Posts Tagged ‘Huffington Post’

The Week Unpeeled

All political eyes in the US will be focused on the first of three presidential debates, starting Wednesday, with President Obama currently leading in three key states putting added pressure on Mitt Romney in what columnist Peggy Noonan in The Wall Street Journal over the weekend called a “hinge point in history,” especially for the Republican candidate.

Elsewhere:

  • The Financial Services Authority announced an overhaul of the Libor interbank lending rate in an attempt to restore faith in the benchmark, which included the current governing body (British Bankers’ Association) giving up responsibility for what the Financial Times called the “broken” Libor;
  • Spain and Greece outlined plans to reduce government spending and raise taxes to convince international lenders and financial markets they are on track to cut their deficits;
  • The Dow ended September 2.6 percent higher and the quarter 4.3 percent higher to close Friday at 13,437, with Spain credit ratings weighing on the market despite the positive performance;
  • Blackberry maker Research In Motion’s share price jumped nearly 18% after the company posted a smaller-than-expected quarterly loss of $235 million;
  • Apple was forced to apologize over the fiasco surrounding its maps;
  • The Huffington Post launched its Italian-language Web site, which featured an interview with Silvio Berlusconi, the former prime minister of Italy, who insisted that talk on his private life was “disinformation and defamation”; this marks the fifth version of the Web site with others besides the US in Canada, the UK, France and Spain;
  • Arthur Ochs Sulzberger, the publisher of The New York Times for over 30 years, died; and
  • Researchers revealed they are close to creating an anti-aging pill after identifying a protein responsible for the decline in muscle repair during aging. End of Story
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On Friday the 13th, I open The Wall Street Journal to stories of JP Morgan’s profit plunging and news of a video that shows a group of Marines urinating on militant corpses. This leads me to ask the question, is anything good happening in the world today?

The answer is definitively, yes. Every day random acts of kindness take place, inspirational art is created, people unite to further charitable causes and countless other uplifting events occur. As of yesterday, there is finally a place to read about just such stories: HuffPost Good News.

In the first post to appear on the new site, Arianna Huffington aptly describes HuffPost Good News' content as intended to “shine a much-needed spotlight on what's inspiring, what's positive, what's working -- and what's missing from what most of the media chooses to cover.”

The lead story on the site is currently “The Year’s Best Good News Stories that just got Better.” Followed by, stories of animal rescues and profiles of people that have made a difference in the world.

So when you find yourself needing a break from the politician bashing and abysmal earnings announcements, go get a virtual hug from HuffPost. CJP

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I don’t know about you, but for me, the daily grind gets tiring from time to time. Work gets busy, commutes get long, and when you get home, there’s dinner to be made, personal emails to catch up on, your mother to call, 90 hours of DVR judging you, and that NYT’s best seller getting dusty on your nightstand. And those are the days that you have ‘nothing’ after work. A lot of our CJPeeps have ‘extracurricular’ activities, too; marathon training (and fundraising for the charity you’re running for), volunteer work, evening classes, concerts at Brooklyn Bowl, and a few of our employees have kids—a full time job in itself. Then there’s the problem of falling asleep; even if I am home and in bed at a decent time it is almost impossible to ‘rest’ with the reflections of the day’s activities, mental preparation for tomorrow’s, and that triple shot vanilla latte from my 3pm run to Starbucks FINALLY kicking in. Inevitably, the alarm goes off way too early, and I am a little less “up” and a little less “at ‘em” than I was the day before.

How does one keep up?

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AOLThere is an episode from The Simpsons (S9 E14, for the fact-checkers out there) called Das Bus wherein Homer starts up his own home-based Internet business called Compu-Global-Hyper-Mega-Net because he’s tired of everyone making money off of the Web except for him.

In the show’s climax, Bill Gates shows up at the Simpson home to “buy him out” which consists of Bill Gates’ “enforcers” destroying Homer’s office and breaking a bunch of stuff.  “I didn't get rich by writing a lot of checks,” Gates offers as the key to his success on the way out the door.  The moral: never mess with the alpha dog.

Over the last several months, we've seen AOL Media take a decidedly different approach to attempt market domination.  It has written several very large checks in what looks like an effort to achieve market domination in the media supply business.  High profile purchases of the Huffington Post and TechCrunch, among others, seemed to indicate that AOL was making a concerted effort to control the news stream, if such a thing were attainable.

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The Week Unpeeled

Ahead of Valentine’s Day on Monday, love -- or at least mergers – were in the air, with AOL announcing plans to buy the HuffPo blog for $315 million (or 30 times projected Ebidta!); Deutsche Borse AG was talking to NYSE Euronext about combining (Wall Strasse!), and reports over the weekend said that the NYSE would have management control; Nokia and Microsoft are forming an alliance to take on the smartphone market; and London and Toronto stock exchanges are looking to hook up.

Elsewhere:

  • President Obama unveiled his budget package and pledged to cut $1.1 trillion over the next decade
  • Borders is expected to file for bankruptcy as early as early this week;
  • The Daily supposedly posted a picture of “the most powerful women in Hollywood,” but many deny that the screenshot through the window of the car was NOT Nikke Finke;
  • “Fit fun classy guy” Rep. Chris Lee from New York resigned from Congress after he was exposed for above-the-belt exposure on Craigslist as single (he’s not) and looking (now for a job);
  • And kinda in the same vein, an opera about Anna Nicole Smith opens in London this week at the Royal Opera House;
  • Meanwhile, the Dow closed at a 2-1/2 year high Friday at 12,273.

Crowdsourcing and Tahrir Square

Egypt dominated headlines all week and all weekend, with President Hosni Mubarak stepping down after 18-days or stepped-up opposition pressure amid expectations that other Arab nations may see similar conflict (or as seen on Twitter: “First Tunisia. Now Egypt. What’s next? Check Facebook.”); Although obvious at this point, it’s worth emphasizing the strong influence social media had on this revolution, even spearheaded in large part by a social-media executive, Google employee, Wael Ghonim. In the aftermath, it’s clear that Facebook and Twitter served as the accelerators, helping demonstrators push the pedal on the revolution or to crowdsource the overthrow at Tahrir Square. Watching the revolution from CNN and Twitter and CNN watching Twitter, social media also seemed to accelerate diplomacy, keeping steps ahead of the administration on responses. The test now comes to see what role social media plays in rebuilding democracy, more important but less glamorous and maybe a less Tweetable activity.

CJP Remains Ahead of the Curve

Last week, the Verdana font was made part of MoMA’s design collection and now word from The Wall Street Journal over the weekend on a front-page feature: “Orange Crush: Fall in Love with the Color of the Moment.” WAY been there, done that.  CJP

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