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The race to the White House is shaping up to be a clear referendum in black and white. Though President Barack Obama has faced some…
Mitt Romney Has 0 Percent Of African-American Vote [NBC/WSJ POLL]
James Taranto at the Wall Street Journal pointed out in his “Best of the Web Today” review on Thursday how Mark Halperin of Time seems to disagree so vehemently with himself about how the Obama presidency was supposed to unfold this year. Why would Obama delay business-tax-cut talk until the fall, for example : It is fair to ask (and many Democrats have) why the President is only now proposing such critical measures, rather than offering them up earlier in his term, before election-season politics brought governing to a standstill. It’s fair to answer, too. While Americans were anxious about the economy, Obama was obsessed with wrecking our health care. He was urged on by cheerleaders in the media like the one who wrote an article on March 22, the day after the House passed ObamaCare, which began as follows: In the 7½ months between now and November’s midterm elections, millions of Americans will be whipped into a frenzy over the purported evils in the Democrats’ health care bill, egged on by Fox News chatter, Rush Limbaugh’s daily sermons, threats of state legislative and judicial action and the solemn pledge of Republicans in Washington to make the fall election a referendum on Obamacare. But in doing so, they may be playing right into the Democrats’ hands. The author of that paragraph: Time magazine’s Mark Halperin . It would be unsporting to dwell on Halperin’s lack of prescience. After all, anyone who makes political predictions is going to get it wrong sometimes. But in his March 22 piece, Halperin went beyond prognostication: Democrats will be joined in the fray by much of the press. For Republicans, this will seem like familiar ground, since generations of conservatives have complained that the so-called mainstream media have been biased against them. Well, get ready, Republicans, for déjà vu all over again. The coverage through November likely will highlight the most extreme attacks on the President and his law and spotlight stories of real Americans whose lives have been improved by access to health care (pushed, no doubt, by Democrats from every competitive congressional district and state). The louder Republicans yell, the more they will be characterized and caricatured as sore losers infuriated by the first major delivery of candidate Obama’s promise of “change.” The focus on the weekend’s alleged racial and gay-bashing verbal attacks by opponents of the Democrats’ plan should be a caution to Republican strategists trying to figure out how to manage the media this year. Halperin is a member of the press, and as the first paragraph of the March article makes clear, he was among the ObamaCare cheerleaders who, as he accurately observed, made up “much of the press.” Thus, that last excerpt is not just a prediction but a promise: Don’t worry, Mr. President, we in the press will propagandize relentlessly for you and turn this into a political winner. We think that was an unwise promise to make, not only because the press is supposed to be independent, but also because it was impossible to deliver the goods. The liberal media monopoly has long since been broken. Halperin and his colleagues were never going to be able to put lipstick on the ObamaCare pig by slandering opponents or producing puff pieces on “real Americans whose lives have been improved.” Yet having promised to do just that, Halperin isn’t even trying. Instead, he is chastising the president — for inexplicably following Halperin’s advice!

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Taranto: How the Press Looks Silly for Projecting ObamaCare Would Make GOP ‘Sore Losers’
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Tagged bennyhollywood, democrats, halperin, health, House, james-taranto, mark halperin, media, News, president, Street, TMZ, wall street journal
February 2009 was a pretty dark time for the conservative movement. The arguably most liberal president in the history of the United States has been sworn in to office just weeks early. The Congress had solid Democratic majorities in both chambers. And there were overtures that only way to save the nation from suffering the worst of a downtrodden economy was through an avalanche of costly legislation that would create huge budget deficits and ever-expanding bureaucracy. But in the midst of that dark spell, CNBC’s Rick Santelli lit the spark that ignited the conservative pushback. On CNBC’s Feb. 19, 2009 “Squawk Box,” Santelli called for a “tea party” in Lake Michigan to protest the idea the Obama administration was preparing to enact a massive housing bailout to reward people who took part in risky behavior by purchasing a home they couldn’t afford. According to former House Majority Leader Dick Armey, now the chairman of FreedomWorks , often portrayed as a Tea Party villain by the American left , Santelli really is a father of the movement. Armey, along with Matt Kibbe, president and CEO of FreedomWorks, credit Santelli in an Aug. 17 Wall Street Journal op-ed and more extensively in their book “Give Us Liberty: A Tea Party Manifesto.” And on CNBC’s Aug. 19 “Squawk Box,” Armey explained the importance of Santelli. “The Santelli rant, which we talk about with great affection in our book, immediately went to the Internet and the Internet is so important to this movement, in terms of the baffled liberals who can’t understand what’s going on without a George Soros,” Armey said. “It’s the Internet, because that went viral. And everybody said – and that’s where the term ‘tea party’ comes in.” Armey explained that his organization served as a mechanism for the activists to coordinate the Tea Party movement. “So what we found happening very soon is with people who had found us because they said, ‘I like that guy on TV. I want to have a tea party. How do you do it? Well, let’s go see who does it.’ That’s how they found FreedomWorks and they asked us, ‘Give us some, you know, advice how to do this, how to put it together,’ and so forth. And we developed this mentoring relationship.” Despite accusations of opportunism , Armey explained his organization predated the Santelli rant and the entire movement. “We’ve been doing this since 1984, and we are the best there is at,” he added. Later in the program, Santelli responded Armey’s appearance on “Squawk Box.” “[T]he rant was a year and a half ago,” Santelli said. “The Tea Party movement is really moving along. It’s pretty cool after a year and a half.”
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Former Majority Leader Dick Armey Credits CNBC’s Santelli for Sparking Tea Party
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Tagged alaskan, book, Breaking News, carl quintanilla, newsweek, Obama, online media, party, squawk box, union, wall street journal
No matter what happens, even surrounding his personal life or his pet cause global warming, former Vice President Al Gore just isn’t going away. During an Aug. 10 conference call , Gore launched into a critique of the media’s recent coverage of ClimateGate, specifically blogs, talk radio and “biased right-wing media.” “Well I believe Mark Twain often gets the credit for the saying … that a lie runs around the world before the truth gets its boots on,” Gore said. “Now I’m not sure that’s the real reason for it, but there is a sad but undeniable truth that those who wanted to try sewing confusion used an echo chamber from blogs and talk show hosts and biased right-wing media to promulgate the distortions of the paid skeptics and professional deniers who tried to undermine the evidence.” Gore, who earlier during the call said he all but given up on cap-and-trade legislation being passed this Congress ( audio here ), alluded to a handful of “formal inquiries” that he argued cleared the science of any doubt that may have been caused by the leaked e-mails from ClimateGate, despite the questionable circumstances surrounding these inquiries . “There have been of course multiple, formal inquiries, all of which have dispelled the falsehoods that go under the title of ‘ClimateGate,'” Gore continued. “The three separate inquiries conducted not only cleared the scientists and the organizations involved, but strongly reaffirmed the basic assertions that they have been making.” But this time the former vice president named names. He went after The Wall Street Journal for its coverage of ClimateGate, even though the daily newspaper was one of the few outlets covering the scandal with much vigor. “I’ll give you one example – The Wall Street Journal wrote upwards of 30 editorials and news stories during the time about the story of the University of East Anglia broke and not a single one of them presented the side of the science. There are many other examples as you know.” In recent months, Gore has had his own public relations problem with media coverage surrounding his personal life, including a divorce and allegations sexual misconduct , which he was later cleared of by Portland, Ore. authorities. But to combat the media, which he alleges has been working against him on global warming, he urged his supporters to send letters to the editor, demand equal time and write op-eds. “It is our responsibility to demand that reporters, editors and all journalists report the truth,” he said. “It is only through consistent and constant pressure from us demanding equal time in local and national media that we will get the truth out. And that is why it’s so critical to write letters to the editor, to post comments online, to draft and write op-eds that share your point of view and use the facts and spread them far and wide. Only when the media hear from enough of us will they change their habits and print the truth about these scientific facts.” A 2008 Business & Media Institute study disputes the idea that Gore’s cause of climate change alarmism has faced an uphill battle as far public relations goes. Over the years, it showed the alarmists have outnumbered the skeptics in airtime, a trend that has been occurring over the years.
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Al Gore Complains about Global Warming Media Coverage; Blasts The Wall Street Journal on ClimateGate
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Tagged Breaking News, charlie-rangel, climate-change, congressional, global-warming, president, street-journal, truth, wall street journal
One narrative the liberal media has strenuously failed to develop is the incredible irony of BP presenting itself as the greenest oil company, the “Beyond Petroleum” folks who recognized they were boiling the planet with oil. In Friday’s Wall Street Journal , Mark Mills reviewed a new book, Oil, by Tom Bower: But the most interesting figure in Mr. Bower’s narrative is not Mr. Putin but BP’s Lord Browne, who understood cultural politics better than his peers. In the 1990s, BP launched what was arguably the oil industry’s most successful public-relations campaign, for all the good it is doing the company now. The campaign transformed BP into a shining example of a progressive company—one supposedly “Beyond Petroleum.” It is clear from Mr. Bower’s account that, while BP remained first and foremost an oil company, Lord Browne drank his own Kool-Aid, basking in encomia from the media and green mavens. He gave lectures at Stanford, appeared on “Charlie Rose,” cozied up to Greenpeace and promised to spend $1 billion on solar technology. The Beyond Petroleum campaign, conceived by PR masters Ogilvy & Mather, was originally intended as an internal strategy, aimed at making the company appear more green-sensitive. But it so excited Lord Browne that he delivered a May 1997 speech proclaiming BP the first “green” oil major. The company produced a 200-page “Reputation Manual” with facts about BP’s greenness, formed a political-style “war room” in Houston, and launched a multiyear media blitz. Mr. Bower claims that the rebranding cost BP $200 million. The cost is now measurable in irony, as the Gulf of Mexico grows ever more slick and BP ever more hated. But the campaign was hokum from the start. At this point in history it is almost impossible to find a place “beyond” petroleum. It’s not just the scale of the task but its nature. Energy-dense liquids are valuable, and oil is uniquely valuable in its combination of density, ease of storage and transport, and, believe it or not, safety. Every alternative is worse on all metrics, including cost, even at twice today’s oil price. If liquid hydrocarbons didn’t exist, we would have to invent them
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Underreported: The Irony of BP’s ‘Beyond Petroleum’ PR Crusade
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Tagged bp gulf oil spill, browne, from-the-media, from-the-start, greenpeace, houston, media, mexico, News, Street, wall street journal
President Obama met with a group of prominent liberal commentators on Thursday to discuss the Gulf oil spill and the administration’s response. The meeting came in the midst of a rare firestorm of criticism from the left over the president’s response to the spill. It was surely not coincidence that the journalists seen leaving the White House that afternoon–the New York Times’s Gail Collins , the Washington Post’s Eugene Robinson , MSNBC’s Rachel Maddow , and the Wall Street Journal’s Gerald Seib –were some of the more prominent critics of the president’s Oval Office address on Tuesday. The meeting demonstrates two facts: the White House is trying furiously to spin media coverage of the federal response to the spill in the administration’s favor, and the old White House double standard towards the news media persists. Though hardly shocking, the Obama administration continues to employ a vicious double standard that dubs any news organization that criticizes the president something short of legitimate. Lest anyone has forgotten, two top White House officials–chief of staff Rahm Emanuel and political advisor David Axelrod –both rhetorically negated Fox’s credentials as a legitimate news organization. Thursday’s meeting suggests another layer of partisanship that, though hardly surprising, is still quite telling. While Fox is demonized, some of the left’s most partisan commentators are not only granted the White House’s seal of legitimacy, but are even give privileged access to the president. The meeting also suggests that Obama is devoting more effort to spinning his administration’s policies concerning the gulf spill than he is with actually devising more effective policies. His meeting with these lefty journalists was, after all, roughly three times as long as his meeting with BP CEO Tony Hayward.

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Catching Heat From Left, Obama Meets With Liberal Commentators to Discuss Gulf Spill
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Tagged eugene-robinson, from-the-left, gerald seib, News, Obama, office, president-obama, rachel maddow show, rachel-maddow, spill, wall street journal, white
Last month, we met Ken Bannister . He put his collection of 17,000 “banana-themed artifacts” on eBay, and this man and his mother bought it. The International Banana Museum is saved! More
Posted in Celebrities, Hot Stuff
Tagged banana, banana-museum, bennyhollywood, international, interview, mother, saved, wall street journal
Apple’s iPad could make it the king of old media, arbiter of taste and technology alike. So magazines and newspapers have begun a series of countermoves that could turn the quietest dogfight in media into the most vicious. In one sense, the iPad’s January unveiling was a nerd climax, a landmark for obsessive gadget freaks. But in another it was one in a series of Apple chess movies that will determine how much influence the company wields over the future of magazines and newspapers. If the tablet device and Apple’s associated online shops become popular enough, the company could have a chokehold over publishing technology and content itself. It could become as central to the future of print media as it has become to the future of music, where Apple’s iTunes Store dominates online sales. And it could use that position to promote its preferred technologies over those of rivals, most notably Adobe’s Flash animation software, now ubiquitous on websites. But Apple is but one player in this game; old media are making moves of their own. Apple’s refusal to work with Adobe, whose software is central to most art departments, makes publishers uneasy. And the old media are none too comfortable with Apple reviewing their content and applications for approval, or with the prospect of one company potentially controlling the future of print. So they’re taking steps to preserve their independence. It scarcely hurts that these steps promise to save loads of money in comparison with the path Apple is most enthusiastic about; magazines and newspapers are hardly swimming in surplus money these days. In short, there’s a quiet dogfight going on between Apple and its prospective media partners over the future of the iPad. It’s not open warfare; it’s the sort of quiet maneuvering you’d expect from parties who, on the one hand, need to cooperate but, on the other, can’t stop competing. We’ve outlined some of the maneuvering below: Apple move: Banishing Flash. One of Apple’s most prominent maneuvers was its decision to exclude Adobe’s Flash animation technology from the iPad, as with the iPhone before it. When CEO Steve Jobs unveiled the tablet device in January, it had no support for Flash, and none is likely forthcoming: in a iPad-related meeting with Wall Street Journal editors, Jobs trashed Flash as unstable and unsecure, and said it would be “trivial” for the newspaper to dispense with it in preparation for the Apple tablet. Publisher countermove: Baking Flash into apps. The publishers aren’t just going to flush their Flash investment. It’s massive; since our post about Jobs’ Flash rant at the Journal , we’ve received emails from media types defending the Adobe software. You can read five of the best emails here in an accompanying post . Taken together, they strongly contradict Jobs’ claim that it would be “trivial” for publishers to ditch Flash in preparation for the iPad . Our emailers said Flash is deeply integrated into news outlets, powering sophisticated video players, interactive graphics and — hello? — advertising that would be difficult if not impossible to duplicate using JavaScript and other technologies supported natively on the iPad. As one online producer told us, “Flash for interactive graphics is irreplaceable,” while ditching it “requires broad changes across multiple properties… Oh, sure, just use Javascript: well guess what, we don’t have a bunch of code junkies in our newsroom.” Luckily, Adobe has some little-talked-about software it calls Packager for iPhone . Set for wide release some time in the second quarter, the packager compiles Flash code down to code that will run natively on the iPhone. In simpler terms, it converts Flash code into iPhone code. Will Apple allow this? Adobe’s Jeremy Clark told us it already has: iPhone applications built with Flash Platform tools are compiled into standard, native iPhone executable packages and no runtime interpreter is necessary to run the application. Over 30 Applications built using the [pre-release] Flash Packager for iPhone have already been accepted in the iPhone app store so we’re confident that our method fits within the rules of the iPhone App Store. All of the apps highlighted on Adobe’s website are games or entertainment oriented, but that’s changing: Wired has been working with Adobe, and used Adobe Air to power the demonstration tablet edition featured in its recent video ” Wired Magazine on the iPad .” Wired is probably hoping, then, to use an iPad version of Adobe’s Flash Packager to get its content onto the Apple tablet. Wired could design its e-magazine in Flash, export using Adobe’s tool, and distribute through the iPad App Store. As Editor Chris Anderson told us, It’s fair to say that Wired’s preferred path (indeed, the one we’re on) is cross platform, starting with the Adobe authoring tools we already use every day to put out the print magazine (InDesign, etc). How that emerges in e-reader form depends on the platform—sometimes it’s a straight save as Adobe Air, sometimes it requires going through a cross-compiler tool. But the ultimate aim is create once, read everywhere, with all the fine-grained design flexibility we have in print combined with the new interactive power of tablets. The only complication is performance: The iPad’s Apple A4 processor is weaker than those in most personal computers, so Wired will have to be especially careful with its Flash programming. Apple move: iStore for magazines and newspapers . Although no one will go on record, we’re told that Apple’s working on its own built-in iPad store for magazine and newspaper content — a sort of “iNewsstand” to complement iBooks, the bookstore, and iTunes, the music store. It’s a predictable move, the most logical and consumer-friendly way to distribute e-magazines and e-papers via the iPad. Without a central application for managing subscriptions to perdiodicals, after all, users will end up accumulating a messy jungle of magazine and newspaper “apps” on their iPads, each requiring a separate installation and bringing to the table its own user interface quirks. Publisher countermove : Sticking to apps. There’s no telling how publishers will respond to Apple’s iMagazine stand because it doesn’t exist yet; pricing, interface, format, revenue split and conent rules are still unknown. But the content creators do have one bit of leverage: If they don’t like Apple’s terms, they can threaten to keep selling standalone apps through the App Store. No one publication has as much invested in the iPad user experience as Apple, after all, so why should the publishers care if their apps clutter up the device? Apple move: Censoring content. Apple is already censoring content on iPhone apps, but it’s sending mixed messages: The company banished thousands of apps containing ” sexually arousing content ” like women in bikinis while letting the Playboy and Sports Illustrated Swimsuit Edition apps stick around. It seems likely Apple will have to get more consistent and clear with the rules on the iPad, if only to save itself from headaches. Magazines and newspapers seem to be flocking to the device in large numbers, and their apps promise to be chock full of racy pictures, racy advertisements and even racy PDF copies of the print edition (horror!). The clearer Apple can be up front, the fewer fights it will have with publishers. If it keeps the rules for iPad app content especially restrictive , Apple will have leverage to encourage magazines to distribute through its own iPad periodicals store. Just allow more free expression in the magazine/newspaper store than in the app marketplace. Publisher countermove: Retreat to the Web. Apple can set all the rules it wants for content distributed through its own stores. But no one says publishers have to be in Apple’s store in the first place. if Apple’s policies prove too restrictive — or, worse, too hard to predict — publishers can simply publish whatever they want on iPad-optimized versions of their websites. NPR has already developed such a site to filter out Flash content for iPad users; racier publishers could produce iPad sites to preserve their freedom of expression. In fact, Apple’s PastryKit framework allows publishers to come awfully close to duplicating the iPhone/iPad interface in a Web app. Apple move: Banning apps with Flash baked in. Steve Jobs really seems to detest Flash . So past might not be prologue: Just because Apple allowed onto the iPhone 30 apps cross-compiled with Adobe’s Flash Packager (see above) doesn’t mean the company will allow cross-compiled Flash apps in the future. In fact, Wired ‘s parent company Condé Nast seems worried about Apple banning such apps. CEO Chuck Townsend told Peter Kafka of All Things D he is uneasy instituting the Wired model at other titles, due to Apple’s antipathy toward Flash. So he’s porting other magazines to the iPad using a less ambitious strategy of simply duplicating print pages within the app . That approach would require far less Flash coding, and thus there would be far less lost if Apple banned the technology used in Flash Packager. Publisher countermove: Rally the geeks. Flash Packager isn’t the only tool that takes unsupported code and turns it into native iPhone/iPad software; Novell’s MonoTouch pulls off a similar trick by pre-compiling programs from the Mono programming framework. There are already games in the app store pre-compiled from a Mono game platform , in fact. If Apple tried to ban Wired ‘s tablet edition and the other Flash Packager apps, it would have to try and explain why MonoTouch apps aren’t banned, too. If Apple did ban MonoTouch apps, it would have closed off not one but two major sources of iPhone and iPad apps, undermining Apple’s own platform. If outmaneuvering Apple sounds like an increasingly technical endeavor, that’s because it is. But if old-line publishers want to have any hope at exploiting Steve Jobs’ technologies without getting taken advantage of, they should have started been reading up on such geeky matters months ago,
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How Apple Is Dogfighting To Control Your News [Media Wars]
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Tagged apple, bennyhollywood, editor, flash, freedom, Hollywood, ipad, Music, Pictures, TMZ, wall street journal