Posts Tagged ‘The New York Times’

The Week Unpeeled

Obama drama (Maureen Dowd) all week for sure amid damning and finger-pointing headlines on Benghazi and talking points, AP and an “unfettered” press, the IRS and targeting the Tea Party, among others. The IRS scandal seemed to take center stage with hearings late last week and the acting chief stepping down and stepping into the firing zone.  As Dowd suggested in her New York Times column Sunday “Taxing Times for Obama,” everyone hates the IRS, now apparently for new reasons. (Curious that the Tea Party target takes it names from a group against taxes, right?)

Elsewhere:

  • Bloomberg terminal spy scandal seemed to turn more terminally negative with Bloomberg LP enlisting former IBM chairman and chief Sam Palmisano to review practices (amid criticism by some that the new data cop is a pal of the mayor) ;
  • The Syrian Electronic Army hacked the Financial Times’  tech blog and some of its Twitter accounts;
  • The Dow ended a pretty strong week up 1.6 percent to close at 15,354;
  • Google CEO Larry Page closes that he suffers from vocal-cord paralysis in a post on the Google+ service; and
  • Barbara Walters and David Beckham announced their retirements (separately). End of Story
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The Week Unpeeled

Bloomberg terminals and the journalists behind them made headlines last week, after an exclusive in The New York Post alleged that reporters were “spying” on customers by looking at what functions were being used and whether they were logging into terminals (prompting calls to Goldman Sachs at one point about whether a partner had left the firm when a terminal had been left idle).  The story, which became front-page news over the weekend, Goldman and JP Morgan officials were blasting Bloomberg for snooping over security in using the ubiquitous boxes. The Fed and Treasury are now looking into the issue, so the story will have long legs no doubt.

Elsewhere:

  • The Dow continued its rally, ending at a record close Friday of 15,118, and the S&P 500 another record close of 1,633;
  • The Fed said it is planning (timing uncertain) its wind-down its massive bond-buying program, which was designed to stimulate the economy;
  • NBC News is expected to name Deborah Turness, the head of ITV News in Britain, as president, the first woman president of a network news division in the US;
  • Alan Abelson, a top editor of Barron’s and columnist for “Up and Down Wall Street, died; and

Researchers last week announced that carbon levels have reached their highest levels in “millions of years” on earth, which no doubt will brings more attention to climate change issues. End of Story

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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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Image courtesy: Topos Graphics and as seen on The New York Times Opinion Pages

The Following Post Was Originally Written For and
Published By The Council of Public Relations' Blog

The New York Times recently ran a story by Arthur C. Brooks entitled, “My Valuable, Cheap College Degree,” about the $10,000 undergraduate degree. The author, the president of the American Enterprise Institute and a former college professor, decided that instead of going into debt for a degree from an average college, he would pay $10K for a distance-learning B.A.

Interesting.

Brooks claimed that the ROI from his $10K spend was huge, given that his career turned out as he had hoped and he lives a debt-free life. He also argued that with the cost of education skyrocketing, we would see more innovation in terms of the cost of college.

So the next logical question: Would I as an employer hire a kid with a $10K B.A?

Damn straight I would!

Ours is a “public school” profession, in that most young hires have attended a decent but not top 5-ranked college. I have no qualms about that. My best hire, oftentimes, is a kid from an average college who had four internships and a dirty job along the way—grocery bagger, factory worker, waitress.  Although we’ve hired our share of kids who went to boarding schools and graduated from top colleges, they succeed no more frequently than the gritty kid from the average college. And I like the entrepreneurship shown by people who take tough jobs starting out.

Read the rest of this entry »

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The Week Unpeeled

Well, the budget deadline passed and automatic sequester cuts were forced into place late last week, pushing “the nation’s economy into unchartered waters” (WSJ, Friday, March 1).  Even so, the Dow managed to end the week on a high note, with the blue-chip average climbing within striking distance of its all-time high, ending on Friday at 14,089 on Friday.

Elsewhere:

  • Warren Buffett released his highly read and folksy annual letter to shareholders calling his company’s $24 billion increase in net worth “subpar” (it did trail the S&P 500 by 200 basis points at 14% in 2012) and focusing a bit on his buying “spree” of newspapers, acquiring 28 dailies over the last 15 months;
  • Groupon fired its CEO with a “lead parachute” (CNBC) package of 378.36 (that is a correct number) after extremely disappointing quarterly results;
  • JP Morgan Chase is shedding 17,000 jobs by the end of next year;
  • Pope Benedict XVI hung up his Prada papal slippers and bid adieu;
  • All the Obit News Fit to Print:  In a New York Times obituary last week, an Israeli-born local resident said that he “loved his family, his birth and adopted countries, finance . . . Loved everything about NYC except The New York Times”:
  • Not yet an obit: The State of Michigan said it will appoint a financial manager to oversee Detroit in a tough turnaround assignment for a city $14 billion in debt; and
  • WTF on WFH: Yahoo CEO Marissa Mayer put the kabosh on “working from home,” which was revealed in a leaked email message that got – no surprise – lots of media coverage, from bloggers who no doubt were.
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