Tag Archives: chief-executive

Meg Whitman is new HP CEO

Meg Whitman, 55, joined the HP board in January and served as president and CEO of eBay from 1998 to 2008, when she led the company through its initial public offering and massive growth. Former eBay Chief Executive Officer and California governor candidate Meg Whitman on Thursday was named Hewlett-Packard#39;s new CEO, replacing Leo Apotheker who served 11 months on the job. “We are fortunate to have someone of Meg Whitman#39;s caliber and experience step up to lead HP,” said the California-

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Meg Whitman is new HP CEO

Devin Wenig biography

Devin Wenig is the CEO of the Markets Division of Thomson Reuters and former COO of Reuters. Devin Wenig is the Chief Executive Officer of the Markets Division of Thomson Reuters. He leads the global financial services and media businesses, which provide indispensable information to professionals in the financial services, media and corporate markets. Previously, Mr. Wenig served as Chief Operating Officer and a Board Director of Reuters Group PLC and held a number of senior management positio

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Why This Red Head “Media Thug” Rebekah Brooks Was Arrested

It’s not looking good for this Rebekah Brooks character: The U.K. police investigation into alleged phone hacking took a dramatic turn Sunday with the arrest of Rebekah Brooks, the former chief of News Corp.’s U.K. newspaper unit who resigned Friday. London’s Metropolitan Police, known as Scotland Yard, arrested her around noon Sunday when she appeared by appointment at a London police station. She hadn’t been charged. It was the 10th arrest by police in a dual probe investigating allegations of voicemail interceptions and corrupt payments to police. The allegations focus on the News of the World, News Corp.’s Sunday tabloid that the company recently closed after 168 years amid an escalating scandal. By midafternoon on Sunday, Ms. Brooks remained in police custody along with her legal representation, according to a spokesman for the former News International chief executive. “She is assisting police at the moment,” the spokesman said, noting that the appointment with police was prearranged. “Until that’s completed, I can’t really say any more.” Ms. Brooks is due to come under public scrutiny this week when she appears before a parliamentary committee alongside News Corp. Chairman and Chief Executive Rupert Murdoch and his son, James Murdoch, News Corp.’s deputy chief operating officer. The trio will face questioning from U.K. politicians about the hacking and whether executives previously misled parliament. The News Corp. phone-hacking scandal involves allegations that the company’s News of the World tabloid illegally accessed mobile-phone voice mails and bribed police to get information. The scandal has been simmering for years but escalated to a new level recently with the allegation that the paper in 2002 hacked the phone of a missing 13-year-old girl who turned out to be dead. Ms. Brooks had become the public face of the scandal and for many British lawmakers their chief target. Chris Bryant, the Labour lawmaker who has pushed the issue hardest, said he was “delighted” by the news, and that Ms. Brooks should have been arrested in 2003 when she told a parliamentary committee that News International had paid police officials. Mr. Bryant thinks that police attention should now focus on James Murdoch, given he was privy to payments made to several people who had complained of phone hacking. “It feels as if the water is lapping around the feet of the Murdoch family now,” he said. SMH. Via WSJ

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Why This Red Head “Media Thug” Rebekah Brooks Was Arrested

Why This Red Head “Media Thug” Rebekah Brooks Was Arrested

It’s not looking good for this Rebekah Brooks character: The U.K. police investigation into alleged phone hacking took a dramatic turn Sunday with the arrest of Rebekah Brooks, the former chief of News Corp.’s U.K. newspaper unit who resigned Friday. London’s Metropolitan Police, known as Scotland Yard, arrested her around noon Sunday when she appeared by appointment at a London police station. She hadn’t been charged. It was the 10th arrest by police in a dual probe investigating allegations of voicemail interceptions and corrupt payments to police. The allegations focus on the News of the World, News Corp.’s Sunday tabloid that the company recently closed after 168 years amid an escalating scandal. By midafternoon on Sunday, Ms. Brooks remained in police custody along with her legal representation, according to a spokesman for the former News International chief executive. “She is assisting police at the moment,” the spokesman said, noting that the appointment with police was prearranged. “Until that’s completed, I can’t really say any more.” Ms. Brooks is due to come under public scrutiny this week when she appears before a parliamentary committee alongside News Corp. Chairman and Chief Executive Rupert Murdoch and his son, James Murdoch, News Corp.’s deputy chief operating officer. The trio will face questioning from U.K. politicians about the hacking and whether executives previously misled parliament. The News Corp. phone-hacking scandal involves allegations that the company’s News of the World tabloid illegally accessed mobile-phone voice mails and bribed police to get information. The scandal has been simmering for years but escalated to a new level recently with the allegation that the paper in 2002 hacked the phone of a missing 13-year-old girl who turned out to be dead. Ms. Brooks had become the public face of the scandal and for many British lawmakers their chief target. Chris Bryant, the Labour lawmaker who has pushed the issue hardest, said he was “delighted” by the news, and that Ms. Brooks should have been arrested in 2003 when she told a parliamentary committee that News International had paid police officials. Mr. Bryant thinks that police attention should now focus on James Murdoch, given he was privy to payments made to several people who had complained of phone hacking. “It feels as if the water is lapping around the feet of the Murdoch family now,” he said. SMH. Via WSJ

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Why This Red Head “Media Thug” Rebekah Brooks Was Arrested

Rebekah Brooks Resigns

“As chief executive of the company, I feel a deep sense of responsibility for the people we have hurt and I want to reiterate how sorry I am for what we now know to have taken place,” Rebekah Brooks said in a statement. “I have believed that the right and responsible action has been to lead us through the heat of the crisis. However my desire to remain on the bridge has made me a focal point of the debate.” It took far too long in the eyes of many, but Rebekah Brooks is finally out at News Inte

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Rebekah Brooks Resigns

Chua Pin Chong dead

The Straits Times reported that the younger Mr Chua Pin Chong, 50, felt uncomfortable while checking in for his flight. An ambulance was called but he died later in hospital. Mr Chua Thian Poh is the president of the Singapore Federation of Chinese Clan Associations, Chairman and CEO Ho Bee Holdings and number 17 on Forbes#39; Singapore#39;s 40 Richest list. Chief Executive Officer of Ho Bee Media and Ho Bee Print, Mr Chua Pin Chong, has died suddenly in Rome on Sunday morning. The youngest

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Chua Pin Chong dead

Madonna new boyfriend Brahim Zaibat picture

Brahim Zaibat, who has been dating the 52-year-old singer Madonna for several months, claims he is comfortable romancing one of the world#39;s most famous women and says being in the spotlight hasn#39;t changed him. Singer Madonna#39;s new boyfriend, dancer Brahim Zaibat, has opened up about his romance with the singer, saying he likes to be in control. “My life did not really change, I am still the same person, I am not the jealous kind. As long as I feel I am in control, everything goes smoo

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Madonna new boyfriend Brahim Zaibat picture

John Varley retire(Barclays PLC CEO)

In this photo released by VisMedia, the newly announced Barclays PLC chief executive Robert E. Diamond Jr., center, poses for a photograph with outgoing Barclays CEO John Varley, left, and Barclays chairman Marcus Agius, right, at Barclays headquarters in Canary Wharf, London, Tuesday, Sept. 7, 2010. Diamond, who built Barclays PLC into a global powerhouse in investment banking and has been criticized for his lavish pay, will become chief executive next year, the company announced Tuesday. John

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John Varley retire(Barclays PLC CEO)

Former White House Correspondents President Denounces ‘Travesty’ of Fox News Getting Front Row Seat

For some in the White House Press Corps, literally thanking God for the existence of a terrorist organization is less controversial than being owned by a company that gives more money to one political party than the other. That, at least, is the standard former WHCA president Edwin Chen has set forth. In an interview with the far-left blog Media Matters, Chen dubbed “a travesty” the WHCA’s decision to award a front-row seat in the briefing room to Fox News. His objection? “The vacancy was created because of an ideological conflict,” and would be filled by “another cloud of ideological conflict.” The first ideological conflict to which Chen referred was Helen Thomas’s retirement, forced by a video showing her making anti-Semitic comments. The second: the political contributions of Fox’s parent company, News Corp. The years of offensive, derogatory, and (to say the least) controversial comments from Thomas – such as “thank God for Hezbollah” and “why does [George W. Bush] want to drop bombs on innocent Iraqis?” – are apparently, in Chen’s mind, not indicative of “ideological conflict” as he uses the phrase in this context. Thomas’s presence in the front row was never an issue of concern for Chen until her final outburst as a White House reporter. In fact, Chen defended Thomas’s record of journalistic fairness even after she retired. “She was a bipartisan inflictor of pain,” he told NPR . But Chen lamented to Media Matters that Thomas retired in the midst of “this conflict over politics and a question of fairness,” and that Fox “drags in all of this controversy” because of its parent company’s political donations. But if the issue is controversy – if Chen believes that White House reporters should not drag controversy into the briefing room – why is this only becoming an issue now? Why is controversy surrounding Fox News any more of a disqualifying factor than controversy surrounding Helen Thomas? Of course Chen and others will note that Thomas is an opinion columnist, not a “straight news” reporter. To which any sensible observer will reply that no one is citing Fox’s coverage of the White House as cause for concern. The controversy has to do not with Fox’s news operation, but rather with its parent company’s political activities. If Fox’s discontents in the WHCA were able to claim that Fox’s news operation is too opinionated, or that its parent company’s political activities are directly affecting its work in the White House press pool, they would do so. Another former WHCA president, former Knight Ridder reporter Ron Hutcheson, takes a similar angle, raising the issue of whether Fox can report fairly without actually citing any of Fox’s reporting. Hutcheson told Media Matters that “a big political contribution by any news organization raises some questions. Clearly the management of Fox has political views.” Since Hutcheson and Chen are so concerned about “political views” staining the WHCA’s reputation for fairness, why are they more concerned with hypothetical bias from reporters who have not themselves demonstrated political favoritism than they are with Helen Thomas, a White House reporter who was open about her political favoritism? Thomas proudly proclaimed her political views on more than one occasion. “I’m a liberal, I was born a liberal, and I will be a liberal ’til the day I die,” she told the Philadelphia Inquirer. “I’d say I’m about as far left as you can go,” she told the Fox Business Network’s Stuart Varney. If the issue is journalistic fairness – whether White House correspondents can give those they are covering a fair shake – you would think that the litany of outrageous statements from Thomas, coupled with her self-proclaimed uber-leftism, would set off more alarms than the fact that the Fox correspondent’s news organization’s parent company gave more to one political party than the other. The real “travesty” is the double standard at play. A couple concluding notes on Chen: the Washington Examiner’s Julie Mason told Media Matters that the WHCA’s decision on the vacant seat came down to one between Fox and Bloomberg, Chen’s former employer. In other words, he’s not exactly a neutral arbiter of this dispute. Chen’s current employer is the Natural Resources Defense Council. If his double standard on controversial White House correspondents did not tip you off to his personal political views, that fact should.

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Former White House Correspondents President Denounces ‘Travesty’ of Fox News Getting Front Row Seat

Brad Pitt: Let’s Execute Some BP Executives

On July 27th and 28th, the  New York Times  published the  following headline:  “The oil slick in the Gulf of Mexico appears to be dissolving far more rapidly than anyone expected.” In the story that followed the headline, readers were informed: “The immense patches of surface oil that [once] covered thousands of square miles of the gulf after the…oil rig explosion are largely gone.” Ironically, the man who predicted this would be case was the much-maligned Tony Hayward, former Chief Executive of British Petroleum (BP). While being grilled on Capital Hill about the oil spill earlier this year, Hayward described it as a ” relatively tiny ” one in comparison to the “very big ocean” in which it had occurred.  Although the backlash Hayward faced by Democrats was nasty, Rush Limbaugh concurred with the BP boss, and stories like the one I cited from the  New York Times  seem to demonstrate that Hayward and Limbaugh were both correct. Yet, not only does BP continue to be the target of heavy criticism by Democrats and environmental groups, it has even found itself in the crosshairs of Brad Pitt, who recently “said he would  consider the death penalty  for those to blame for the Gulf oil spill crisis.” According to the UK’s  Daily Mail , Pitt’s exact words were: “I was never for the death penalty before – I am willing to look at it again.” With all respect to Pitt, a seemingly reasonable guy who has made some great movies, it may be a bit over the top to support (or even consider supporting) the death penalty for a human being simply because that person was involved in an environmental disaster. How out of whack has our world become when someone of Pitt’s stature can spend his whole life opposing the death penalty for men who commit crimes like rape and murder, then suddenly find a way to condone that punishment for men who accidentally spill oil in the waters of the Gulf? Talk about turning teleology on its head. Making matters worse, Pitt said these things almost a month after the  New York Times  and other media outlets informed readers that the spill will not be as bad as first thought. And while Pitt is talking up the death penalty,  Jeffrey Short , a former government scientist who now works with Oceana, is telling reporters that “40 percent of the oil in the gulf might have simply evaporated once it reached the surface” while another “unknown percentage of the oil would have been eaten by bacteria.”  (This doesn’t even take into account the percentage of oil that was dissolved by the dispersants BP put into the Gulf.) Simply put, the extent of the disaster predicted by many talking heads has been greatly reduced, if not done away, in many parts of the Gulf. And while this isn’t to condone any degree of environmental recklessness, it is to say that we shouldn’t be talking about “the death penalty” for men who may (or may not) have played a part in an oil spill that is “dissolving far more rapidly than anyone expected.” Crossposted at Big Hollywood

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Brad Pitt: Let’s Execute Some BP Executives