Posts Tagged ‘BBC’

The Week Unpeeled

President Obama proposed a fiscal budget that includes $3.8 billion in spending and actually put some “comprising” cuts on Social Security and Medicare on the table.  Now that these sacred endowments have entered the discussion, battles have started from both sides, which will surely dominate headlines especially as we near the midterm elections.  Just in time for tax day. (Maybe we should use bitcoins in the budget . . . They seem to be appreciating bubble-like.)

Elsewhere:

  • Margaret Thatcher, the Iron Lady, died, amid heaps of coverage and commentary from compatriots and detractors (And amid lots of controversy, BBC radio did play “Ding, Dong, the Witch…”);
  • J.C. Penney CEO of Apple retail fame was ousted as the retailer struggled to recover any brand image;
  • North Korean situation remained on high alert;
  • The Fed accidentally released its minutes early (by some 19 hours) to Wall Street firms, among other concerns, raising more talk on embargoes and the whole pre-release process;
  • Gold continue to lose its luster, sinking into bear-market territory and seemingly ending its 12-year bull run (more reason for bitcoins);
  • The Dow ended virtually flat on Friday at 14,865 but strong for the week, hitting new highs again with several other barometers;
  • Annette Funicello, the original Mouseketeer (WAY before Brittany) died; and

Way notable obit: a Wednesday obituary in The New York Times is worth a read: McCandlish Phillips a former NYT journalist who exposed a Jewish Klansman was called a “tenacious reporter and lyrical scribe” (a rare combo). Phillips “refrained from smoking, drinking, cursing and gambling, each of which had been refined to a high exuberant art in the Times newsroom.”  NO surprise, he retired from print to the pulpit. End of Story

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The Week Unpeeled

The world did not end last week but the year did begin to wind down amid a bit of doomsday-style headlines with the fiscal cliff issue (or is it Merry Cliffmas, referenced in a few publications, this year?) unresolved and NRA press conference quotes going global. (“The only thing that stops a bad guy with a gun is a good buy with a gun” blared across The Times in London and beyond on Saturday.)

Elsewhere:

  • Reports that Ben Affleck may be the Senate candidate to fill the spot most likely left vacant in Massachusetts following John Kerry’s nomination as Secretary of State;
  • UBS agreed to pay approximately $1.5 billion in fines for key rate rigging that was called “routine” (coverage was anything but routine with financial papers devoting pages to the investigation findings that the corruption—“epic” said the FT—appeared to be widespread);
  • The findings from an inquiry into the BBC scandal involving Jimmy Savile showed that decisions not to run an expose appeared to be more mismanagement than cover up;
  • South Korea elected conservative Park Geun-hye as president;
  • Instagram photoshopped its statements on “sharing” users photos but unclear whether the about face would convince Kim Kardashian not to take her snaps elsewhere; and
  • NYSE Euronext was sold to upstart ICE for $8.2 billion, showing how technology is the name of the global trading game. End of Story
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The Week Unpeeled

“Four More Years” morphed into “Fiscal Cliff” quickly last week in the media following President Obama's pretty and somewhat surprisingly convincing re-election on Tuesday. Attention turned immediately to the economy and the budget amid talk -- but just talk -- of compromise.

The UK and European headlines were muted in their celebratory headlines in contrast to the 2008 election results, which were full of applause, with focus now on discussions that America should now focus on the fiscal crisis.  Some coverage, including the front page of The Times, also focused on how Michelle Obama “won the US election” for the President.

The UK coverage, however, also turned quickly to the BBC under a new news scandal when its popular Newsnight show had to completely recant a story alleging child abuse by Lord McAlpine due to the victim's admission of mistaken identity.  That is hit number two to the media organization in as many months.

The BBC general director, George Entwistle, resigned, as a result, after just a short while at the helm. (Interesting side note: The Times coverage included a sidebar on local booking odds on what other BBC execs heads would roll.)

The BBC Today show Saturday morning did -- in my opinion -- amazing tough and pointed interview with Entwistle (its own boss in effect) that led to his resignation, maybe in a little-too-late moment for the journos to get tough at the media company.

Elsewhere: 

  • CIA Director David Petreus resigned amid a confession of an extramarital affair and killer New York Post headlines, “Cloak and Shag Her”;
  • New York “ousted” London as world financial center, according to the Centre for Economics Business Research, based on number of jobs, with Hong Kong in third and expected to take second place in three years;
  • The Dow ended a tough week down 2.1 percent to close Friday at 12,815;
  • The Bank of England Monetary Policy Committee held interest rates at 0.5p and decided not to bring in more quantitative easing;
  • The European Central Bank kept its main interest rate on hold at 0.75pc;
  • Research by Income Data Services in the UK showed that executive pay rose by 27pc last year, despite public backlash;
  • HSBC is at the center of a HM Revenue and Customs investigation after it allegedly opened offshore accounts for high-profile British criminals; and
  • Believe: Beiber and Selena split. End of Story
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There is a video making the rounds of the BBC's technology correspondent Rory Cellan-Jones speaking to Mike Lazaridis, the co-chief executive of Research In Motion, the fine folks behind the BlackBerry and the recently launched Playbook tablet.

BBC's technology correspondent Rory Cellan-Jones speaking to Mike Lazaridis

Click to watch video

Presumably after discussing the tablet (we are only able to see about a minute and a half of the exchange), Mr. Cellan-Jones then questions Mr. Lazaridis about the ongoing issues surrounding “security” and the BlackBerry platform, specifically in India and the Middle East. What transpires after that question is asked is both puzzling and disquieting.  After first dismissing the question as “unfair” and stating that BlackBerry is being “singled out,” Mr. Lazaridis, after some furtive glances assumedly to a handler on his right, abruptly ends the interview and demands the camera be shut off.

Read the rest of this entry »

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To shortly answer the title’s question… Absolutely! To this end, a friend of mine passed along a great read from the BBC that I thought was worth sharing.

In her article “Six ads that changed the way you think,” reporter Katie Connolly does a great job spotlighting a few ad campaigns that transformed the way consumers and marketers think about specific products and/or brands. Case-in-point, she leads with the example of DeBeers’ “A Diamond is Forever” campaign (launched in 1948). As she notes, “DeBeers did something extraordinary - it managed to convince generations of men and women that the only acceptable symbol of an engagement was a diamond ring.”

In the piece, Connolly goes on to highlight campaigns from companies including VW, Marlboro, Nike, Absolute Vodka, President Lyndon Johnson, Calvin Klein and Apple.

With that I’ll throw it to you. What other campaigns have been truly transformative in their ability to alter the way audiences view a specific brand?

Comment away… CJP

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