, $100, more...
AMY GOODMAN: To talk about these developments, we're joined by a panel
of guests. Here in Urbana, Illinois, we're joined by Robert McChesney,
professor here at the University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign and
author of eight books including Rich Media, Poor Democracy:
Communication Politics in Dubious Times. On the phone from Los
Angeles, we'll be joined by Tavis Smiley, host of the television
program "Tavis Smiley," which airs on PBS nationally, and a radio
program, "The Tavis Smiley Show," which is being broadcast by Public
Radio International. On the phone with us from Washington, D.C., Jeff
Chester, Executive Director of the Center for Digital Democracy. Also
from D.C., Norman Ornstein, a member of the Board of Directors of PBS
and Resident Scholar at the American Enterprise Institute. We're going
to begin with Jeff Chester. You've been putting out a lot of documents
over the last few weeks. Can you sum up your concerns?
JEFF CHESTER: Well, there's no question that the chair of the CPB
board, Ken Tomlinson, backed by the G.O.P. majority is putting
tremendous pressure on PBS, in particular. As Ken Auletta, the New
Yorker media writer, reported last year, the GOP has realized they
can't really kill public television, in particular. It's too popular,
because, in part, of its children's programming. So they decided to
transform it, to weaken it, to eliminate the kind of serious news and
investigative reporting that public broadcasting occasionally does and
to put, in essence, a kind of GOP imprimatur over, in particular, the
news and public affairs. So there's tremendous pressure going on.
They have appointed these new watchdogs who have a sort of a dubious
reputation to oversee all programming on public TV and public radio,
including this show. They have a wide mandate to investigate any
programming on any public radio or television station regardless of
whether or not they're CPB or federal funding. So there's tremendous
pressure right now behind the scenes in public broadcasting; and I've
said that Tomlinson is really channeling sort of Richard Nixon here.
There's an enemies list. Bill Moyers is on that list. There's
backchannel communications with the White House to develop strategy.
There's pressure on programmers. They tried to get PBS to sign a
contract that would give CPB much more control over individual
programs -- thankfully, PBS rejected that contract -- and, of course,
there's been a slew of senior executives fired in part because those
executives told the GOP board chair, Ken Tomlinson: 'Look the polls
that you commissioned, the two polls you commissioned from a GOP firm
showed the public doesn't perceive bias. Eighty percent of the
American public thinks that PBS and NPR is doing a fine job.' So there
is a kind of invisible campaign going on -- these articles are now
exposing it -- to transform public television and eventually public
radio and, frankly, including the stations that carry your program.
AMY GOODMAN: Jeff Chester, can you talk about a document that you got
a hold of that was sent from CPB to PBS, a kind of contract? And I
also do want to say that we invited any representative from the
Corporation for Public Broadcasting to join us, but they declined our
invitation for today. Jeff Chester.
JEFF CHESTER: Well, for the last 17, 18 years, PBS and CPB sign a
annual contract, and it allows the transfer of funds, the CPB federal
funds, to PBS, to underwrite its national programming service, which
includes some of its prime time programs and children's programs. And
for the first time in 18 years, in essence, what CPB demanded was to
have much greater control over what PBS decides in terms of the
programs it will commit to for its national programming service. In
essence, if PBS did not agree that its programs would reflect the
research and the goals that CPB has developed, in essence, to
accomplish this Republican agenda, then CPB had the right to refuse to
provide it with funds. So, this was an unprecedented attempt on the
part of CPB to really control the programming content on PBS; and it
does illustrate another problem, is that public television in this
country is so enfeebled that for, in essence, a measly $25 million --
nothing for the commercial networks, but that's what really we were
talking about -- it went through all kinds of contortions until it
decided, of course, to reject this contract last April.
AMY GOODMAN: Well, we're going to talk about that and more in just a
minute. We're joined by a roundtable of people to talk about the state
of the Corporation for Public Broadcasting and particularly PBS.
[break]
AMY GOODMAN: We're talking about the Corporation for Public
Broadcasting and PBS. We're joined by a roundtable of people,
including Jeff Chester of the Center for Digital Democracy; Norm
Ornstein, the American Enterprise Institute, who sits on the board of
directors of PBS; Bob McChesney, in the studio with us, a professor
here at the University of Illinois, author of many books on the media.
I wanted to go to Bob McChesney. As you hear Jeff Chester sum up his
concerns, your thoughts as you look at the history of the media and
where public broadcasting fits into it.
ROBERT McCHESNEY: Well, I think Jeff's concerns are -- he nails it.
He's right on target. This is a severe crisis right now that public
broadcasting face. And I think, you know, to put it in context, the
United States has never had public broadcasting in the sense that most
countries has had it, which has been a non-profit, non-commercial
service for the entire population with a direct relationship to it.
Here in the United States, our public broadcasting developed after the
commercial interests had basically taken over the airwaves. And they
got first claim to programming. When public broadcasting came along in
the '60s, its job was to do the programs that those guys couldn't make
any money off of, that they were being criticized for not doing. So
they were put in a very difficult position. They weren't allowed to do
shows that developed a big audience. And then, ideologically they were
put in the position they couldn't do news programs that went outside
the boundaries either or they would face political pressure in
Washington. So if you understand the sort of way their hands were tied
behind their back from the outset, what public broadcasting has
accomplished in this country is actually fairly impressive, given the
difficult sort of scenario they were put into. And they fought hard
and I think some of the stations have done a terrific job in that
context, but it's always been a difficult battle, because you never
get political support, you're getting political censorship, and you're
struggling for support with commercial underwriting, with trying to
get listeners and viewers. But I think what we're seeing now, as Jeff
points out, is that there's such a policing now of intellectual
content in this country that this is a blatant attempt by the Bush
administration to say, well, here's like any sort of dissident voices
that we can get our hands on to quash, we have to, and I think that's
the only way to interpret what Tomlinson is doing.
AMY GOODMAN: Norm Ornstein, you are member of the Board of Directors
of PBS. Are you concerned?
NORMAN ORNSTEIN: Oh yeah, I think we're all concerned. You know, the
way in which public broadcasting was set up in this country, the
governing structure was always insane, frankly, layers of different
areas of responsibility and administration. There's always been
tremendous tensions between the stations and PBS itself, a programming
service. CPB is an entity which was the conduit for federal funds. It
was also supposed to provide – set up that way to provide a firewall
between the political process and the programming. And if you have not
a firewall, but a fire, then that's a major concern. It fits in with a
lot of other concerns, frankly. You know, public broadcasting in this
country is going to struggle as it will in other countries, as it is
in other countries, when you have all of a sudden a 500-channel
universe. It's a different world, and you have to justify yourself in
a different way. If you have got an arts channel and an opera channel
and a fishing channel and a National Geographic channel and all kinds
of other things, what is it that makes public broadcasting different
and unique? Ultimately, that justifies the public involvement.
At the same time, as we make the transition to digital broadcasting,
there's a tremendous expense, and the money that's coming in both to
pay for the transition and that will end up covering the ability to do
the things that public broadcasting can do in a digital age, is going
to be a struggle, as well. We have been spending a lot of our time
trying to make sure we could have a bright digital future. So, you put
all of those things together, and you have got headaches even if there
weren't this kind of political problem.
I will tell you, frankly, that during my service on the board, I was
very uneasy about the Moyers show because I saw the show as basically
public broadcasting putting a "kick me" sign on the back, and I knew
what was going to happen from that. What we have had with the Moyers
show is a highly visible prime time news show, in which Bill acted
both as advocate and commentator and anchor. It's very difficult to
mix those roles. And I knew what was going to happen was we would get
a kind of criticism and pressure that would lead to some kind of
right-wing shows to balance the left-wing show. We got it with Tucker
Carlson's show. We got it with "Wall Street Journal Report."
And what I have feared for a long time is that we would lose our
identity in public affairs, which should be and has to be distinct
from what's offered on cable or what's offered on commercial
broadcasting, public affairs. Commercial broadcasting public affairs
has become dumbed down and shallow, as they struggle to deal with the
fact that they're money losers for their corporate entities, and cable
is all shouting all the time. What they love is to put somebody from
one end shouting at somebody from the other end. Public broadcasting
has not had, in an overall sense, bias in its public affairs. It has
had the leading lights of the news hour of "Frontline," where you can
have points of view expressed, but it's very, very hard to make the
case that they tilt one way or the other. With "Washington Week," with
a whole series of other programs, with the Ken Burns documentaries
that stand out as beacons. And once you move in a direction where
you've got to balance left wing against right wing, you look like
cable. And taking cable people like Tucker Carlson, I thought, was
leading us in a direction where we would lose any sense of why we had
a justification in public affairs in a 500-channel universe. So there
are lots of areas of concern here, and of course, they're going to be
exploited by political entities.
ROBERT McCHESNEY: Norm has hit on a really -- first, the great
question he asked: Was there a justification for public broadcasting
in a 500-channel universe? He actually answered that at the end of his
point, because he pointed out that even with 500 channels there's a
lot that's not being done or a lot that's being done poorly. And
what's striking around the world, if you look at Germany and Britain
and northern Europe and Japan, is that public broadcasting -- they
thought it would all decline around the world with the advent of
satellite television -- is booming, because the services that
non-commercial, well-funded public broadcasting could provide,
especially in a country like the United States -- imagine what we
could have the local news that was done by public broadcasters -- are
so clear to people, they're flocking to it now. It's doing better than
ever in many respects in countries around the world. So we have seen
the answer to the question. There's a definite place for public
broadcasting, non-profit, non-commercial broadcasting. I think where I
would sort of take difference with Mr. Ornstein, was his
categorization of the Moyers show, because the Moyers show was not a
liberal or left-wing version of the right-wing talk show. It was an
investigative journalism show. Bill actually broke stories. He
investigated people in power. And frankly, if they put on a
conservative-oriented investigative show, I think that would have been
terrific. But you don't balance an investigative journalism show with
pontificators that just sort of shout out sound bites but don't
actually do any journalism, don't get dirt under their fingernails,
and that's why I don't think that's a legitimate comparison.
AMY GOODMAN: What about the tradition of muckraking journalism? Can
you talk a little about it?
ROBERT McCHESNEY: Well, I think as Norm pointed out that's pretty much
dead in commercial broadcast media. We don't have hard investigations
of people in power. As we saw during the buildup to the Iraq war, most
depressingly, too much of what passes for broadcast journalism is
stenography for press releases. There's not much investigation digging
behind the claims of people in power. And what Bill did by doing that
is called liberal journalism, but I don't know why exactly it's
liberal journalism when you investigate what people in power say.
Because if Bill Moyers doesn't apply that to democrats, that's
legitimate. But as far as I can tell, Bill Moyers has one standard he
applies to anyone in power.
AMY GOODMAN: In The New York Times last week, their piece called,
"Republican Chair Exerts Pressure on PBS, Alleging Biases," they
write, "In late March, on the recommendation of administration
officials, Kenneth Tomlinson hired the Director of the White House
Office of Global Communications as a senior staff member. While she
was still on the White House staff, she helped craft guidelines,
governing the work of two ombudsman whom the corporation recently
appointed to review the content of public radio and television
broadcasts. Tomlinson also encouraged Corporation and public
broadcasting officials to broadcast the "Journal Editorial Report,"
whose host, Paul Gigot, is editor of the conservative editorial page
of the Wall Street Journal, and while a search firm has been retained
to find a successor for Kathleen Cox, the Corporation's president and
chief executive, whose contract wasn't renewed, Tomlinson has made
clear to the board his choice is Patricia Harrison, co-chair of the
Republican National Committee, who is now an Assistant Secretary of
State." Norm Ornstein?
NORMAN ORNSTEIN: Well, I don't like -- first of all, I don't like the
idea of having ombudsmen at -- although, you know, they did not pick
crazy people, Ken Bode is certainly a distinguished journalist --
AMY GOODMAN: Ken Bode, as well as -- of formerly with NBC, and the
other ombudsman, Jeff Chester, with Reader's Digest? We'll get him
back on. Norm Ornstein, your response.
NORMAN ORNSTEIN: You know, the whole concept of having ombudsman at
this point is a suggestion that you have got bias in your public
affairs. And my own judgment is that if you leave Moyers and these
response shows to it aside, I just have [inaudible] anything that
would suggest a bias in the public affairs arena. So I didn't find
that a particularly appropriate move to make. And you have got to be
concerned. Frankly, I don't know why you have a board at CPB that
includes people from both sides. I can't understand why we haven't
heard anything from any of the board members, including those who were
appointed by democrats, about what's going on inside. I just don't
understand it.
AMY GOODMAN: Well, let me ask Jeff Chester if he can join. Let me ask
Jeff Chester if he can join in this discussion about the ombudspeople,
and what they're supposed to be doing, and who they are?
JEFFREY CHESTER: First in terms of the democrats on the CPB board, I
have spoken to some. I mean, there's one outstanding vacancy, and we
know from the Ken Auletta story that the White House refused to
support the democratic nominee, Professor Chon Noriega, because he
said during his White House vetting that he would not censor
individual programs, but according to my sources on the CPB board, no
matter what the democrats say, the chairperson keeps returning to this
idea that there's bias in the program. Mr. Tomlinson, despite these
two polls, is completely fixated on the fact that he sees bias
throughout the public television schedule. It's not just Mr. Moyers,
and there I also have to agree here that one of my concerns is that
what Tomlinson and company are critiquing is the serious journalism
that you saw in "Now." I mean, you have people working on the "Now"
show who are refugees from the network evening news departments, Norm.
You know, it's the only place left where you can do serious
investigative reporting. And I understand the concern that some people
had about the commentary. But the reporting is first rate, and it's
that kind of reporting, frankly, that makes public television
potentially distinct in this multi-channel universe and it's that kind
of serious investigative reporting that in fact is the target of
Tomlinson and company.
Now, as Tomlinson is trying to, you know, squeeze public television to
make programming decisions that reflect his and the GOP agenda, they
have chosen these two people who frankly have a conflict of interest.
I mean, Ken Bode was a distinguished journalist, but, you know, he in
essence was fired from his PBS show and replaced by Gwen Ifill. That
was the "Washington Week in Review." So he may harbor some, you know,
grudge, unconscious or not, against public broadcasting. Mr. Schultz
is completely inappropriate, a crony of Tomlinson from years back with
strong connections into the hard right of the Republican Party. These
guys have been told, go and look at whatever you want. Look at
Pacifica, you know, look at NPR and report back to us, and we'll
publicize it, etc. So it's part of the infrastructure of control that
Tomlinson and company have set up. And finally, you know, it's always
a little confusing about the role of CPB in programming, but CPB is
pushing a programming agenda, including its new programming chief, who
is a conservative programmer, named Michael Pack, who used to work
with Lynne Cheney. He has created a whole new series.
AMY GOODMAN: Lynne Cheney, the Vice President' wife, former chairman
of the National Endowment for Humanities.
JEFFREY CHESTER: That's right. And we know from the Ken Auletta story
that Michael Pack was the producer when Lynne Cheney brought PBS
president Pat Mitchell into the Vice President's residence about two
years ago to pitch a children's series, while Pack is now running a
series at CPB, "America at the Crossroads," which is to look at the
nature of international terrorism, states that harbor, response to
terrorists. So there's a conservative programming agenda at CPB now
underway, which is one reason why Congress, the democrats, have asked
for this data.
AMY GOODMAN: Well, Jeff Chester, Norm Ornstein, Bob McChesney, we're
also joined on the line now from Los Angeles by Tavis Smiley, who is
host of a PBS television program as well as a radio program, "The
Tavis Smiley Show," which is broadcasting out of Public Radio
International. Welcome to Democracy Now!, as well, Tavis.
TAVIS SMILEY: Amy, nice to have you on, and good morning to all your guests.
AMY GOODMAN: It's good to have you with us. Can you talk about your
response to the latest news about the Corporation for Public
Broadcasting, headlines like those in The New York Times around the
issue of pressure being put on PBS and public broadcasting by the
chair of the CPB?
TAVIS SMILEY: Who was the last person speaking just before I came on?
AMY GOODMAN: That was Jeff Chester.
TAVIS SMILEY: That was Jeff. First of all, let me just say in the – as
we say, in the fine tradition of the black church, amen. When I heard
Jeff saying at end with regard to the politics of – the politics being
played around this issue, I would have to agree with everything Jeff
said. I mean, it's pretty clear to me, you would have – I mean, Stevie
Wonder can see that there are clearly politics being played around
this particular issue with regard to CPB and the way they do business,
and not just politics but indeed partisan politics being played, as
Jeff was pointing out. I guess my take is a little bit different, and,
you know, I guess I'd want to expand the conversation to talk about
how we're actually defining the term conservative politics. So it's
clear they have a conservative political agenda where CPB is
concerned, but when I talk about conservativism, I'm expanding it
beyond just the pure partisan political agenda to talk more also – to
talk more, rather, about the issue of diversity.
I have, as you know, a program on public radio and a program on public
television, the only American to be nationally heard on both public
radio and public television every day. And the reality is that up
until 2001, when I became the first African American to host his own
show, and certainly a show geared toward bringing in a broader
audience of listeners to public radio, CPB had not thought it
important enough prior to that time and even since that time, to
really reach out to expand public radio to a broader audience. That is
an indictment not just on conservatives but liberals alike, or
so-called liberals, but it certainly is getting worse and getting more
difficult to put program on that reaches out not just -- reaches out,
rather, to a broader audience. And I see that process becoming more
difficult than it was even four years ago, given the conservative
politics that are being played here.
How do I know that? Because after I started the public radio program,
then we decided to go to public television, and we have now a very
successful program in its second season on PBS, that is doing the same
thing that our radio program has done. We have the youngest
demographic. We have the most multicultural, multiracial audience. We
have an educated audience. We have all the things that a -- that
anybody at CPB or PBS or public radio could want in terms of audience
demographics, and yet when we went to CPB to get our television
program on the air, with all of the success we were having on public
radio, CPB did not fund, did not support the television show.
This is not an axe to grind. Our show is in its second season. We, at
this point, don't want CPB money. We're off and running, not a
problem. The point I'm raising here, Amy, very quickly is that this
agenda, this conservative agenda does not allow for us to have
conversations on public radio or public television that are, pardon
the phrase, fair and balanced. That's a problem, this political
partisan agenda, but beyond that it creates a broader problem, because
in the most multicultural, multiracial, multiethnic America ever, I do
not see with these kinds of folk pushing their agenda how we're ever
going to make public radio sound like America looks, how we ever get
public television to look like America looks. And that's another
problem for those of us who happen to be persons of color who value
public radio, who value public television and are frightened about
what's happening right now at CPB.
JEFFREY CHESTER: Can I say something?
AMY GOODMAN: You left NPR?
TAVIS SMILEY: I did leave NPR. And I left NPR for that very reason,
that I did not think, quite frankly, that NPR was as serious as I
thought they were when I joined them about diversity, about inclusion.
I'm one African American. The show was doing extremely well, the
fastest growing program, again, in the history of NPR. Nobody there
would argue those numbers. The fact of the matter was, after three
years, I was pushing for some movement. I thought that given the
success that we had, people in the building should have seen the light
and not have to force me to make them feel the heat to build upon the
success that we have had, or had had while I was there. So, to make a
long story short without, you know, casting aspersion again on NPR, I
just decided the best thing for me to do -- I didn't want to be used
as a front, I didn't want to be window dressing -- so the best thing
for me to do was to leave and to start all over again. Now, one
doesn't walk away from almost 100 stations that it takes you three
years to build up to, being heard in 92-94% of the country. One
doesn't walk away from that. That's a tough and difficult decision to
make. But for me, the issue of diversity and inclusion was important
enough to walk away with the hope of shining a light on what was not
being done, so that in the months and years to come, we can live up to
the true ideals of what public television and, in that regard, public
radio really ought to be about.
AMY GOODMAN: Bob McChesney, you have been talking about holding public
meetings and addressing this issue of fair and balanced. Who
determines what's one side and what's the other?
ROBERT McCHESNEY: Well, I think, clearly what we are seeing in the
case of Tomlinson is this sort of definition of fair and balanced is
ideological, it's opportunistic, it has no principle behind it. I
mean, I think, as Tavis Smiley just pointed out, if one were to just
look at the programming on NPR and PBS stations and say, well, what is
sort of -- what's going on here? What's missing? I mean, the thing
that jumps out is the lack of diversity, as he points out, of people
of color. I mean, striking the lack of any coverage of working class
people or labor issues, all of the business shows – but, you know, you
don't hear Ken Tomlinson saying, better get labor programs on, better
hear what consumers and workers think about the economy. So, blatantly
opportunistic tone of this sort of sense of balance, I think, is
apparent. The way to get the answer to this – you know, ironically
now, there used to be a firewall between the Corporation for Public
Broadcasting and the management, theoretically, so they wouldn't feel
political pressure for every decision they make. That firewall is
coming down. The firewall that's still there that has to come down is
between the people in this country, the listeners, the viewers, the
potential viewers and listeners and the managers and the politicians.
We can't let the Ken Tomlinsons of the world sort of act like they
represent the public, when they have no – don't have the public's
interest at heart and there's no evidence they have any support in the
public for what they're doing. All of the evidence we're getting right
now shows that there's a wellspring of support for the idea of public
radio and TV in this country. People like the idea, even people who
don't use the system, but there are concerns, and the primary concern
is the lack of funding, first of all, and secondly, this partisan
meddling by people like Ken Tomlinson.
AMY GOODMAN: Free Press did a study. You did a sort of poll in a few areas?
ROBERT McCHESNEY: Well, we've done a series of focus groups with
working class people in the last few weeks. And we don't -- haven't
gotten the final data in, but we were struck by the degree of support
for public broadcasting, and from a constituency not considered to be,
as Tavis Smiley has said, their core audience.
AMY GOODMAN: Bob McChesney, I am going to interrupt for a minute,
because we have just been joined on the telephone by Congress member
David Obey of Wisconsin, who I know is racing off to a Congressional
briefing, having just come off of C-SPAN. Welcome to Democracy Now!,
Congress member Obey.
REP. DAVID OBEY: Thank you
AMY GOODMAN: It's good to have you with us. Now, you have joined with
Congress member Dingell in writing a letter to the Inspector General
of the Corporation for Public Broadcasting, demanding an investigation
of what?
REP. DAVID OBEY: Well, there have been a number of accounts in
newspapers and stories elsewhere which would seem to indicate that Mr.
Tomlinson is crossing the line in terms of trying to apply political
pressure or achieve political ends for public broadcasting. The
Corporation for Public Broadcasting is specifically forbidden by law
to get itself involved in programming or trying to promote or
distribute programming, and from the comments that we have seen in a
variety of news stories, ranging from The New York Times on the left
to The Washington Times on the right, it seems that there's
considerable cause for concern.
AMY GOODMAN: And so what do you want to specifically be looked at, and
I'm looking at your letter right now, which raises a number of
questions, among them, that Mr. Tomlinson hired Mary Catherine Andrews
while she was still director of the White House Office of Global
Communications to draft guidelines for two ombudsman to review the
content of public radio and television?
REP. DAVID OBEY: That's one item. If an ombudsman is going to be
created, for instance, I question whether or not it ought to report to
the Corporation for Public Broadcasting. I'm not at all convinced that
that doesn't put them right smack in the middle of making judgments
about programming that they had no business making. We also would like
to have them review what the circumstances were around Mr. Tomlinson's
hiring a consultant to specifically review and evaluate Bill Moyers's
show that recently went off the air. It appears that that's the only
show that was targeted. It also appears that Mr. Tomlinson was very
active in trying to promote The Wall Street Journal Editorial Board's
new program with member stations around the country, and that, to me,
does not seem to be legitimate.
AMY GOODMAN: The way they're spinning your letter to the CPB Inspector
General, Congressman Obey, on the Drudge Report right now, it says,
"Dem Congressman: conservative voices on PBS may be illegal."
REP. DAVID OBEY: Oh, that's nonsense. No, no one is squawking about
conservative or liberal. Or I don't care if people are Irish, French,
you name it. What I want is to see that the law is adhered to, and the
law says that the Corporation for Public Broadcasting is supposed to
keep its cotton-picking nose out of programming and out of politics.
AMY GOODMAN: Bob McChesney, you're calling for public hearings?
ROBERT McCHESNEY: Well, I think the way around this -- the only
solution to this is to not allow these debates to be done behind
closed doors in Washington without any public involvement. The voice
that's missing here entirely is the public of this country, the people
who support public broadcasting, the people who watch it, the people
who want it in their communities. Let's go around the country. Let's
have public broadcasting officials, members of Congress, go out and
talk to people in their communities about what they want from public
broadcasting, hear what they say. I have got a feeling that Ken
Tomlinson is going to be getting a real education in what the American
people think they want from their public broadcasting, if he actually
hears from them and not just from the White House about what he should
be doing.
AMY GOODMAN: Jeff Chester, you are calling for the resignation of Mr.
Tomlinson?
JEFFREY CHESTER: It's time that Ken Tomlinson leave. He has
politicized this agency unnecessarily. He has brought disgrace upon
it. Just quickly, I'd like to concur with what Mr. Smiley said. I
mean, there's a larger issue here, which is the lack of vision, in a
way, that both public television and public radio have about the
future. PBS in particular is in a real crisis, and you know, there
should have been at this time, you know, many, many more people like
Bill Moyers, people of color, women, who had series, who had programs,
who had national platforms. PBS sadly has never developed that, and so
one of the things we need to do is a much larger conversation, not
just fight off this right-wing attack and find out whether or not CPB
has broken the law, but really re-envision public media for the 21st
century.
AMY GOODMAN: What about this notion that some general managers talk
about on public radio and television that they need a firewall from
the public in public television and radio?
ROBERT McCHESNEY: I think -- go ahead, Jeff.
JEFFREY CHESTER: I think, frankly -- and Norm sort of talked about
this at the beginning, part of the problem is the whole arcane
governance structure. A lot of public television stations now are very
comfortable with their corporate underwriters. You know, I wish Free
Press luck, but they're going to find that, in many ways it's too late
to get those stations, PBS stations to change. I mean, when you have
the general manager of the Nashville PBS station telling PBS we don't
want any more news or public affairs programs on the national
schedule, when you have those kinds of people who are seeking just
safe programs that can generate revenues from underwriting and viewer
sponsorship, then you know you have a real problem.
AMY GOODMAN: Well, I want to thank you all for being with us. When we
come back, we're going to hear what another Congress member has to say
about public broadcasting. He is Bernie Sanders, the independent of
Vermont. Some are saying that he has a very good shot at becoming the
Senator of Vermont when Jim Jeffords steps down after the next
election. Bob McChesney of Free Press, a professor at University of
Illinois; Jeff Chester of Center for Digital Democracy; Norm Ornstein
of the American Enterprise Institue; Tavis Smiley of "The Tavis Smiley
Show" and PBS; Congress member Obey, Democrat of Wisconsin.
To purchase an audio or video copy of this entire program, click here
for our new online ordering or call 1 (800) 881-2359.

***

For those of you still with me, I'd like to point out that you can't
hear Amy Goodman or Tavis Smiley on KUOW.


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[CanYoAssDigIt] Fwd: URGENT REPLY

What kind of idiot do they take me for? I told them I couldn't
possibly do this for less than 25%!

I am so smrt

SMRT!

---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: Eddie Don <eddie_600don@email.ro>
Date: May 12, 2005 6:20 AM
Subject: URGENT REPLY
To: eddie_600don@email.ro

eddie don AND ASSOCIATES
Talackerstrasse 1, P.O. Box 05 Zurich
Opfikon-Glattbrugg, Switzerland.
E-mail:

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Switzerland. I have a client (widow) she has Twenty Million
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My client is willing to offer you 20% of the total fund if
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of your

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mail address:stated above for more details.

Yours Sincerely,
Dr. eddie don. (Chairman).

___________________________
Cv-ul tau ia 500 euro/luna!
http://500.myjob.ro


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[CanYoAssDigIt] Mission Accomplished

How about a giant statue of Patrick McGohan at Abu Chraib? or maybe
the star of Queer Eye for the Straight Guy? If people felt that
trivialized what is going on there, would they be over-reacting?

****

Two years after "Mission Accomplished", whatever moral stature the
United States could claim at the end of its invasion of Iraq has long
ago been squandered in the torture and abuse and deaths at Abu Ghraib.
That the symbol of Saddam Hussein's brutality should have been turned
by his own enemies into the symbol of their own brutality is a
singularly ironic epitaph for the whole Iraq adventure. We have all
been contaminated by the cruelty of the interrogators and the guards
and prison commanders.

But this is not only about Abu Ghraib. There are clear and proven
connections now between the abuses at Abu Ghraib and the cruelty at
the Americans' Bagram prison in Afghanistan and Guantanamo Bay.
Curiously, General Janis Karpinski, the only senior US officer facing
charges over Abu Ghraib, admitted to me a year earlier when I visited
the prison that she had been at Guantanamo Bay, but that at Abu Ghraib
she was not permitted to attend interrogations - which seems very odd.

A vast quantity of evidence has now been built up on the system which
the Americans have created for mistreating and torturing prisoners. I
have interviewed a Palestinian who gave me compelling evidence of anal
rape with wooden poles at Bagram - by Americans, not by Afghans.

Many of the stories now coming out of Guantanamo - the sexual
humiliation of Muslim prisoners, their shackling to seats in which
they defecate and urinate, the use of pornography to make Muslim
prisoners feel impure, the female interrogators who wear little
clothing (or, in one case, pretended to smear menstrual blood on a
prisoner's face) - are increasingly proved true. Iraqis whom I have
questioned at great length over many hours, speak with candour of
terrifying beatings from military and civilian interrogators, not just
in Abu Ghraib but in US bases elsewhere in Iraq.

At the American camp outside Fallujah, prisoners are beaten with full
plastic water bottles which break, cutting the skin. At Abu Ghraib,
prison dogs have been used to frighten and to bite prisoners.

How did this culture of filth start in America's "war on terror"? The
institutionalised injustice which we have witnessed across the world,
the vile American "renditions" in which prisoners are freighted to
countries where they can be roasted, electrified or, in Uzbekistan,
cooked alive in fat? As Bob Herbert wrote in The New York Times, what
seemed mind-boggling when the first pictures emerged from Abu Ghraib
is now routine, typical of the abuse that has "permeated the Bush
administration's operations".


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Wednesday, May 11, 2005

[CanYoAssDigIt] Fwd: [Bizarro_UltraZine] Re: 9-foot bronze statue of BEWITCHED Samantha causes controversy...

---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: Matt Love <matt.mattlove1@gmail.com>
Date: May 11, 2005 10:02 PM
Subject: Re: [Bizarro_UltraZine] Re: 9-foot bronze statue of BEWITCHED
Samantha causes controversy...
To: Bizarro_UltraZine@yahoogroups.com

The problem is that they haven't reacted enough. It' is true that you
can find witch related souvenirs and shops in Salem, that is part of
the problem. I am fully in favor of the people that would like to make
amends for what happened in Salem in the past, and recognize they
haven't fully gotten there yet. It's true that it's 400 years in the
past - it makes it a good place to start, because it took the catholic
church 500 years to apologize to Galileo, it took the people of York
800 years to honor the Jews that were slaughtered there in their
witchhunt. So it would be a good idea to close the gap, maybe if they
start trying to do the right thing in Salem, we can expect that in a
couple of hundred years or so, the US will apologize for using
biological weapons against Cuba, or mining the harbors in Nicaragua.

I am a student of witchhunts. And as you know, I find the persecution
of innocent people to be one of the most horrific things imaginable.
of course, we always like to believe that anybody who is murdered by
the state deserves it. And if it happens to us, and nobody sticks up
for us, well, we're dead, so tough luck, people will think we deserved
it to, so that's just the way it goes.

I thought of an analogy I like better than yours - a fashion show at
Dachau, with all the heroin thin models wearing prison camp uniforms
marching gaily off to the showers. Not trivializing their suffering
at all.

On 5/11/05, tim_tt2 <tim_tt2@yahoo.com> wrote:
> It sounds to me that people are over reacting...sure bad things
> happened to innocent people during the witch hunts, but like the guy
> said...it's documented in museums and though people shouldn't trivilize
> what happened...I bet if you go to Salem, you'll find a lot of witch
> related souveniers and shops.
>
> It's like erecting an Alien statue in Roswell,NM
>
> T.
>
>
>
> Yahoo! Groups Links
>
>
>
>
>


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[CanYoAssDigIt] Re: [Bizarro_UltraZine] This should make Matt Love's day lol

They are all traitors, and Anti-American on fundamentally deep levels.

Of course, people are so narcotized by TV (and the drugs that are
advertised so heavily on TV these days) that they don't understand
this.

Being at my folks place, I have been able to follow Mike Mitchell's
advice and watch more TV. What a vast wasteland of idiocy and lies.

On the news they talked about some local fellow who died in Iraq. He
wanted so much to help the people of Iraq that he went back for a 2nd
tour. It is indeed possible that his death at the hands of the Iraqi
people who so desperately want the US military and US industry out of
their country will eventually help them. Because if enough people
like him die, the citizens of this country may eventually act on their
belief that the war is wrong, not worth it, all so dick Cheney's
colleagues at Halliburton can make a buck, etc. It's quite clear that
the administration has no intention of doing what the American public
want, and it's discouraging, but in no way surprising, that the
legislature, rapidly collapsing into a fraud and a farce just as in
Rome during the collapse of their republic.

They must be forced to act like Americans. not like fraudulent
Americans like John Wayne and Ronald Reagan, but real Americans like
Andrew Jackson and Mark Hatfield. If they are incapable of this, they
should be turned out of office, every one of them.

I know that was sort of the culmination of the rhetorical arc I had
established, but I can't resist adding - what kind of idiots will sign
up because they will get more money if they are killed? well, it will
probably work, since people are getting twice as stupid every 18
months, but I don't want to hear any more shit about how crazy Muslims
are for expecting a reward in the afterlife for an act of terror today
- American terrorists think they'll be able to spend money after they
die!

On 5/11/05, tim_tt2 <tim_tt2@yahoo.com> wrote:
> rs, 1 minute ago
>
> WASHINGTON - Congress is giving President Bush billions of
> dollars more for the fighting in Afghanistan and Iraq, a
> higher death benefit for soldiers killed in combat and a new embassy
> in Baghdad.
>
> ADVERTISEMENT
>
> The spending package also requires states to issue more uniform
> driver's licenses and to verify the citizenship or legal status of
> license applicants, a provision that has prompted some states to
> threaten to sue.
>
> Bush, who gained most of what he had sought in the $82 billion
> measure, said he would sign the bill into law and praised Congress
> for showing bipartisan support for the troops and anti-terrorism
> efforts.
>
> The 100-member Senate passed the measure unanimously on Tuesday, and
> the House approved it overwhelmingly last week.
>
> "New democracies are taking root in Iraq and Afghanistan, and America
> is proud to stand with them," Bush said in a written statement. "This
> legislation will help America continue to promote freedom and
> democracy."
>
> The bill is the fifth emergency spending package Congress has taken
> up since the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks. It raises the cost of
> the global effort to fight terrorism to more than $300 billion since
> 2001.
>
> Most of the money — $75.9 billion — is planned for military
> operations in Iraq and Afghanistan, while $4.2 billion goes to
> foreign aid and other international relations programs.
>
> The bill pays for war costs through September, the end of the current
> fiscal year. Rep. John Murtha (news, bio, voting record) of
> Pennsylvania, the top Democrat on the House Appropriations
> Committee's defense subcommittee, said the Army already is discussing
> needing another spending bill as early as August.
>
> The president sent Congress the spending proposal in February. Both
> Republican-controlled chambers had promised to fund only items and
> programs lawmakers deemed urgent. The final legislation matches
> Bush's proposed price tag.
>
> Lawmakers packed the bill with a number of provisions, including one
> drafted by Sen. Dick Durbin, D-Ill., that prohibits money in the bill
> from being used "to subject any person in the custody or under the
> physical control of the United States to torture or cruel, inhuman or
> degrading treatment or punishment" prohibited by U.S. laws and
> treaties.
>
> Durbin said the measure was in response to the prisoner abuses
> scandals in Iraq and elsewhere.
>
> Senate Appropriations Committee Chairman Thad Cochran, R-Miss.,
> called the final bill "a genuine compromise between the two bodies on
> legislation that is of utmost importance to our troops who are
> deployed in the war on terror and for our allies around the world."
>
> Democrats used the bill to criticize the Bush administration for its
> Iraq policies and for failing to go through the normal budget process
> to pay for the wars. Many also assailed Republicans for tacking on
> immigration provisions.
>
> The legislation provides money for combat costs, including
> ammunition, armor for vehicles, weapons systems and other equipment.
> It also boosts the one-time benefit for survivors of troops killed in
> combat zones from $12,000 to $100,000. The increase would apply
> retroactively to families of troops killed in Iraq and Afghanistan
> beginning Oct. 7, 2001.
>
> On the foreign affairs side, the measure provides $592 million for a
> secure diplomatic compound in Baghdad, $230 million for U.S. allies
> in the war on terror, and $200 million in economic and infrastructure
> assistance to the Palestinian Authority. The bill includes $907
> million for expenses and aid related to the December tsunami in
> Southeast Asia.
>
> Sen. Lamar Alexander, R-Tenn., joined Democrats and state
> officials Tuesday in criticizing the driver's license rules, which he
> said would create national identification cards and stick state
> governments with the bill.
>
> "It's possible that some governor may look at this and say, 'Wait a
> minute. Who are these people in Washington telling us what to do with
> our driver's licenses and making us pay for them too?'" Alexander
> said.
>
> The bill toughens asylum laws, authorizes the completion of a fence
> across the California-Mexican border and provides money to hire more
> border security agents. The House had included most of the provisions
> in its version of the bill. The Senate did not but agreed during
> negotiations to go along with the House.
>
> Senate Minority Leader Harry Reid, D-Nev., said the bill comes up
> short in at least two areas.
>
> "We should have received much greater attention in this bill about
> our ability to succeed in Iraq," Reid said. And, immigration reform
> should have been dealt with later, he said.
>
> Overall, the measure reflects a desire by lawmakers to give the
> Pentagon what it needs while holding the line on State Department
> spending. Lawmakers provided roughly $1 billion more than Bush sought
> for defense and about $1.5 billion less than he wanted for
> international relations programs
>
>
>
> Yahoo! Groups Links
>
>
>
>
>


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Tuesday, May 10, 2005

[CanYoAssDigIt] Re: [Bizarro_UltraZine] 9-foot bronze statue of BEWITCHED Samantha causes controversy...

It's almost unspeakably vulgar - sort of like putting up a big statue
of Colonel Klink from Hogan's heroes in auschwitz - no, make that
jeruselem.

but the salem people deserve to have this stuffed down their throat,
because in many ways they have trivialized the state sponsored,
terrorist murder of those people.

what next? a statue of Bomb Voyage (from the Incredibles) at the site
of theTwin Towers? You betcha, good fun, harmless and pleasant to the
eye and to the touch

On 5/10/05, kdhaisch@aol.com <kdhaisch@aol.com> wrote:
> from the IMDb...
>
> A 9-foot bronze statue of witch Samantha Stephens, the
> character played by Elizabeth Montgomery on "Bewitched,"
> and paid for by the TV Land cable channel, has divided
> the town of Salem, MA, which had agreed to showcase
> the statue in a public park.
>
> Although several episodes of "Bewitched" were set in
> Salem, where Samantha attended a witches' convention,
> John Carr, a former member of the Salem Historic
> District Commission, told today's Washington Post that
> the plan trivializes the hanging of 19 citizens accused
> of witchcraft in 1692. "It's like TV Land going to Auschwitz
> and proposing to erect a statue of Colonel Klink," said
> Carr.
>
> But Mayor Stanley Usovicz noted that Salem deals with
> its tragic past in local museums. "Will this statue redefine
> Salem? Absolutely not," he told the Post. "Will it add
> to the experience of coming here? Definitely."
>
> --------------
>
> WHAT DO *YOU* THINK??
>
> K.
>
> .
>
> [Non-text portions of this message have been removed]
>
>
>
> Yahoo! Groups Links
>
>
>
>
>


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[CanYoAssDigIt] Star Wars TV show to film is Australia

from a friend of mine in australia... man, first they send shoemaking
overseas, then it's airplanes and computers, now it's tv shows.
caligula is finishishing off this empire fast, aint he?

Leslie Morris <dr_spider_man@yahoo.com> wrote:
hey kiddies...

--- It was reported today that the live-action Star
Wars television series
to be filmed in Sydney, Australia.

Rick McCallum said that Australia was chosen, due to
the Government
recently extending its 12.5 per cent refundable tax
offset
to foreign films to large budget television series.

The Star Wars TV Series
- 100 hour long episodes
- Cast and crew have not been chosen.
- Series will be set between Episode 3 and 4.
- Minor characters will be featured not key
characters.
- Sydney actors and crew would be used, with a variety
of directors.

George Lucas will also be returning to Australia in
July, and will be
looking for a house to buy.
Rick McCallum will be spending time at his Darling
Point home.

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[CanYoAssDigIt] Re: [Bizarro_UltraZine] "It's about time the 2 most beautiful people in the world fucked each other!"

Maher is nuts.... Angelina Jolie is a borderline who has made herself
as ugly on the outside with all those disfiguring tattoos as she is on
the inside.

Prince Charles has a lot on the ball, but he will never get credit for
anything good he's done because people think his ex-wife was nice
because she was attractive, even though she was another sicko who made
life miserable for all around her. She somehow, supposedly, won the
hearts of the british people, and she may have - they are nearly as
stupid as us, they voted for the Labour Party again, a group of losers
that can come up with anything better than the Neo-Thatcherite Blair
(just as Americans voted for Reagan's illegitimate son, Bill Clinton,
more than once). I know that Di won the hearts of supposedly freedom
loving americans, who wish they were ruled by a genetic dynasty (don't
look, we are!). I believe that people would have come around to see
Charles as basically a decent person, victimized by duty and office
and a crazy bitch, but the crazy bitch got herself sainted while she
was involved in some crazy shit with another useless playboy shit, and
somehow that made her a saint and Chuck a goat! Charles has at least
used the disreputable office of royalty to do some good in the world,
which is more than can be said, or ever will be said about Pitt,
Jolie, Garner or Affleck.

If only Hitler and Stalin had been handsome, no doubt to this day
people would be arguing over which one of them was the most wonderful
person in the world, and lamenting that they didn't have more children
to spread their glorious genes around.

Stupid People shouldn't breed - I concur. We'd be much better off
without Jenna and Barbara. Or Dubya, Jeb, Neil, and Little Bush 4.
Or - well, you could keep going back. There was no doubt a smart
Prescott or Bush or Walker back there somewhere, but after a point,
dirty deals and political connections smoothed the way for for this
clan of inbred blue bloods.

On 5/9/05, kdhaisch@aol.com <kdhaisch@aol.com> wrote:
> Matt asked...
> > Steven Hawkings and Margaret Thatcher?
>
> No, Bill Maher said that about
> Brad Pitt & Angelina Jolie.
> But I am sure it would apply to
> Ben Affleck & Jennifer Garner, too.
>
> But, God, let's hope that
> Prince Charles & Camilla Parker Bowles
> never have any kids-- big-eared, wrinkled,
> stupid kids!!
>
> Or, to quote that great song from
> "The Return of the Texas Chainsaw Massacre"
> (1994) -- "Stupid People Shouldn't Breed"!!!
>
> kdh
>
> .
>
> [Non-text portions of this message have been removed]
>
>
>
> Yahoo! Groups Links
>
>
>
>
>


Yahoo! Groups Links

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[CanYoAssDigIt] Support 'Em

"Do not confuse the warrior with the war."
-John Kerry

From right wing to liberal, scolds (the more broad minded of them)
continue to assert that it is permissible (Who asked them?) to hold an
anti-war position, as long as you keep it to yourself. Regardless of
your opinion of what the troops are doing, you must encourage them,
because they are based on this particular patch of earth (except for
some of the mercenaries, oops, I mean contractors).

* I love Stravinsky's music, but I give him no credit for composing it.
* I admire American Jeffrey Daumer, although what he did was not okay.
* Genocide is an atrocity, but that's hardly the fault of those who
do it.
* I hate Ralph Nader, I just dig his deeds.
* The words of Emo Phillips are hilarious, but what does he think he
is, a comedian?
* Mengele was a saint who did nothing but sin.
* Witch hunts: bad. Witch hunters: Go team.
* That goddam Buckminster Fuller thought he was so smart, just
because his ideas were.


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Sunday, May 08, 2005

[CanYoAssDigIt] Love That Banner

http://boards.straightdope.com/sdmb/


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Saturday, May 07, 2005

Re: [CanYoAssDigIt] Stranger's Free Classified Musician Ads

Anyone remember that column in the Cooper Point Journal, years ago,
called "Thoughts n Shit?"

Matt Love wrote:

>"guitars, bass,drums/w back up vocals? Needed. i've got lyrics out the
>ass! i want folks who want to write music to them. I write stuff that
>sounds good acoustic and powered up, think godsmack, big n rich, alice
>n chains etc i'm 20 and i sing! email me powerofmusic05@hotmail.com
>[05-03-2005]
>Send an e-mail: powerofmusic05@hotmail.com"
>
>I would like to suggest that this is not the best place to get lyrics
>- or anything else, except shit or a little Lithuanian delight.
>
>I offer the following example of what happens when you get words out
>of your ass:
>
>Al Franken, in the current Seattle Weekly: "A few months ago, Rush
>was talking about the minimum wage. Conservatives like to portray it
>that no one has to raise a family on the minimum wage—the only people
>who get the minimum wage are teenagers who want to buy an iPod. So
>Rush says, "Seventy-five percent of all Americans on the minimum wage,
>my friends, are teenagers on their first job." And one of the
>researchers brings this to me, with a smile, and I say, "Well, can you
>look it up?" And they look it up. The researcher goes to something
>called the Bureau of Labor Statistics. Sixty percent of Americans on
>minimum wage are 20 and above. Forty percent, then, are either
>teenagers or below 12 [laughs]. I had several jobs as a teenager, so
>you figure, what, 13 percent might be teenagers in their first job.
>Not 75 percent. So where did Rush get his statistic? Well, he got it
>directly from his butt. It went out his butt, into his mouth, out the
>microphone, into the air, into the brains of dittoheads. And they
>believe this stuff."
>
>I should point out that John Walsh makes a good case that Franken
>talks out of his ass, too, at www.counterpunch.org, "Al Franken is a
>Big Fat Phony."
>
>
>
>Yahoo! Groups Links
>
>
>
>
>
>


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Friday, May 06, 2005

[CanYoAssDigIt] Stranger's Free Classified Musician Ads

"guitars, bass,drums/w back up vocals? Needed. i've got lyrics out the
ass! i want folks who want to write music to them. I write stuff that
sounds good acoustic and powered up, think godsmack, big n rich, alice
n chains etc i'm 20 and i sing! email me powerofmusic05@hotmail.com
[05-03-2005]
Send an e-mail: powerofmusic05@hotmail.com"

I would like to suggest that this is not the best place to get lyrics
- or anything else, except shit or a little Lithuanian delight.

I offer the following example of what happens when you get words out
of your ass:

Al Franken, in the current Seattle Weekly: "A few months ago, Rush
was talking about the minimum wage. Conservatives like to portray it
that no one has to raise a family on the minimum wage—the only people
who get the minimum wage are teenagers who want to buy an iPod. So
Rush says, "Seventy-five percent of all Americans on the minimum wage,
my friends, are teenagers on their first job." And one of the
researchers brings this to me, with a smile, and I say, "Well, can you
look it up?" And they look it up. The researcher goes to something
called the Bureau of Labor Statistics. Sixty percent of Americans on
minimum wage are 20 and above. Forty percent, then, are either
teenagers or below 12 [laughs]. I had several jobs as a teenager, so
you figure, what, 13 percent might be teenagers in their first job.
Not 75 percent. So where did Rush get his statistic? Well, he got it
directly from his butt. It went out his butt, into his mouth, out the
microphone, into the air, into the brains of dittoheads. And they
believe this stuff."

I should point out that John Walsh makes a good case that Franken
talks out of his ass, too, at www.counterpunch.org, "Al Franken is a
Big Fat Phony."


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Historic language alert

I haven't heard much talking today - could be the human race is
slipping into a sub-verbal condition - so I will republish a language
alert first distributed on my last birthday, Sept 10, 2004 11:41 AM
(and you don't want to wait until the last minute to decide what to
get me for my next birthday. Check out my Amazon Wish List at
http://www.amazon.com/gp/registry/1LV58J3FDRHPC/ref=cm_aya_wl/102-0877241-6345711)

A commentator on Democracy Now, incensed over election issues in Florida:

"This shenanigrous behavior must stop!"

A woman (convicted felon) on Weekday this morning wanted to have his
voting rights

"reinstored"

CPB Exerting Political Pressure on Public Television

The NYTimes piece said that NPR is not experiencing the same pressure
as PBS, because they have a greater degree of autonomy due to the huge
endowment from Joan Kroc. But I think a plausible alternative theory
is that they have already given in to conservative bias.

I got the following reply from Palast's people when I asked them if
his treatment at KUOW had changed:

Hi Matt,
NPR have been really bad and utterly gutless. Several times we've had
what appear to be enthusiastic producers wanting Greg on the air only
to cancel after having a brief pre-interview chat with him.
Go figure...
Regards,
LENI

Which didn't really answer the question, I asked, but they are busy,
out doing real journalism. I enjoy his e-mail updates, I'm getting
news I don't get from the government propaganda outfit. And speaking
of which, Chomsky mentioned several events that I never heard about on
NPR, how about you folks?

I have not heard back from the Nader people yet.

---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: FAIR <fair@fair.org>
Date: May 5, 2005 10:24 AM
Subject: CPB Exerting Political Pressure on Public Television
To: Matt Love <matt.mattlove1@gmail.com>

FAIR-L
Fairness & Accuracy In Reporting
Media analysis, critiques and activism

http://www.fair.org/index.php?page=2508

ACTION ALERT:
CPB Exerting Political Pressure on Public Television
Chair cites dubious evidence of public television's "liberal bias"

May 5, 2005

A front-page New York Times story (5/2/05) added to mounting evidence that
the Corporation for Public Broadcasting (CPB) under chair Kenneth
Tomlinson is pressuring public television officials to produce more
conservative programming, and to rein in shows it perceives as liberal.

"The Republican chairman of the Corporation for Public Broadcasting is
aggressively pressing public television to correct what he and other
conservatives consider liberal bias," reported the Times, adding that CPB
pressure has prompted "some public broadcasting leaders-- including the
chief executive of PBS-- to object that his actions pose a threat to
editorial independence." An unnamed senior FCC official used even starker
terms, telling the Washington Post (4/22/05) that the CPB under Tomlinson
"is engaged in a systematic effort not just to sanitize the truth, but to
impose a right-wing agenda on PBS. It's almost like a right-wing coup. It
appears to be orchestrated."

As a private, non-profit institution, the CPB is tasked by Congress to
distribute funds to public broadcasters with a view toward balance.
Although it was intended to shield public broadcasting from political
influence, the CPB has long since become a mechanism for transmitting
Congress' ideological desires to public broadcasters.

Tomlinson says the CPB is only trying to rectify liberal bias in public
television-- a dubious role for an official tasked with shielding public
broadcasters from prevailing political winds. But Tomlinson has presented
little evidence of any pervasive left-wing bias in public broadcasting; in
fact, his only specific criticisms seem to be aimed at the program Now,
which was, until recently, hosted by Bill Moyers.

Tomlinson was instrumental in the development and funding of the Journal
Editorial Report, a program that features the Wall Street Journal's
hard-right editorial board and was supposed to be a "balance" to Now
(although unlike the Editorial Report, Now frequently had guests whose
views differed from those of the show's producers). The CPB's ideological
influence has grown as it has become increasingly staffed by White
House-friendly board members and officials. In addition to Tomlinson,
major Republican Party donors Cheryl Halpern and Gay Hart Gaines were
added to the board in 2003. Earlier this year Ken Ferree, a former aide to
FCC chair Michael Powell, was made both chief operating officer and
interim president of the CPB.

If Tomlinson and his CPB colleagues are doling out public broadcasting
funds based on the premise that PBS's left-wing slant must be corrected,
then they should first be required to show the public that such a bias
exists. Contrary to those familiar charges, a 1999 FAIR study found that
the news and public affairs programming available on PBS affiliates
displayed an elite, pro-business slant. The FAIR survey examined the
regular public affairs programming-- news, talk/interview, business and
documentary-- during a two-week period in late 1998. The findings
indicated that PBS shows often mirrored the narrow range of debate
available in the mainstream media:

-- Government officials (50 percent), professionals (31 percent --
overwhelmingly journalists) and corporate /Wall Street representatives (11
percent) dominated the debate over domestic politics, leaving little room
for consumer advocates or public interest voices.

--Only 22 percent of the sources were women;

--On economic stories, corporate/Wall Street sources dominated (75
percent), with labor unions rarely being heard (1.5 percent of sources).
Not a single representative of organized labor appeared in discussions of
corporate mergers or of layoffs.

If the CPB is truly interested in "balance" on PBS, they might want to
investigate why so many affiliates regularly air business and investment
programs (Nightly Business Report, CEO Exchange, Wall Street Week With
Fortune), some of which are distributed by PBS, but have no shows devoted
to labor or consumer rights. They might ask why PBS stations have long
featured talkshows hosted by conservatives (McLaughlin Group, Think Tank
with Ben Wattenberg, Tony Brown's Journal) but none hosted by
progressives. (The Tavis Smiley Show, arguably the closest thing to a
progressive talkshow on public TV, mostly interviews actors, musicians and
other cultural figures.)

PBS has also demonstrated a curious double-standard when it comes to
policing conflicts of interest. In 1993, PBS distributed The Prize: The
Epic Quest for Oil, Money and Power, a documentary series funded by
PaineWebber, a company with significant oil interests; almost every expert
featured was a defender of the oil industry. PBS carried Living Against
the Odds, a 1991 special on "risk assessment" funded by the oil company
Chevron that asserted, "We have to stop pointing the finger at industry
for every environmental hazard." In 2002, PBS distributed Commanding
Heights: The Battle for the World Economy, a look at globalization funded
by global corporate entities like BP, FedEx and Enron.

Yet PBS has rejected documentaries dealing with labor issues-- even
historical features dealing with 19th century labor struggles-- because
they received funding from labor unions. Defending Our Lives, a film
about domestic violence, was rejected in 1993 because one of its producers
was the leader of a battered women's support group. In 1997, Out at Work,
a film about workplace discrimination against gays and lesbians, was
rejected because it was partially funded by unions and a lesbian group.

The whole point of public broadcasting is to be an alternative to
commercial media outlets-- in part by creating a platform for dissenting,
marginalized and controversial views that for-profit networks won't air.
To try and apply Republican appointees' notions of "balance" to every PBS
or NPR program, as the CPB has suggested, would almost certainly stifle
those voices.

The CPB has recently appointed two ombudsmen to, as NPR reported
(4/28/05), "review the journalism that airs on PBS and NPR member
stations, along with programs from other public broadcasters such as
Pacifica Radio and Minnesota Public Radio."

Given the current partisan make-up of the CPB, this arrangement could
serve as a cover to de-fund programming that Republican members of the CPB
find objectionable, and to promote and enhance funding for shows that
serve and promote conservative interests.

ACTION:
Let the CPB know that it is the left and not the right that has been
traditionally excluded from public broadcasting. Remind them that public
broadcasting is supposed to serve as a platform for dissenting and
controversial views-- not simply another forum for conservative and
corporate voices.

CONTACT:
Corporation for Public Broadcasting
Phone Numbers:
202-879-9600
800-272-2190

mailto:comments@cpb.org

As always, please remember that your comments have more impact if you
maintain a polite tone.

----------
Your donation to FAIR makes a difference:
http://www.fair.org/index.php?page=103

SUBSCRIBE TO EXTRA! AND GET FAIR'S NEW BOOK FOR FREE:
The Oh Really? Factor
http://www.fair.org/index.php?page=114

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FAIR's online store:
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FAIR produces CounterSpin, a weekly radio show heard on over 130
stations in the U.S. and Canada. To find the CounterSpin station
nearest you, visit http://www.fair.org/index.php?page=5

Feel free to respond to FAIR ( fair@fair.org ). We can't reply to
everything, but we will look at each message. We especially appreciate
documented examples of media bias or censorship. And please send
copies of your email correspondence with media outlets, including any
responses, to fair@fair.org .

You can subscribe to FAIR-L at our web site: http://www.fair.org . Our
subscriber list is kept confidential.
FAIR
(212) 633-6700
http://www.fair.org/
E-mail: fair@fair.org

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[songwriters and poets] Re: The Brook: You read the poem, now hear the song!

Joe Swordfish received some feedback on The Brook (posted at
www.soundclick.com/SongPoet)

I'm not sure what '"isDanteisnotDante." ...LOL!' menas, but I'm sure
that Joe was pleased with "Cool stuff" (that one would look good in
the ads in the music magazines (though she came back an hour later
with "Now DUCK!" which confuses me - perhaps she would like some duck
calls mixed into the birdsong? In fact, I help make that happen. I
need to find a poem about ducks or ducking and send it to Joe - I'm
sure he'll be responsive, he usually does whatever I suggest.

"The music isn't bad..." the kind of press the Rolling Stones have
been longing for, lo these last 25 years or so. But then he has to go
and spoil it all by saying something stupid like "the processing on
the vocals makes them impossible to understand."

Joe said that at first he was like totally pissed off, but then he
went back and listened to it again, and he have to admit that Eorthman
was right! So he said that after that, he was really pissed off,
because he sent this to some friends to listen to before he posted it,
and did he hear a word about it being hard to understand? Of course
not! Sheesh, and they call themselves friends?!? So Joe had to eat
crow and pretend to be all humble and shit.

--- In songwritersandpoets@yahoogroups.com, anns_rose
<no_reply@y...> wrote:
Any moment now, we have the answer to the musical question:
"isDanteisnotDante." ...LOL!

Cool stuff, Joe.

anns_rose <no_reply@yahoogroups.com> to songwritersand.
More options 12:19 pm (2½ hours ago)

Now DUCK!

On 5/4/05, eorthman <no_reply@yahoogroups.com> wrote:
> The music isn't bad, but the processing on the vocals makes them impossible to
> understand. What's the good of setting a poem to music if the words to the poem are
> converted into electronic noise?

---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: Joe Swordfish <jswordfish@gmail.com>
Date: May 4, 2005 3:31 PM
Subject: Re: [songwriters and poets] Re: The Brook: You read the poem,
now hear the song!
To: songwritersandpoets@yahoogroups.com

I'm working on it.... prior to vocoderization of my vocal part, it was
understandable but even worse acoustic noise.

Another songwriter list I just joined seems to have vocalists
littering the premises... surely one of the 2910 members on this list
could be a singer who would like to join Kameshwar and me playing to
appreciative audiences in casinos and half-way houses across the
country? Or at least sing on a recording?

and Joe's favorite post and his reply:

On 5/4/05, byrdbrane2 <no_reply@yahoogroups.com> wrote:
>
> If you touch any of my shit without my permission I'll sue you straight into a halfway house, motherfucker.

I can't blame a man on that, you wrote the damn shit.

But consider, song sharks offer this kind of service for hundreds of
dollars, I'm doing it for free. I am working on a way to entirely
automate the process, so that people can generate musical
accompaniment to their poems with the push of a button. After that,
automatic computer generated music videos. Everybody will be able to
turn their personal computer into their own personal 24/7 music
channel. Everybody broadcasting, nobody listening. My God, it will be
beautiful.

But don't worry, Byrdbrane, your poems are safe from molestation. They
are too long.

[iChat] As we suspected all along

Well, duh!

They may SUSPECT this is true now, but they KNEW it was true 18 months
ago when they were twice as smart. 18 months from now, they will be
on the street with a tin cup, but fortunately they will be so stupid
they won't care - they'll think they have jobs, and they'll be voting
Republican. That's how it goes.

---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: Darci Chapman Hanning <darcilee@u.washington.edu>
Date: May 5, 2005 7:51 AM
Subject: [iChat] As we suspected all along
To: ichat@u.washington.edu

"Data from the library job market and mounting anecdotal evidence show
that there is cause for alarm. The number of full-time, professional
positions in libraries is dwindling, salaries continue to be
depressed, more entry-level positions are being liquidated or
"deprofessionalized," and qualified job seekers are having trouble
securing work. Meanwhile, an industrywide MLS recruitment drive is in
full swing, ensuring another large crop of graduates will be spilled
out into the job market each year. Even with this bumper crop of new
professionals, library administrators complain about the lack of
qualified applicants for available positions."

Full article: http://www.libraryjournal.com/article/CA527965

Darci Chapman Hanning
_______________________________________________
iChat mailing list
iChat@u.washington.edu
http://mailman1.u.washington.edu/mailman/listinfo/ichat

[PlansFromOuterSpace] Find A Grave's John 'Bunny' Breckenridge entry

I am pleased that my "Plans From Outer Space" group has been active
lately, with some actual information being shared. I hope more people
will subscribe; if I can become a respected figure in
PlansFromOuterSpacology, perhaps those Koreans that have filmed "Plan
17 From Outer Space" and "Plan 19 From Outer Space" will send me
copies. So please join my group!

PlansFromOuterSpace-subscribe@yahoogroups.com

---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: Tor Groupies <torgroupies@yahoo.com>
Date: May 3, 2005 9:40 AM
Subject: [PlansFromOuterSpace] Find A Grave's John 'Bunny' Breckenridge entry

Dear Mr. Smith;

Thank you for giving me the truth in the matter.

There is a lot of homophobia today and more so a few decades back.

Maybe I'll even leave some virtual flowers on Bunny's grave.

Best Wishes

Kyle Brinkmann

Adrian Smith <trouserpressbaby@yahoo.co.uk> wrote:

--- Michael Wilk <gloomman96@hotmail.com> wrote:

---------------------------------
John "Bunny" Breckinridge didnt sexually abuse young
boys. He was
looking after two teenaged boys, the sons of some
floozy. I think the
story goes that "Bunny" took them to a gay bar (!),
one of the boys
propositioned an undercover cop, and "Bunny" went to a
correctional
facility, where he became known as "Queen of the
Laundry". The story
is in Rudolph Grey's book "Nightmare of Ecstasy", upon
which the Tim
Burton film "Ed Wood" was based. According to Vampira,
there was a
televised hearing of the trial, and there was "Bunny",
adjusting his
makeup!

That's a great story. I love bunny's performance in
Plan 9, and Bill Murray's take in Ed Wood. This looks
like a book I'm going to have to order some time off
Amazon marketplace. I just wish their international
postage wasn't so high!

http://www.geocities.com/emergofilms - My short films website

http://www.geocities.com/trouserpressbaby/movie_collection.html - See
my entire movie collection!

__________________________________
Do you Yahoo!?
Yahoo! Mail - You care about security. So do we.
http://promotions.yahoo.com/new_mail

Tor Groupies
President

Kyle Brinkmann

MAILING ADDRESS:
Tor Groupies
C/O Kyle Brinkmann
Post Office Box 1143
Gardner, MA 01440-6143
PHONE NUMBER:
(203)231-8516
WEB SITE:
www.geocities.com/TorGroupies
E-GROUP:
http://movies.groups.yahoo.com/group/TorGroupies

__________________________________________________
Tor Groupies <torgroupies@yahoo.com> to Anything_Ed_Wo., bad_movies,
cinema_undergr. ...
More options May 2 (23 hours ago)

Dear Ed Wood Fans;

Today I "interred" John "Bunny" Breckenridge on the Find A Grave
website (www.findagrave.com).

Breckenridge is best remembered for portraying the alien ruler in Ed
Wood's 1959 "Plan Nine From Outer Space".

Due to Breckenridge's checkered past including being convicted of sex
offenses involving young boys I really only did this for Ed Wood's
fans. I kind of find it hard to think we should honor or even remember
those who abuse children.

Also if anyon has any information on where Valda Hansen was buried I
would appreciate being forwarded that information.

Tor Groupies
President

Kyle Brinkmann

MAILING ADDRESS:
Tor Groupies
C/O Kyle Brinkmann
Post Office Box 1143
Gardner, MA 01440-6143
PHONE NUMBER:
(203)231-8516
WEB SITE:
www.geocities.com/TorGroupies
E-GROUP:
http://movies.groups.yahoo.com/group/TorGroupies
________________________________
Yahoo! Groups Links

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________________________________

Language Watch: The Downward Spiral

As you folks know, I have been using deterioration of language skills
to track the speed at which human intellectual capacity diminishes.
What started out as a snarky satire on insufficient and unnecessary
ideas I was exposed to in the MLIS program at the U of W have for me
become a serious theory, one that is supported by evidence as
powerfully as the theory of global warming. I am concerned that the
rate of deterioration is compounding (Thank you, Sugarzareh, for
supplying examples culled from your field observations of teen
thugwads. Other readers are invited to submit theirs as well). Here
are just a few recent examples I've encountered:

Word Coinage at a recent meeting I was at:
Jane Doe: Devisory
John Doe: Insultive

[Sorry for the pseudonyms, I suspect they may be paranoid ego surfers,
and I don't need any grief over something so petty.

From a list I'm on: "I also ask for comments and except them." [Me
too, but up until now I thought I was the only one who would admit it.
Most people brag about accepting comments]

Headline in a recent Tacoma News Tribune: "Police Kill Man With
Knife" [Are the cops economizing on brutality?]

Cherif Bassiouni, on last Thursday's Democracy Now: Because they were
useful to the US after the invasion, they [Afghan warlords] "were
rewarded with impunity for their past crimes."

A huge number of examples of human idiocy from a recent press conference:

Bush: "I take him for his word"

Bush: "Natural gas can only be transported when you liquefy it. When
you put it into solid form."

Bush: "I can only speak to myself"

Reporter: "Is this what's nominating Democrats to oppose your
judicial candidates?"

Saturday, April 30, 2005

[CanYoAssDigIt] Previous Post Explained

The attachment that gave the previous (Let Comcast...) post meaning did
not go through to the board. Individual subscribers should have received
it via email, though. Anyway, Ill paste it in: (The message on top was
sent to Comcast)

I forgot to mention in that last email that what Tony offered on the
phone was for me to take $50 off my first bill, pending my receipt of
the rebate. But, I paid that first bill, and now I'm begging for you to
apply it to the second bill.

So, I'm asking for less than what I was promised

According to what Comcast told me, the rebate is due to arrive in the
next three business days. (After what I've experienced so far today, it
seems unlikely that that will happen.) But, for the sake of argument,
let's assume you weren't lying about when the rebate will arrive. So, if
I got the rebate and put it in the mail the following day, that would be
three days later than if I mailed the payment the next business day
(Monday).

Upshot: What you are so stubbornly arguing about amounts to a three-day
delay in your receipt of payment. Which, I suppose I have to add yet
again, is what you told me you would do.

I just wanted to get in every last detail, to show the full extent of
how hysterically ridiculous your recalcitrance is, before I start with
the publicity.

------------------------------------------------------------------------

Subject:
Re: Web Form Submission: Billing/Invoice Question
From:
Joe Sibley
Date:
Sat, 30 Apr 2005 18:43:16 -0700

To:
Comcast Seattle

That's odd, where I come from an employee's refusal of a request to talk
to his/her supervisor is a serious offense. There seems to be a
pervasive confusion in your corporate culture of the concepts of "can't"
and "won't."

No notes, eh? Do you think I made the whole thing up? Failing to make
notes is Tony's problem, not mine. (When I was on the phone, I didn't
make any notes about having to pay for service, but I'm doing it
anyway.) Could the absence of notes be due to this bait and switch
pitch being SOP?

I'll find a way to take this to a higher level without your help,
Christopher. This email will be forwarded eventually, so I would like to
make a suggestion to whomever I deal with next: An extra measure of
goodwill is lost when staff apologize for inconvenience when they are
adding to inconvenience.

This bill is still under dispute.

Comcast Seattle wrote:

Dear Joe,

Thank you for contacting Comcast Cable. I apologize for any
inconvenience you have been experiencing.
There are no notes on your account to indicate that the $50.00 rebate
wold be applied to your account in the way you described. I am unable
to escalate this for you.

If you have any more questions feel free to reply to this e-mail, or you
can chat with one of our Online Customer Support Specialists 24 hours a
day, 7 days a week at

http://www.comcastsupport.com/sdcuser/asp/default.asp

Thank you for choosing Comcast.

Sincerely,

Christopher Comcast Online Customer Support

Original Message Follows:
-------------------------

Next level of authority, please.

One more time, processing protocols are irrelevant. The issue is Comcast
reneging on a verbal contract. I am more than 99% confident that you
indeed can bypass the process, but just don't want to. By what mechanism
you fulfill your promise is of no concern to me. I just want you to do
it. If it's true that you can't fix this for me, then your customer
service department is astonishingly poorly run. I'm sure this issue has
come up many times before.

Any disinterested person who knows anything about telemarketing will
tell you that it's extremely likely that what Tony told me was part of a
script. I didn't ask for any details about use of the rebate. He offered
them unbidden. He repeated it several times for emphasis. Evidence
points to this being part of the standard sales pitch.

But, whether Tony's offer was SOP or not, he was representing Comcast.
And I want Comcast to do what he said you would. I'm not asking a lot.

If I have to send many more of these emails, I'm going to ask for
compensation for my time and effort to correct your error. If I go as
far as I can and your top executives insist on stonewalling about a
slight delay in receiving $50 (cash flow problem??), that one of your
sales reps committed to, then I'll go with DSL. I much prefer
high-speed, but DSL will do- unless, of course, the DSL provider lies to
me, in which case I can go to a different DSL provider. I think I can
find a decent one, because they operate in a non-monopoly environment
and have incentive to treat their customers fairly.

Comcast Seattle wrote:

Dear Joe,

Thank you for contacting Comcast. I sincerely apologize for any
unpleasant experience you had recently with your Comcast service and
thank you for bringing this matter to our attention. However, the rebate
is processed thru protocols we have previously explained. We regret
that we cannot bypass that process.

If you have any more questions feel free to reply to this e-mail, or you
can chat with one of our Online Customer Support Specialists 24 hour a
day, 7 days a week at

http://www.comcastsupport.com/sdcuser/asp/default.asp

Thank you for choosing Comcast.

Sincerely,

Deborah M. Comcast Online Customer Support

Original Message Follows:
-------------------------

Comcast,

I'm afraid your response is unacceptable.

What your phone sales rep did is known as bait and switch. When I was
calling to request Comcast service, I was in an unusually good mood, and
I think this is why I was off-guard and not mindful of the fact that
offers made vocally (as opposed to in a fixed medium) can easily be
reneged on. I try to be trusting, but it rarely pays off. In that phone
call, you held me to my words. I ordered service and agreed to pay for
it. You took all the info I provided as true. So, what I said mattered,
and I'm holding Comcast to the same standard.

I thought that my first email today was only a formality. Now I see that
you're going to make me fight to hold you to your word. You are taking
my valuable time to correct a problem of your own making.

The method of processing your rebates is irrelevant to the topic at
hand. I'm aware of on-line payment and its advantages. Please, respond
to my concerns without further advertising.

Chisti,

Please refer this message to your supervisor or someone who has the
authority to do the right thing and make good on offers made by Comcast
personnel.

Comcast Seattle wrote:


Dear Joe,

Thank you for taking the time to contact Comcast today. I'm very sorry
for any inconvenience it may cause you; however, the $50 rebate cannot
be applied to your Comcast account in the manner you have requested.
The rebate that you are scheduled to receive actually gets processed
through a third party vendor, and Comcast cannot process a payment in
that manner. You are responsible for the current amount due on the
account. The rebate will be processed and sent to you as a check via the
Third Party Vendor.

Thank you for your patience and understanding with us in this matter.
If you prefer to complete you billing transactions online, I believe you
will find our Online Bill Pay site useful. You can review your billing
and account status via the Online Bill Pay site at
http://www.comcast.com/payonline

With Online Bill Pay you are able to:

* View and print your billing statement
* Update your credit card information (VISA - MasterCard - Discover -
American Express)
* Setup or Stop automatic account payment via credit card * Setup or
Stop automatic Electronic Funds Transfer
* Make a one-time payment
* View all recent charges and payments
* Change your billing address and other personal information
* Update your preferred statement method
* Access your account information 24 hours a day, seven days a week from
home, the office or even while out of town.

The security of your information is important to us. We use the Secure
Socket Layer (SSL) protocol to protect the security of your information.
SSL technology encrypts your private information to protect it from
being decoded by anyone other than Comcast. You will be able to tell
that you are in secure mode because, depending on the browser, you will
see either a padlock or a solid key in the lower section of the browser
window. Please make sure that you are using a browser that will work
with the Online Bill Pay site.

For Windows users, you would need Internet Explorer 6.0 or Netscape
Navigator 4.0 or higher.
For Macintosh Users, you would need Internet Explorer 5.0 or higher or
Netscape Navigator 6.2 or higher.

I hope this information helps you, but if you have any other questions
regarding your account, please do not hesitate to contact us. You can
always chat with one of our Online Customer Support Specialists 24 hour
a day, 7 days a week at:
http://www.comcastsupport.com/sdcuser/asp/default.asp
Thanks again for contacting Comcast.

Sincerely,

Christi Comcast Online Customer Support

Original Message Follows:
-------------------------

The following information was submitted from the Comcast Web site:
Name: Joe Sibley
Address: 422 Phoenix St SE
City: Olympia
State: WA
Zip: 98501
Home Phone: 360-786-9301
Email: joesibley@comcast.net
Re: Web Form Submission: Billing/Invoice Question
Browser: Other
OS: Windows XP
-
Comments:
I would like to get confirmation in writing of what I was told in the
phone conversation in which I first requested Comcast service. Tony,
your sales rep, told me that I could defer $50 of my payment until my
rebate in that amount reaches me in the mail. I have paid my first
bill ($135.14). The second ($35.15), due "on receipt" is outstanding.
So, I would like to apply $50 to the $35.15, leaving me $14.85 to
credit to the next bill. My service was installed on 3/30, and the
rebate is supposed to arrive in five weeks, so I expect it in the mail
very soon. Okay? Thank you.
IPAddress:
24.19.166.12


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[CanYoAssDigIt] Let Comcast Administer Social Security

I don't know if anyone has the patience to wade through all this, but
it's instructive.

The reason we should privatize government is that services administered
directly by the state are inflexible, bureaucratic, uncaring,
inefficient, unreceptive, dishonest, stupid, etc. The glorious private
sector, on the other hand...


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Re: [CanYoAssDigIt] These kids today....

I don't know which was more horrifying, the bad picture on the TV or
mom's putting pens in the victim's mug. Maybe a therapist instructed
him to document the housekeeping with a view to suing for a Mercedes.
Mom is definitely eccentric (by that, I mean her house is slightly more
stuffed with junk than mine) but I'll be convinced she's truly insane if
she doesn't literally boot out this whiny, parasitic little shit.

Matt Love wrote:

>Can you believe the little rat, exposing his own mother to world wide
>criticism on the world wide web, for this perfectly normal, every day
>kind of behavior? Does he think he's the next Eminem or something?
>Sheesh...
>
>---------- Forwarded message ----------
>From: Stormdncr
>Date: Apr 29, 2005 11:36 AM
>Subject: [MIDIChat] Hooked on ebay
>To: me
>
>
>Talk about someone who has a packrat syndrome.
>
>http://www.randomthink.net/misc/ebay/
>
>
>Yahoo! Groups Links
>
>
>
>
>
>
>Yahoo! Groups Links
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>


Yahoo! Groups Links

<*> To visit your group on the web, go to:
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[CanYoAssDigIt] These kids today....

Can you believe the little rat, exposing his own mother to world wide
criticism on the world wide web, for this perfectly normal, every day
kind of behavior? Does he think he's the next Eminem or something?
Sheesh...

---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: Stormdncr
Date: Apr 29, 2005 11:36 AM
Subject: [MIDIChat] Hooked on ebay
To: me

Talk about someone who has a packrat syndrome.

http://www.randomthink.net/misc/ebay/

Yahoo! Groups Links


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Friday, April 29, 2005

[CanYoAssDigIt] The Lighter Side: Language Watch

On the bus, some teen thugwads, fresh out of jail (but I repeat
myself) were explaining technology. "They have this shit that they
spray on shit to make it fire-retarded." He used the expression
several times, so I didn't mishear.


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Re: [CanYoAssDigIt] Re: [KUOW_SLG] Digest Number 118

Well, there you have it. lots of listeners happy. I have this antiquated
idea about journalism being about getting at the truth, rather than a
popularity contest.

Matt Love wrote:

>Barbara Roberts wrote:
>
>
>>Try to model the balance you'd like to hear from Public Radio.
>>
>>
>
>Thank you for the constructive suggestions.
>
>I am not sure what the balance should be between government propaganda
>and what is happening in the real world, but they are not currently
>approaching it.
>
>For example, did you hear the utterly embarrassing and pathetic
>performance by the President last night, and then how they sanitized
>in the commentary afterwards? They took a couple of things he said
>out of context, pretended that he was presenting cogent and coherent
>statements. Instead of bringing in opposing points of view (and most
>people in this country, by a large margin, opposes the policies Bush
>was flogging at that press conference) or even objective "experts" he
>interviewed two other NPR reporters who have been "covering" these
>issues for NPR. I despise this practice, and it seems to be getting
>worse all the time.
>
>I realize this forum is not really fertile ground to raise these
>issues - it started as a forum to discuss "The Conversation" which has
>always been mostly fluff anyway. However, what I found strikingly new
>is Reynold's attempted attack on Ralph Nader when he was a guest. He
>came off more as a peevish chihuahua than a pitbull, the change in
>tone from his usual go along to get along approach was quite striking.
>
>Ross has worked in public sector broadcasting for many, many years.
>First in community stations, then in public stations. He's now with
>the biggest one in this market, and he's probably scrutinizing the
>ceiling and thinking about the car, mortgage, baby expenses, future
>college expenses that he might have - the things that people
>accumulate by the time they get to be his age. So if the trends are
>to the right, he will follow the drift, as they all do, because it's
>not easy to get out and make an honest man of himself again.
>
>Did he get explicit instructions to lean on Nader? Was Steve Sherer
>told to treat Greg Palast like a kook? I don't know what the
>mechanisms are. The internal workings are a black box to me, I can
>only evaluate by what comes out. At first I had only anecdotal
>evidence from my own observations; FAIRs reports are extensive,
>thorough and systematic, and confirm what I've seen (on the national
>level).
>
>The Board that governs NPR is appointed by Bush. Kevin Klose argued -
>unconvincingly - that they are able to resist the pressure the board
>puts on them.
>
>Who is on the governing board of KUOW? Has there been a shift in
>membership lately? Pressure to attack Nader would be more likely to
>come from Dems. Dems have strong motivation to pretend that our
>elections have integrity (Gore and Kerry both failed to challenge
>widespread irregularities from fraud and incompetence), so pressure
>could have come from Dems to treat Palast like a pariah. Is the board
>made up of Democrats-in-name-only like Locke or Locke appointees?
>
>These are the sorts of things I'm interested in knowing, and I'd like
>some assistance, if anybody is interested in getting involved. I
>realize that when the three branches of the government of this
>republic are collapsing into one imperial structure right before our
>very eyes, it's hard to worry about KUOW. It's hard to know where to
>start, which is part of the problem that activists face. It seems to
>me that this is as good of a place to start as any.
>
>From: Barbara Roberts
>Subject: Re: Long time no post...
>
>Hey Matt: Chill. Wasn't Chomsky great?
>Have you been listening this week?
>Maybe the screeners select for praise, but there seem to be lots of listeners
>happy with the programming.
>I think you should write your posts in pencil and edit them.
>Try to model the balance you'd like to hear from Public Radio.
>
>Barbara
>
>Matt Love wrote:
>
> To visit your group on the web, go to:
>http://groups.yahoo.com/group/KUOW_SLG/
>
> To unsubscribe from this group, send an email to:
>KUOW_SLG-unsubscribe@yahoogroups.com
>
> Your use of Yahoo! Groups is subject to the Yahoo! Terms of Service.
>
>__________________________________________________
>Do You Yahoo!?
>Tired of spam? Yahoo! Mail has the best spam protection around
>http://mail.yahoo.com
>
>[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]
>
>
>
>Yahoo! Groups Links
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>


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[CanYoAssDigIt] Re: [KUOW_SLG] Digest Number 118

Barbara Roberts wrote:
> Try to model the balance you'd like to hear from Public Radio.

Thank you for the constructive suggestions.

I am not sure what the balance should be between government propaganda
and what is happening in the real world, but they are not currently
approaching it.

For example, did you hear the utterly embarrassing and pathetic
performance by the President last night, and then how they sanitized
in the commentary afterwards? They took a couple of things he said
out of context, pretended that he was presenting cogent and coherent
statements. Instead of bringing in opposing points of view (and most
people in this country, by a large margin, opposes the policies Bush
was flogging at that press conference) or even objective "experts" he
interviewed two other NPR reporters who have been "covering" these
issues for NPR. I despise this practice, and it seems to be getting
worse all the time.

I realize this forum is not really fertile ground to raise these
issues - it started as a forum to discuss "The Conversation" which has
always been mostly fluff anyway. However, what I found strikingly new
is Reynold's attempted attack on Ralph Nader when he was a guest. He
came off more as a peevish chihuahua than a pitbull, the change in
tone from his usual go along to get along approach was quite striking.

Ross has worked in public sector broadcasting for many, many years.
First in community stations, then in public stations. He's now with
the biggest one in this market, and he's probably scrutinizing the
ceiling and thinking about the car, mortgage, baby expenses, future
college expenses that he might have - the things that people
accumulate by the time they get to be his age. So if the trends are
to the right, he will follow the drift, as they all do, because it's
not easy to get out and make an honest man of himself again.

Did he get explicit instructions to lean on Nader? Was Steve Sherer
told to treat Greg Palast like a kook? I don't know what the
mechanisms are. The internal workings are a black box to me, I can
only evaluate by what comes out. At first I had only anecdotal
evidence from my own observations; FAIRs reports are extensive,
thorough and systematic, and confirm what I've seen (on the national
level).

The Board that governs NPR is appointed by Bush. Kevin Klose argued -
unconvincingly - that they are able to resist the pressure the board
puts on them.

Who is on the governing board of KUOW? Has there been a shift in
membership lately? Pressure to attack Nader would be more likely to
come from Dems. Dems have strong motivation to pretend that our
elections have integrity (Gore and Kerry both failed to challenge
widespread irregularities from fraud and incompetence), so pressure
could have come from Dems to treat Palast like a pariah. Is the board
made up of Democrats-in-name-only like Locke or Locke appointees?

These are the sorts of things I'm interested in knowing, and I'd like
some assistance, if anybody is interested in getting involved. I
realize that when the three branches of the government of this
republic are collapsing into one imperial structure right before our
very eyes, it's hard to worry about KUOW. It's hard to know where to
start, which is part of the problem that activists face. It seems to
me that this is as good of a place to start as any.

From: Barbara Roberts
Subject: Re: Long time no post...

Hey Matt: Chill. Wasn't Chomsky great?
Have you been listening this week?
Maybe the screeners select for praise, but there seem to be lots of listeners
happy with the programming.
I think you should write your posts in pencil and edit them.
Try to model the balance you'd like to hear from Public Radio.

Barbara

Matt Love wrote:

To visit your group on the web, go to:
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To unsubscribe from this group, send an email to:
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[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]


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Thursday, April 28, 2005

Re: [CanYoAssDigIt] Re: [Bizarro_UltraZine] PEOPLE's "50 Most Beautiful People" complete list...

If you condense the story, it's a quick and accurate guide to the US
(government's, not all the people's) general attitude toward the rest of
the world:

Foreign journalist must ask US permission to leave captivity in yet a
third nation, but US soldiers shoot and kill anyway, other US soldiers
say it's okay. The end.

Matt Love wrote:

>This list is tedious. They are only repeating the popular consensus.
>A consensus that was invented by people like them, drilled into the
>heads of media sucking sheep, who vote for these same people. This is
>then breathlessly reported as if it's news, and the cycle goes on and
>on.
>
>Maybe I'll make my own list of my "50 Most Beautiful People". Here's
>my first candidate: Italian journalist Giuliana Sgrena.
>
>She was of course fired on by U.S. soldiers who opened fire on her car
>after she was released from captivity in Iraq. She was wounded, and
>her rescuer, and one of Italy's highest ranking intelligence
>officials, was killed.
>
>Now a Pentagon report has cleared the soldiers.
>
>Sgrena says, "It is important that the Americans press their
>government to tell the truth. Because it is in the interest of
>Americans, the truth. Not only of Italians."
>
>More details:
>--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
>On Monday, a US Army official reported that a military investigation
>has cleared the soldiers who shot dead Nicola Calipari on March 4
>after US troops opened fire on the car that was also carrying Giuliana
>Sgrena - the Italian journalist who had just been freed from
>captivity. Sgrena has publicly rejected the U.S. claims that the
>shooting was justified. The leaking of that report sparked outrage in
>Italy.
>The Italian officials on the US-led commission are reportedly refusing
>to endorse the U.S. Army's findings. Italy maintains that that car
>carrying Calipari and Sgrena had been driving slowly, received no
>warning and that Italy had advised U.S. authorities of their mission
>to evacuate Sgrena from Iraq.
>
>Yesterday, Giuliana Sgrena blasted the results of the investigation at
>a press conference in Rome.
>--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
>
>She called for U.S. and Italy to Leave Iraq.
>
>Now there's a beautiful person!
>
>
>On 4/27/05, kdhaisch@aol.com wrote:
>
>
>>PEOPLE's 50 Most Beautiful People
>>It's an annual spring tradition.
>>See who made the list of the world's most gorgeous
>>guys and gals.
>>
>>(HEY, Leonardo DiCRAPrio did NOT make the list!!!!
>>hooray)
>>
>>In alphabetic order (with my comments added)...
>>
>>• Jessica Alba (soon to be in "Fantastic Four" movie)
>>• Jennifer Aniston
>>• Drew Barrymore (what the fuck??)
>>• Mischa Barton
>>
>>• David Beckham (married to Posh of the Spice Girls!
>>and why didn't SHE make the list??)
>>
>>• Halle Berry (oh yeah! beautiful !!!)
>>
>>• Orlando Bloom
>>• Penelope Cruz
>>• Patrick Dempsey, Grey's Anatomy
>>• Johnny Depp (gag me!)
>>
>>• Hilary Duff
>>• Sara Evans, Country singer
>>• Colin Farrell
>>• Jamie Foxx
>>• Tim Green, former NFL star and best-selling author
>>
>>• Mariska Hargitay, Law & Order: SVU
>>• Tyler Hilton, One Tree Hill
>>• Josh Holloway, Lost
>>• Scarlett Johansson
>>• Angelina Jolie (hubba, hubba. ALWAYS a hottie !!)
>>
>>• Juanes, Colombian musician
>>• Alicia Keys
>>• Heidi Klum (skinny supermodel, she's hot)
>>• Jude Law
>>
>>• Lindsay Lohan (Tim wants to fuck her MOTHER!!!)
>>
>>• Eva Longoria (a "Desperate Housewives" overnight star)
>>
>>• Jennifer Lopez (oh, HELL NO!!!)
>>
>>• Ann-Margret (SHE'S SO OLD !!!)
>>• Matthew McConaughey
>>• Eva Mendes, Hitch
>>
>>• Jesse Metcalfe, Desperate Housewives
>>• Sienna Miller, Alfie
>>• Catalina Sandino Moreno, Maria Full of Grace
>>• Sandra Oh, Sideways, Grey's Anatomy
>>• Sophie Okonedo, Hotel Rwanda
>>
>>• Clive Owen, Sin City, Closer
>>• Tyler Perry, Diary of a Mad Black Woman author
>>• Brad Pitt (GAG ME !!!!!!!!)
>>
>>• Julia Roberts (OH YEAH !!!!!!)
>>
>>• Seal
>>• Maria Sharapova, Russian tennis player
>>• Jessica Simpson
>>• Elizabeth Smart, Utah teen
>>
>>• Martha Stewart (you kiddin' me?)
>>
>>• Hilary Swank (wonderful actress, but NOT beautiful)
>>
>>• Usher
>>• Dwyane Wade, Miami Heat basketball player
>>
>>• Oprah Winfrey (fat women need love, too)
>>• Kate Winslet
>>• Ziyi Zhang, House of Flying Daggers
>>
>>.
>>
>>[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]
>>
>>
>>
>>Yahoo! Groups Links
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[CanYoAssDigIt] Long time no post...

So in quick succession they've brought two NPR bigshots (Kevin Klose
and Warren Olney) into the studio at KUOW, where they heard over and
over again from listeners that they are unhappy with the new
center-right orientation of the network, and they deny it, and try to
maintain that devoting most of their broadcasting time to government
propaganda and food programs is "objectivity."

It reminds me of Richard Nixon's famous "I am not a crook."

It's been proved over and over again, by FAIR for example, and I've
made the case repeatedly in this forum so many times that nobody even
bothers to argue with me about it anymore.

It is sad that KUOW didn't consult with their listeners about what
THEY wanted the Tavis Smiley show with - I would have lobbied hard for
Democracy Now! Because it isn't either/or, there are many NPR
stations that carry DN! and if KUOW did, I'd put up with the smarmy
and obsequious toadies kissing up to conservative think tank
mouthpieces and retired generals (enriching themselves "consulting")
etc etc that you get with NPR news - but no, they gave us the anemic
"The World".

Speaking of smarmy and obsequious toadies, I imagine that Scott Simon
will be dishing out more of the same "we are the world" slop, in the
face of overwhelming evidence that we orphaned NPR listeners are
actually much more accutely attuned to world opinion, while they
desperately cater to their funding sources on the right.

I am sorry to have to say "KUOW sucks" - it would be interesting to
know what they said to Ross Reynolds and Steve Sherer - "ok, when you
have Greg Palast on, forget the way you treated him in the past, be
rude, treat him like a conspiracy theorist, a member of the tin hat
crowd" and "treat Ralph Nader like a worm, a kook, a canker sore" and
perhaps "never talk to the Transportation Choices Coalition again,
only industry and government from now on."

What the hell is going on, anyway, and why does it seem like only a
handful of people even notice?

At least they are breaking with the decades long NPR ban on Chomsky,
that's something.


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[CanYoAssDigIt] "you guys consistenly have good music keep it up"

Check this out (below, with [parenthetically] comments from me), my
rappin cappin snappin alterego knucklehead got a big misspelled,
incoherent shoutout from some people I've never heard of!

Find out what people are yelling their heads off about, check out
knucklehead at

www.soundclick.com/knuckleheadus

and scream "damn good pleasure" at

http://www.soundclick.com/kengoshaentertainmentpresents85alllive

let them know the knucklehead posse is mighty!

Knucklehead (US)Knucklehead (US)
message board post

kengosha entertainment posted on Thu April 7, 2005
you guys consistenly have good music keep it up

[I will my friends! I will keep it up!]

.........if you get a chance holla at us.

[OK, I will. HEY, YOU!!!!!]

we have music w/ peddi crack and young buck........L 2 da I V 2 da E is #1
come find out.........oh by the way we have HOTSTEPPA for the jazz
heads AND WANT WAR for the thug cats!!........PLUS THE CRUSIN SINGLE
NO DISRESPECT TO YOU........ and for the block huggers we have b itch
holla my name and fuc cassidy!!! and if you notice we are #1 on the
charts........so i know the hate will come!!
check this............
L to da I -- V to da E ( ALL LIVE ):
· #20 in the HipHop charts
· #1 in the New School sub charts

hotsteppa:
· #81 in the Jazz charts
· #11 in the Jazz General sub charts

only in sub genres:
fuc cassidy p2 feat flashy and peddi crakk:
· #26 in the HipHop : Battles/Disses sub charts

love ya baby.....lucky ray feat young buck of gggg:
· #14 in the HipHop : Spoken Word sub charts

bi*** holla my name......Da SPRANO'S.:
· #73 in the HipHop : Old School sub charts

no disrespect to you:
· #89 in the HipHop : Christian Rap sub charts

Dreams.... tribute to BIGGIE.....Ace Slaughter:
· #320 in the HipHop : Freestyle sub charts

WANT WAR?:
· #224 in the HipHop : Alternative Hip Hop sub charts
_____________________________________
kengosha entertainment presents 85 All Live
http://www.soundclick.com/kengoshaentertainmentpresents85alllive


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