Category Archives: Uncategorized

Categorically, All Things Uncategorized.

Imagine

[From mi amiga:]

Just think, if November 22 had been Thanksgiving in 1963, JFK would have been at Camp David (or Hyannis Port) instead of Dallas.

Imagine,

cko

www.walkingraven.com

More About the Writers’ Strike

What’s on the Line In the Writers’ Strike By Harold Meyerson

The problem for the people who write the shows is that, at present, the studios aren’t bound to pay them anything for material that goes out on the Internet, and the studios are pretty much trying to keep it that way.

“Our current bargaining agreement doesn’t give us jurisdiction over content written for new media,” says Tony Segall, general counsel of the Writers Guild of America West. A side letter appended in 2001 to the guild’s contract with the studios exempted the studios from having to bargain with the union over the paychecks of writers turning out material for the Web, which the insufficiently futurist leadership of the guild (since replaced) apparently viewed as a distant prospect.

Last year, however, NBC-Universal asked the writers of “The Office” to create two-to-three-minute “webisodes” of the series for the Internet. Though the webisodes drove up the show’s ratings, the studio paid the writers nothing for their work. The writers, not surprisingly, ceased their webisode writing; the guild sought to negotiate for them with NBC-Universal and got nowhere fast; and the issue of the writers’ right to bargain collectively for Internet work became the crux of the writers’ conflict with the studios.

The day before the strike began, the studios offered the guild jurisdiction over writing on the Internet that is related to existing scripted dramas. Their offer wouldn’t cover the streaming of Letterman’s Top Ten list. It wouldn’t cover any material originally written for Internet delivery, a category that in a few years may encompass all new shows.

Segall acknowledges that devising a contract for new media is conceptually challenging. Since nobody knows how much revenue will initially be produced by entertainment delivered by the Internet, the guild’s position is that the contract should stipulate a percentage of Internet-show revenue, rather than a flat fee, for writers.

The guild’s message is: “If they [the studios] get paid, we must get paid.” …

Nations with more high-tech economies than our own, such as the Scandinavian states, have upgraded technology and increased productivity in ways that have enhanced, rather than diminished, the bargaining power and lives of their workers. In the United States, by contrast, our corporate elites, sometimes using technological innovation as a pretext for their power grabs, have destroyed workers’ bargaining power and kept for themselves almost all the revenue from technologically driven productivity increases. The picketers at Paramount and Disney may look to be a chorus line of wise-asses, but their struggle is a deadly serious test of whether any American workers retain the clout to strike a deal with the unchecked greed that is the modern American corporation.

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2007/11/13/AR2007111301833_pf.html

Writers Strike For Fairness — Center for American Progress Action Fund Progress Report

THE WRITERS’ PREDICAMENT: In 2004, The New York Times reported that “not since the advent of the videocassette in the mid-1980s has the movie industry enjoyed such a windfall from a new product,” in reference to DVDs. In contrast, as the WGA notes, “48 percent of writers guild members are unemployed at any time. Residuals are more than just extra cash. They are a life saver, allowing writers in financial strains to keep from losing their house or losing health insurance.” Most WGA members seldom earn beyond five figures each year. “Some of these writers are living check to check,” said James Brooks, the writer, director, and producer of The Simpsons. Actors, directors, and crew members also rely on residuals to “pay the bills and fund their health and pension programs.” The writers are “one of the best examples out there of the idea that working people can advance their interests through unions even outside of traditional ‘hard hat’ or public sector industries,” observed The Atlantic’s Matthew Yglesias. …

NEW MEDIA AT CENTER STAGE: With services like iTunes, studios can deliver products “more efficiently than ever.” Despite the cost savings, studios want to pay writers older DVD residuals (four cents per dollar) for online content. Furthermore, traditional media now air shows online, to be watched for free by viewers on the Internet, cell phones, and other new media outlets. While corporations profit from the ad revenue, writers “do not get paid when TV shows are streamed for free” online. Corporations allege the “union’s efforts as prohibiting them ‘from experimenting with programming and business models in New Media.'” The WGA strike has generated a solidarity between the blogosphere and writers. HuffingtonPost has a full page devoted to the strike. WGA leaders have formed their own blog to debunk traditional media spin and inform the public. Several other writers have been writing online, using Facebook, and posting YouTube videos. Yesterday, “[m]ore than 20 bloggers who write about the industry went ‘dark’ in support of the Writers Guild and its demands to be compensated for streaming TV broadcasts and other digital media.”

http://www.americanprogressaction.org/progressreport/2007/11/pr20071114

4 Lucky People Will Get to Start and Run a New Conservative Website

4 Lucky People Will Get to Start and Run a New Conservative Website

Are you interested? Do you know somebody who might be interested?

Dear Fellow Conservative:

In the next 30 days, I will be starting four new websites. I will fund the start-up costs, maintenance, and marketing campaigns for these sites, but I need four principled conservatives to run one of them as their cause and their contribution to conservatism.

Are you interested? Do you know somebody who might be interested?

Together we can work to take back our movement…and our nation. This can be your opportunity to actively participate in shaping history, involved in a cause that will change America.

You don’t have to invest any of your own funds. Just the opposite. With our profit-sharing plan, the more creative and proactive you are, the more your income grows, starting from Day 1.

You don’t have to relocate. Your home computer is your office.

You don’t have to be a professional writer. You do need to write well and convey messages clearly; you do need to understand conservatism and the audience you’ll be seeking to get as subscribers; and the more creative you are, the better for all of us.

And you are free to continue with your other jobs or projects, as long as they are not competitive with the one you do for us. Once you learn the routine, this should take two or three hours a day Monday through Friday, and perhaps an hour a day on weekends.

I’m interested!
What are the four websites?

? One website will take Hillary Clinton to task on a topic where she’s highly vulnerable.

? One website will channel the disgust and anger Americans feel about the politicians in Washington, both Democratic and Republican.

? One website will focus on Ron Paul’s message in his campaign—with a unique twist.

? And one website will show why all the leading candidates for the Republican nomination have poor credentials as true conservatives—and what they must do to earn our support.

Now I’m definitely interested! What do I do next?

Tell me which website interests you, and (in a few words) why. Do the same with your second choice, if more than one of them interests you.

Tell me something about yourself.

How did you become a conservative, and when? What do you feel are the most important challenges facing conservatism—and the American people—today? Have you been active in politics? Do you have experience beyond email on using a computer and getting information over the Internet? (Our new content management system that you’d use is user-friendly and very easy to learn.) You get the idea.

If you have written any articles, please include one or two as attachments to your email.

Send these to me at: viguerie@conservativehq.com

I look forward to hearing from you!

Sincerely,

Richard A. Viguerie
9625 Surveyor Court
Suite 400
Manassas, Virginia 20110

Robo-roach

If you haven’t read yet about robot roaches, you should. Get beyond the creepiness factor or that cheapskate instinct and consider two interesting observations:

When robot roaches and real roaches interact, real roaches will follow the robots against their own instincts. Think Pied Piper. Imagine dropping a handful of robot roaches on the floor, watching them scurry into corners. During the night, the robots lead their new friends into the safety under an innocuous object: a Roomba-style death star, a roach motel on wheels, complete with acid bath for body disposal. (The bi-product can be incorporated — a grisly word in this context — into a room freshener.)

Far more interesting — no, inconceivable — is that in this mix of robot and real roaches, the robots sometimes follow the roaches against their programming. That’s like saying, “I set my alarm clock for 7am but some of the time it goes off at 6am” — pretty close to impossible unless there is bad programming or a hardware defect. Programming is not nearly as flexible as instinct. We’d better figure this out before the roaches turn the robots against us, hiding in the safety of the wall while their new slaves take all the risks. Did that Roomba just growl at me? mjh

Arrogant Marty

The one thing that should end Marty Chávez’s political career is his utter disdain for others. A month or more ago, he sniped that Diane Denish has done nothing. Now he says the same of Tom Udall. Yes, only Marty accomplishes anything in the public arena — all others are good-for-nothings in his view. Yet another Republican quality. mjh

Write On!

OK, I’ve been hiding behind the Hollywood writers’ strike. The truth is, I’ve been too busy with *work* (said with a Maynard G. Krebs intonation) to blog.

While I’ve never been a member of a union — in fact, I’m not a member of much of anything — I do sympathize with the goals of unions to represent the interests of workers . I think the decline of unions coincides with the rise of the disgusting rich and the shift in the entire society away from work and towards get-rich-quick schemes. After centuries of capitalism, we all agree money is worth more than labor. With every lottery ticket, you say, “I should be rich and the quicker and easier the better.” But no one should be stinking rich. Certainly, it shouldn’t come easily.

At some point, the only power a worker has over the boss is to withhold labor. (Similarly, the only power soldiers have over warmongers is to refuse to fight.) When no work gets done, even the rich may notice as they move from one gated community to the next.

So, I can’t really identify with the Hollywood writers’ strike. Granted, I believe we all deserve pay that is more than a pathetic fraction of the few people at the top. However, we don’t all deserve nor get $200,000 for 20 weeks of work, 20 hours per week. Work in which we sit among witty colleagues having a lot of fun. (Yes, it’s still work, but not quite the same as scrubbing toilets.) Mind you, the world desperately needs more humor and laughter is better than bloodshed. Perhaps striking writers could use this time to bring comedy to the homeless. mjh