To display the most relevant entries to you in priority,
vote for the stories you are interested in
(  )
and reject those that you are not interested in
(  )
Advertising Age - Digital -
21 hours and 24 minutes ago
a href="http://adage.com/mediaworks/article.php?article_id=133016"/aFor the last seven months, we
kneeled at the altar of Nate Silver and treated every poll blip as a seismic event. Now? There are
quot;Dexterquot; episodes to catch up on and sandwich meats to slather with baconnaise. Politics
and current events? Sure, right after I see what Bret Michaels is up to. pa
href="http://feedads.googleadservices.com/~a/94ZVDosC0qAjhk3D1HqitNMMBkE/a"img
src="http://feedads.googleadservices.com/~a/94ZVDosC0qAjhk3D1HqitNMMBkE/i" border="0"
ismap="true"/img/a/pimg src="http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/adage/complete/~4/79ARLPFUbgs"
height="1" width="1"/
|
Shangols -
23 hours and 2 minutes ago
p style=text-align: justify;Si parfois le Wim dérive méchamment de son sujet initial
- certes cest un quot;journal filméquot; et même si ce quot;voyage à Tokyoquot;
ne constitue point un pèlerinage sur les traces dOzu, cest tout de même la base du
projet... -, on est récompensé par les interviews que donnent lun des ses acteurs
fétiches - Chishu Ryu - et surtout son caméraman - Yuuharu Atsuta - qui se termine
dans une immense émotion. Le passage fugace dHerzog - en allemand non sous-titré,
courage - et le plan sur loeil droit de Chris Marker derrière un journal restent, eux,
purement anecdotiques./p p style=text-align: center;a target=_blank
href=http://storage.canalblog.com/91/78/110219/33249342.jpgimg height=338 border=0 width=450
src=http://storage.canalblog.com/91/78/110219/33249342_p.jpg alt=Tokyo_Ga_0_1_preston_sturges_
//a/p p style=text-align: justify;Wim Wenders na pas franchement lair davoir de plan
préétabli et filme un peu ce qui lui tombe sous les yeux. Parfois, il parvient
à faire un lien avec lunivers de Yasujiro: un gamin qui refuse de marcher et il
évoque tous les quot;sales gaminsquot; capricieux ozuesques; les écrans de
télé omniprésents, des taxi aux chambres dhôtel, diffusant entre autres
des films américains, et tout un pan dune culture nippone qui semble englouti; des partis de
pachinko - jeu inventé après-guerre comme pour éviter de trop songer au
passé - ou des golfeurs qui frappent la balle sur un toit dimmeuble, comme autant de petits
clins doeil à des séquences du maître. Wenders, accompagné de Ryu,
visite également la tombe dOzu (un imposant bloc tout noir orné uniquement du signe
quot;Muquot;: le vide), une séquence qui est suivi dune réflexion sur la
capacité dOzu à filmer, non pas simplement des emmoments/em de vérité,
mais emla/em vérité - un véritable art, qui laisse un grand vide au regard des
productions actuelles; la voix off est posée sur des images prises dun train sur un autre
train qui, au départ va plus vite, puis ralentit à la même cadence avant de
disparaître: cest presque un plan kiarostiamien, collant parfaitement au commentaire, et le
Wenders de monter dans notre estime... Malheureusement cela est complètement
gâché par des séquences beaucoup trop longues (le golf, la partie sur les
personnes qui crée en cire les imitations des plats que lon met en vitrine - ok, imiter la
réalité est tout un art, mais 15 minutes sur un sandwich en cire, est-ce bien
raisonnable?) voire totalement hors-sujet (les jeunes Japs qui dansent le rock en plein air -
certes Wenders a vu entretemps emSans Soleil/em de Marker, mais franchement, cest quoi
lintérêt ici???)./p p style=text-align: center;a target=_blank
href=http://storage.canalblog.com/53/72/110219/33249357.jpgimg height=257 border=0 width=340
src=http://storage.canalblog.com/53/72/110219/33249357_p.jpg alt=tokyoga2 //a/p p style=text-align:
justify;Bon, pour rester sur un note positive, évoquons les interviews de Ryu - personnage
dune immense modestie, qui samuse à raconter à quel point il se sentait un mauvais
élève parmi la troupe dOzu qui lui faisait parfois répéter 20 fois la
même prise - et surtout celle dAtsuta. Ce dernier, avec une caméra Mitchell
loué pour loccase, revient précisément sur le positionnement de la
caméra - Ozu avait fait construire son propre trépied pour être le plus proche
du sol - et lutilisation inamovible de la focale (50mm); une fois quOzu avait fixé la
caméra, il sagissait po de déconner autour du bazar. Atsuta revient avec beaucoup
dhumour sur la natte quil transportait tout le temps avec lui - il passait beaucoup de temps
couché avec cet enfoiré de système - et montre avec une grande fierté
le seul souvenir quil lui reste vraiment dOzu, son fameux chronomètre, fait sur mesure, qui
lui permettait davoir le temps exact pour les tournages en 35 ou 16 mm. Atsuta montre un immense
respect, qui frôle lidolâtrie, pour son maître quil a suivi emtout au long/em de
sa carrière, passant de second à premier assistant avant de devenir son cameraman
attitré. La dernière question de Wenders est proprement fatal quand il demande
à Atsuta sil a continué de bosser après la mort dOzu; ce dernier lui avoue que
oui, sans plaisir ni passion, et lorsquil se met à penser à la disparition dOzu, il
explose littéralement en larme, comme sil mettait son âme sur le tatami - il demande
dailleurs à Wenders de se casser, totalement submergé par lémotion... Un peu
comme sil venait soudainement de se rendre compte de la mort de cet quot;homme bienquot;. Pour ces
instants qui dénotent un respect incommensurable pour le cinéaste, le film de Wenders
vaut le détour.nbsp; nbsp;nbsp; /p p style=text-align: center;a target=_blank
href=http://storage.canalblog.com/50/72/110219/33249370.jpgimg height=298 border=0 width=400
src=http://storage.canalblog.com/50/72/110219/33249370_p.jpg alt=tokyoga4 //anbsp; nbsp;nbsp;
nbsp;nbsp; nbsp;/p

|
le Journal du Geek -
23 hours and 41 minutes ago
Je ne sais pas si c’est la même chose ou pas dans les autres grandes villes en
France, mais Samsung a décidé de communiquer sur son téléphone
tactile avec un APN de 8 Mégapixels, le Pixon. Et alors qu’on était
habitué aux affiches et autres, même le métro (du moins sur la ligne 1) en a
pour son grade ! Vive le métro-sandwich !
|
Dailymotion - Videos -
1 days ago
Cours de baladi à télécharger sur
http://www.imineo.com/loisirs-passions/danse/danse-orientale/danse-orientale-style-baladi-video-8010.htm
La baladi vient du mot arabe "balad" qui veut dire le pays (sous entendu l'arrière pays).
Ce style de danse est apparu en Egypte au début du 20ème siècle, suite
à l'exode rural. La musique des campagnes fusionnera avec le style urbain et ce
métissage donnera le style baladi. La particularité de ce style est d'être
dansé avec des mouvements contenus, et la difficulté est d'arriver à
exprimer des émotions diverses tout en dansant avec retenue. Sommaire : Echauffement La
Marche baladi classique La Marche baladi classique avec accélération La Marche
baladi déplacée La Marche arrière classique La Marche arrière avec
chameau La Marche arrière avec le 8 sur le coté La Marche arrière avec le
déhanché Déplacement latéral avec Baladi Marche Egyptienne Marche
Egyptienne avec regard au 4ème temps L'ouverture latérale Le huit fermé La
demi-rotation Le plat pointe La pas chassés accent bassin Le plat pointe avec pas
chassés Plat pointe variation La marche arrière avec déhanchés Le
déhanché face-profile Le déhanché face-profile avec tours Le sandwich
Avant arrière pied plat Marche arrière pivot extérieur Le déplacement
twisté COMPOSE N°1, 2, 3, 4, 5 Chorégraphie
Auteur : imineo
Tags : danser ventre orient balaiya maroc egypt Myriam Douiou professeur coach lecon bled
Envoyé : 04 décembre 2008
Note :0.0
Votes :0

|
Wired Top Stories -
1 days and 11 hours ago
!-- pageType= magazinesmall slug= ff_blodget section= techbiz subsection= people headline=
Financial Industry Scapegoat Reinvents Himself as Financial Reporter authorName= Daniel Roth
creditType= photo credit= Mike McGregor caption= Henry Blodgetis back, and his straight-talking
analysis of the Web world is earning him new fans. -- pstrongHenry Blodget/strong has never gotten
used to the chorus of hate that follows his every move. He's merely learned to live with it. When
he started his personal blog in 2005, the comments a
href="http://www.internetoutsider.com/2005/10/welcomeand_than.html"dripped with disgust/a. "You are
a boldface liar," a reader wrote. "Give me one reason why I should believe what you are writing,"
said another. And that was just in response to Blodget's innocuous first entry. /ppDuring his years
as a star Wall Street analyst, his pronouncements were welcomed and celebrated; now he couldn't say
hello without getting savaged. Just last August, TechCrunch mentioned that Blodget would be one of
more than two dozen tech celebrities a
href="http://www.techcrunch.com/2008/08/15/4-new-experts-henry-blodget-josh-kopelman-tim-o%E2%80%99reilly-robert-scoble-join-techcrunch50/"judging
a contest/a for startups. Blodget knew what was coming, even if his hosts didn't. "Blodget is
scum.... He is no longer the arrogant prick we saw in the '90s, but he's still scum," someone
wrote. "A lot of people lost money listening to this dirtbag." "Blodget is a Web 1.0,
bubble-creating has-been." "He is unethical." "He's as crooked as they come."/p pI meet a
href="http://www.alleyinsider.com/henry_blodget.html"Blodget/a at the offices of his new business,
a year-old site called a href="http://www.alleyinsider.com/"Silicon Alley Insider/a, shortly after
the TechCrunch beat-down. Alley Insider is one of many tech business blogs that feed news, earnings
info, and rumors to investors and corporate insiders. But Alley Insider has one thing that others
don't. Blodget. He's smart, he's skeptical, and he's got the kind of self-assured voice that sells
well in the blogosphere. As the market sinks, his opinions are even more in demand, though he's
still hated by a large portion of his prospective audience./p pThe site shares two floors of a
Manhattan office building with programmers and business staff for some of Alley Insider's sister
companies, all of which were started by former DoubleClick CEO a
href="http://www.alleyinsider.com/kevin_ryan"Kevin Ryan/a. Blodget works in a double-wide cubicle
near a window, separated by a low wall from the site's two other editors. They spend their days
crawling Twitter and RSS feeds, calling sources, and pumping out about a dozen daily takes on the
business world, most with Digg-friendly headlines (no easy accomplishment with bone-dry business
stories). "Is Facebook Distracting Us From Porn? No" is a
href="http://www.alleyinsider.com/2008/9/is-facebook-distracting-us-from-porn-no"typical/a, or "a
href="http://www.alleyinsider.com/2008/4/googles_ginormous_food_budget_7530_per_googler"Google's
Ginormous Food Budget/a: $7,530 Per Googler, $72 Million a Year." Blodget tells his team to think
of the site as talk radio: He wants readers to feel compelled to check in several times a day to
get the Alley Insider view on everything going on in their world./p pFor privacy, we duck into a
small conference room, and Blodget, tall and skinny, sinks into a ridiculously deep leather chair.
His floppy dirty-blond hair gives him a youthful, almost carefree air, but the deep circles that
ring his eyes tell a different story. He's managing a 24-hour news startup. It's midday and he's
been posting since 5 am. And then there's the burden that comes with being Henry Blodget, digital
punching bag./p p"There are obviously a lot of folks who say, 'Now wait a minute, isn't that the
guy who....'" He lets the thought trail off. He's legally barred from talking about the incidents
that led to his vilification. "To them, I'm emthat/em Henry Blodget. There's not much more I can
say. I still can't address specific points. So it's like, 'OK, here's my face. Throw the fruit.
When you want to stop throwing the fruit, if you want to listen, great. If you don't, fine.'"/p
pIt's been almost a decade since the impulse to greet him with rotten mangos first struck. Back in
1998, as a 32-year-old analyst with investment bank CIBC, he a
href="http://www.thestreet.com/markets/analystrankings/977502.html"declared/a that the stock price
of Amazon.com would nearly double to $400. Three weeks later it did, and Blodget was a hero. Soon
he packed up his spreadsheets mdash; he's never more comfortable than when he is lining up numbers
in rows and columns and teasing out their secrets mdash; and moved to Merrill Lynch./p pInvestors
followed the new oracle's every utterance, and bankers wanted Blodget to bless the stocks of
companies they were hoping to do business with. The lines on his graphs always seemed to point one
way mdash; steeply up and to the right. He wasn't just predicting profits, he was selling a
revolution: The old metrics didn't apply. Blodget may have counseled people to own only a small
percentage of Internet stocks mdash; 10 percent at the most mdash; but nobody listened./p !--
pagebreak -- div id="embed" style="width:370px;" div id="pic" style="width:350px;" img
style="width:350px;" src="http://www.wired.com/images/article/magazine/1612/ff_blodget3_f.jpg"
alt=""/ div id="caption" Launched in 2007, Silicon Alley Insider is gaining on some of its
established rivals. br/ emSource: Compete/em /div /div /div pThen came the crash. Five trillion
dollars in wealth vaporized in 24 months, leaving behind unquantifiable amounts of rage among the
masses of day traders who had believed briefly that they, too, were market savants. When the bubble
burst, so did Blodget's aura./p pStill, it wasn't the crash alone that crushed him. It took Eliot
Spitzer to turn Henry Blodget into emthat/em Henry Blodget. Spitzer, then New York's crusading
attorney general, investigated Merrill in 2001 for conflicts of interest. He discovered a clutch of
emails from the young analyst showing that while talking up certain stocks to clients, he was
trashing them internally. Companies like 24/7 Media, Excite@Home, and InfoSpace mdash; firms
Merrill was publicly cheering mdash; in private were deemed by Blodget to be "shit," "crap," and
"junk" (respectively). According to Spitzer's findings, Blodget would have pulled in $12 million in
2001 mdash; quadruple his earnings in 1999 mdash; if he hadn't accepted a buyout that year. In
2003, Merrill's boy genius agreed to pay a $4 million fine and accepted a lifetime ban from working
in the securities industry./p pPublic disgrace usually drives a person into hiding, or at least
into a different career. Jerry Levin, the brains behind the disastrous AOL-Time Warner merger,
today runs a href="http://moonviewsanctuary.com/staff"Moonview Sanctuary/a, his wife's spa;
Spitzer, forced to resign as governor last summer, is currently discovering the a
href="http://blogs.wsj.com/developments/2008/06/10/spitzers-next-act-distressed-real-estate/"joys
of real estate management/a; Health South CEO Richard Scrushy, while on trial for accounting fraud,
a href="http://www.richardmscrushy.com/biography.aspx"became a televangelist/a. Not Blodget./p pOne
former colleague says Blodget spent the months when he was being investigated trying to grasp why
he was singled out for something that was commonplace in the industry. He figured the controversy
would blow over once the public realized his conduct was not unusual. "He was incredulous that the
investigation got traction; he said it was silly," a friend says. But there was too much anger in
the wake of the bubble, and Blodget's embarrassing emails made him an easy scapegoat. Later, when
he was inclined to argue his case, the settlement terms prevented it./p pSo Blodget did what came
naturally. He began writing about the companies he used to cover, a
href="http://www.slate.com/id/2104656/"first for Slate/a, then on his own blog, a
href="http://www.internetoutsider.com/"Internet Outsider/a. Was this journalism mdash; or was it
therapy? Rather than hide, he started saying in public what he had once said only in private, using
the same brutally frank voice that got him in trouble with Spitzer. He marketed his notoriety to a
new Web readership hungry for smart, independent analysis./p pWhen Ryan, an Internet Outsider
reader, approached him about starting an industry news site, Blodget jumped at the prospect of a
bigger stage. Before working on Wall Street, he'd been a freelance writer; now he could combine the
two vocations, borrowing freely from both journalism and equity research./p pThrough Alley Insider,
Blodget is trying to erase, post by post, Spitzer's portrait of him as a duplicitous,
money-grubbing shill for big business. Blodget has always believed that the Internet changed
everything, so naturally he believes it has the power to change the world's perception of him. The
venue offers all Henry, all the time (and even when his other writers are posting, it's clear
they're channeling him). The result is a unique blend of x-ray analysis and tech evangelism./p pAs
we talk, Blodget gets up from his chair, antsy to return to his laptop. I ask him if he understands
what he's up against. If the hate has lasted this long, why expect it ever to fade away? "If all I
knew about me was what I read during that period," he says, "I'd probably have the same
reaction."/p pstrongOn a late summer morning/strong, Blodget waits in the lobby of the Nasdaq
building in midtown Manhattan. He's all banker today: blue suit, red tie, black cap-toed Oxfords,
his shirt so deeply pressed there are creases down the sleeves. It's 10 am and, ready for his
second breakfast, he pries open the plastic case of a turkey and Swiss sandwich and starts wolfing
it down. In a few minutes he is supposed to conduct a video interview for Yahoo's Tech Ticker
finance site. As soon as Blodget started appearing as a regular host in February, the Furies a
href="http://finance.yahoo.com/tech-ticker/article/650/Jerry-Yang-Strikes-Back;-Here%27s-Microsoft%27s-Next-Move?tickers=yhoo,msft"reemerged/a.
"Did you not find any other decent, credible guy than Henry Blodget?" one of the first comments
read. "Why spoil this new feature with such a scum and spoil the Yahoo reputation?"/p pAs producers
prepare to tape the show, Blodget wipes his crumbs off the table. He explains the guiding vision
behind Alley Insider. "We don't want to do things we don't care about," he says. "It's nice to say
theoretically we're the judge of what's important and what's not, but come on, give readers credit.
They'll tell you immediately what they want, and that drives coverage. People are fanatically
interested in Apple, Google, Microsoft. It wasn't a tough call to know what to write about."/p
pBlodget's focus on content is matched by his apparent indifference to the look of the site. Alley
Insider employs a cookie-cutter template of scrolling headlines and thumbnail photos dragged off
the Web. But design limitations notwithstanding, by September the site was getting nearly 500,000
visitors a month, rivaling a href="http://allthingsd.com/"AllThingsDigital.com/a, the citeWall
Street Journal/cite blog edited by Kara Swisher and Walt Mossberg. Since the beginning of the year,
traffic to the site has more than doubled, and Blodget's words now carry surprising weight. When a
href="http://www.alleyinsider.com/2008/10/apple-s-steve-jobs-rushed-to-er-after-heart-attack-says-cnn-citizen-journalist"he
reported/a early this fall that Steve Jobs may have been rushed to the hospital after a heart
attack mdash; citing an anonymous (and, as it turns out, fraudulent) post on a minor user-generated
news site run by CNN called iReport mdash; Apple's a
href="http://money.cnn.com/2008/10/03/technology/apple/"stock dropped/a nearly 10 percent. Critics
blamed Alley Insider./p p"I read citeThe New York Times/cite, citeThe Economist/cite, and Alley
Insider," says a href="http://www.firebrandpartners.com/principals/index.html"Scott Galloway/a,
head of investment equity firm Firebrand Partners, who is best known for his successful public
fight to get on the board of citeThe New York Times/cite. "Henry takes a no-mercy, no-malice
approach to Web business and media." Valleywag recently called him "the disgraced stock analyst
everyone now listens to."/p !-- pagebreak -- div class="wide_img" img
src="http://www.wired.com/images/article/magazine/1612/ff_blodget2_f.jpg" alt="" div
class="wide_caption" div class="wide_caption_txt" The team at Silicon Alley Insider (left to
right): senior editor Dan Frommer, COO Julie Hansen, cofounder Kevin Ryan, and editor in chief
Blodget. br/ emPhoto: Mike McGregor/em /div /div /div br/ br/ pFor all the success today, it took
Blodget amp; Co. some time to figure out a winning formula. When Ryan, a New Yorker, launched the
site in 2007, he wanted to cover the local startup and media scene. Blodget signed on as CEO and
editor in chief, bought a minority stake, and hired citeForbes/cite journalists a
href="http://www.alleyinsider.com/peter_kafka"Peter Kafka/a and a
href="http://www.alleyinsider.com/dan_frommer"Dan Frommer/a to help him develop content (Kafka was
later hired away by AllThingsD). The first few weeks, the site read like a tourist's guide to
spotting B-list Internet companies in the big city, with each firm's location prominently
announced: "NoHo-based Meetup has quietly launched a Facebook application"; "Flatiron-based
YellowJacket Software has raised $1.25 million." Blodget branched out, taking on the bigger names
himself mdash; Apple, Dow Jones, NBC, JP Morgan. It quickly became clear to him that New York's
tech industry was too small an arena to contain the ambition of the site. And nearly half the
readers were in California anyway./p pAlley Insider soon dropped its Silicon Alley focus but stuck
with the moniker. And Blodget began to draw more heavily on his research experience. He created
financial models of the companies he was talking about and posted the spreadsheets as Google docs
so anyone could download and toy with them. He analyzed the potential revenue YouTube could bring
to Google, mapping out his assumptions about viewership and ads watched, and offering a clear
bottom-line conclusion. Readers weighed in with their critiques, which Blodget used to sharpen the
model. He figured he wouldn't just write about Wall Street, he would also usurp part of Wall
Street's business by providing high-quality research, the kind brokerage customers used to prize./p
pBut visitors to the site wanted more than analytics. They also craved the edgier Henry of the
Spitzer emails. Blodget obliged. In one post, a
href="http://www.alleyinsider.com/2008/1/ben_stein_is_an_idiot"Blodget declares/a citeNew York
Times/cite economics columnist Ben Stein to be either "an idiot" or possibly just "delusional." He
suggests that the anonymous sources cited by archrival TechCrunch in its reporting on Microsoft's
attempt to purchase Yahoo "a
href="http://www.alleyinsider.com/2008/5/yahoo_stock_fades_as_techcrunch_microsoft_takeover_sources_sober_up"must
have been drunk/a." And in November 2007, when E-Trade lost $9 billion in value as its risky
mortgage bets turned to dust, Blodget offered only one piece of advice to the company's
shareholders: "a
href="http://www.alleyinsider.com/2007/11/etrade_etfc_total_cost_of_screwup_9_billion"Cry/a."/p
p"On Wall Street, I'd consistently submit a report that would say, 'This is going to be roadkill,'
and it would come back rewritten as 'We see some weakness,'" Blodget says. "Now I can say, 'It's
going to be roadkill.' That's very satisfying."/p pBut even as he delights in railing against
corporate giants, he's still disciplined enough to run the underlying numbers mdash; Blodget loves
the drama, but he loves the spreadsheets just as much. One post about craigslist should have been
something only an accountant could love: a complex set of assumptions and analyses to determine
what the company might be worth. Yet Blodget wrote the whole exercise as if it were a mystery plot,
parceling out details and stringing the reader along until the very end./p pWhen Yahoo announced
this summer that it had hired Bain amp; Co., a consulting firm usually brought in when a company is
about to start swinging the ax, Blodget a
href="http://www.alleyinsider.com/2008/9/yahoo-fat-farm-how-many-people-does-yahoo-need-to-fire-to-get-fit-"sharpened
his own pencil/a. "We're mad as hell ... especially now that Yahoo's wasting millions on Bain." He
offered his own, free advice (spreadsheet attached) cataloging how many people Yahoo should fire in
each division mdash; 1,804 from its "positively obese" sales and marketing arm alone mdash; in
order to goose operating margins to a "more respectable" 20 percent from its current 7 percent. "He
pushed us early on to ask, 'What does this mean for profits? How does any news affect a company's
numbers?'" Frommer says. "It's great if it makes a company look bad or look good, but is this
really going to affect the numbers?"/p pBlodget is also trying things that no
mainstream-journalism-trained blogger like Swisher or GigaOm's a href="http://gigaom.com/"Om
Malik/a would ever dare. He makes serious-sounding offers to buy companies that he wants to
demonstrate are significantly undervalued. It's pure showmanship, but with Blodget's background in
finance and his ties to folks up and down Wall Street, no one knows just how far he will take the
joke./p pHis first target was CNET. With the a
href="http://www.alleyinsider.com/2007/12/announcing_our_friendly_takeover_offer_for_cnet"slightest
of winks/a, he wrote a
href="http://www.alleyinsider.com/2008/1/cnet_update_on_our_offer_and_restructuring_plan_part_1"post
after post/a explaining how he'd a
href="http://www.alleyinsider.com/2008/4/jana_here_s_our_plan_for_cnet"purchase the company/a. At
first he proposed a sort of reverse merger, with CNET buying Alley Insider for $50 million in
stock, at which point Blodget's team would take over every aspect of the company. Then he detailed
the operational changes he would make./p !-- pagebreak -- pRyan got nervous about Blodget's new
direction. Blodget's deal with the government forbade him from giving individual research advice,
but it didn't say anything about jumping into the private-equity space. Still, there might be legal
issues. "Look, why don't we run this by a lawyer just to make sure, because we're getting into
securities stuff here," he said to Blodget. When the lawyer asked them "Is this a real offer?"
there was a brief silence. For the first time the two really thought about it./p p"You know, yes,"
Ryan replied. "If they said yes, we would accept $50 million at that time to buy them. So it is a
real offer. But we're actually asking them to buy us." The lawyer signed off on the convoluted
reasoning./p pAfter Blodget's taunting posts went up, investment firm JANA Partners announced a
hostile takeover attempt of CNET. It failed, but by spring 2008 CBS a
href="http://www.alleyinsider.com/2008/5/cbs_buying_cnet_for_1_8_billion"stepped in to buy/a the
company for $1.8 billion./p pFor one CNET executive, memories of Blodget's unwanted attentions
still rankle. "The way you make a big name for yourself on the Web today is to make, for lack of a
better word, ridiculous statements," says Zander Lurie, former senior VP of strategy and
development at CNET and now CFO of CBS Interactive. Lurie found himself reassuring employees who
sent him Blodget's postings and wondered whether their company was at risk. "Everyone knew there
was nothing in the offering: He didn't have the capital, the expertise, or any specific insight
into our business," Lurie says. "He makes the ridiculous statement and it gets sent all around, and
then he claims credit when there's an event the following year, which obviously he had nothing to
do with. Less than zero to do with. We all have reputations. And his track record is well known."/p
pBlodget has been a
href="http://www.alleyinsider.com/2008/10/how-the-new-york-times-nyt-can-save-itself"waging
another/a half-serious acquisition fight, this time for the New York Times Company. All he wants is
the Web site mdash; the print side is dead, he says. He thinks the paper needs to cut about 80
percent of its costs, at which point it would be the perfect size to be the digital paper of record
for a long time to come. "It's a serious offer from our perspective, but it hasn't been taken
seriously," Blodget says./p pstrongIn the wake of Wall Street's latest meltdown/strong, Blodget
finds himself in even greater demand. He's doing regular TV appearances and is posting again on
Slate. When NPR wanted someone to talk about the Wall Street culture of greed, they a
href="http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=94667073"brought in Blodget/a. The
reporter introduced him by pointing out that Merrill is now gone, "and Henry Blodget is gone, too;
he's banned from Wall Street after being charged with fraud."/p p"Thanks," Blodget said, stuttering
for a second, "especially for that horrific introduction." They both laughed. But by the end, the
host was treating Blodget like an elder statesman./p pRecently Blodget has been expanding his
franchise. He and Ryan have launched two sister sites: a
href="http://www.clusterstock.com/"Clusterstock/a, which will compile and analyze Wall Street
research on a much wider range of industries, and a href="http://www.businesssheet.com/"the
Business Sheet/a, which will focus on corporate scandals. A third is in the works. For each new
site, Blodget provides the bulk of the early posts, seeding the new enterprise with the Blodget
touch./p pBlodget is broadening beyond tech to get ready for what he sees as a coming shakeout in
the news-blog industry. He says he might even start making acquisitions if the price is right.
Ryan's suite of companies has raised $50 million in the past few years, possibly enough to buy out
some other interesting small blogs. The winning formula for this new kind of business remains
elusive: It's a matter of finding the balance between gossip and analysis, between aggregating news
from other sources and doing original reporting. Revenue models that go beyond basic advertising
have also been slow in coming. "If you look at the development of every new medium, there's been a
new form of journalism that has been made possible by it, and there has always been this period of
transition," Blodget says. "There is collective experimentation as people figure out what works and
what doesn't, and usually you have some very important publications that are built."/p pAnother way
to expand is to sell to a larger media company. Blodget says he'd consider an offer, but Alley
Insider is still defined almost entirely by one man. If he left, the value would plummet. Also,
some media institutions mdash; the grayer, stodgier ones mdash; may find Blodget's unique baggage
unacceptable. The endless barrage of comments, the angry mob that seems to follow him everywhere,
may be too much for the sensitivities of some management teams, even in these freewheeling days of
media transformation. When Blodget wrote a few small items for citeThe New York Times/cite, the
newspaper's a href="http://www.nytimes.com/2007/11/11/opinion/11pubed.html"ombudsman went
haywire/a. "The citeTimes/cite luster may help Blodget," he wrote last year, "but some of his taint
rubs off on the citeTimes/cite."/p pIt's just the sort of comment Blodget has come to expect from,
well, everyone. That may change, but only if this latest reinvention succeeds in burying his past
forever. In which case, he will have been right: The Internet really does change everything./p
pemSenior writer Daniel Roth /em(a href="mailto:daniel_roth@wired.com"daniel_roth@wired.com/a)
emwrote about the a href="/cars/futuretransport/magazine/16-09/ff_agassi"future of the electric
car/a in issue 16.09./em/pbr style="clear: both;"/ a style='font-size: 10px; color: maroon;'
href='http://www.pheedo.com/hostedMorselClick.php?hfmm=v3:e5509a1338aa2d046a0f36f53c86fd46:KTSfKmr30cBfHohgGm6zBCE5aLDI579Ry5%2FoG9QrW9e1KIT2xpDAJhCNE%2FP6%2BodTaIRTxDwhJCc5xg%3D%3D'img
border='0' title='Add to Facebook' alt='Add to Facebook'
src='http://www.pheedo.com/images/mm/facebook.gif'//a a style='font-size: 10px; color: maroon;'
href='http://www.pheedo.com/hostedMorselClick.php?hfmm=v3:85af8ef1f22075639f5e1be7151d039b:KjXRBL7FimCdPfkcPkDUOZbe%2BR8tiL4gaeJxl%2FnucFQ8UL28mzRmZSeHpMqoJwFUINppaALMULUa'img
border='0' title='Add to Reddit' alt='Add to Reddit'
src='http://www.pheedo.com/images/mm/reddit.png'//a a style='font-size: 10px; color: maroon;'
href='http://www.pheedo.com/hostedMorselClick.php?hfmm=v3:db4d557cf92ff9467e13e01b1aee6530:PWDj6Lri2aPp2F0l1o37LwimABRJS%2Bw%2FOQMMPSWuRMZRLZhLRGI4Q9jz2JLAIoyYna2BguNYIBWs'img
border='0' title='Add to digg' alt='Add to digg' src='http://www.pheedo.com/images/mm/digg.gif'//a
a style='font-size: 10px; color: maroon;'
href='http://www.pheedo.com/hostedMorselClick.php?hfmm=v3:064842e7a9d26f4e96559df7ad75369c:Ri7lRQ2YuIojw9J42qFhanIkt9g%2B2lNj7ky0mPfhji4DJCDrd66IrgRLO78oVkOke9RGBuQDA3ra'img
border='0' title='Add to Google' alt='Add to Google'
src='http://www.pheedo.com/images/mm/google.png'//a br style="clear: both;"/ a
href="http://www.pheedo.com/click.phdo?s=c54405cdda6d6c80dfe38fdee8a0c2a5p=1"img alt=""
style="border: 0;" border="0"
src="http://www.pheedo.com/img.phdo?s=c54405cdda6d6c80dfe38fdee8a0c2a5p=1"//a img
src="http://www.pheedo.com/feeds/tracker.php?i=c54405cdda6d6c80dfe38fdee8a0c2a5" style="display:
none;" border="0" height="1" width="1" alt=""/ pa
href="http://feeds.wired.com/~a/wired/index?a=V04TVZ"img
src="http://feeds.wired.com/~a/wired/index?i=V04TVZ" border="0"/img/a/pimg
src="http://feeds.wired.com/~r/wired/index/~4/474334201" height="1" width="1"/

|
Guardian Unlimited -
1 days and 15 hours ago
divimg alt=""
src="http://hits.guardian.co.uk/b/ss/guardiangu-feeds/1/H.15.1/69710?ns=guardianpageName=Stage%3A+%27My+whole+life+has+been+a+black+comedy%27ch=Stagec3=The+Guardianc4=Theatre%2CCulture+section%2CJoe+Orton+%28Playwright%29%2CStage%2CTelevision+%28Culture%29c5=Not+commercially+useful%2CTelevision+Media%2CTheatrec6=Catherine+Shoardc7=2008_12_04c8=1128305c9=articlec10=GUc11=Stagec12=Theatrec13=c14=h2=GU%2FStage%2FTheatre"
width="1" height="1" //divpIt has been a while since Doon Mackichan was last hung, drawn and
quartered for laughing at the suffering of children. There was a week in August 2001 when you
couldn't pass a newsstand without seeing her handsome, sparrowhawk face, forehead partially
obscured by the word "evil" or "depraved"./ppThe Brass Eye paedophile special is now mostly
remembered as virtuoso satire, so it's easy to forget what a stink it caused at the time. And it
was Mackichan, who played TV presenter Swanchita Haze, who bore the brunt of it. People expected
that sort of thing from Chris Morris, but Doon was a woman with - gulp - children of her own.
"[Mackichan] had seen herself as a major comedy force in the making," wrote the Mail. "She even
dreamt of becoming a film star. But with the Brass Eye disaster as her epitaph, all those plans lie
in tatters."/ppLooking back, it's hard to say her career didn't suffer. There were two more seasons
of Smack the Pony, the girly Channel 4 sketch show with Sally Phillips and Fiona Allen, but to
diminishing returns. There were wifely roles in ropey sitcoms. There was theatre. Then came a
two-year break for unhappier reasons (of which more later). And now she's back, in a play that,
well, laughs at the suffering of children. Adults, too. Especially those six feet under. /ppJoe
Orton's Loot, like Brass Eye, is comedy that sets out to shock. Don't be fooled by its age;
although the play was first performed in 1965, Loot has weathered better than, say, a TV parody of
late-90s news shows. Death doesn't date as a cultural taboo; likewise religion. Rereading Loot is
like having a shower when you hadn't realised the boiler's broken: unexpectedly shocking./pp"Yep,
it's full on," says Mackichan, eating a tuna sandwich between rehearsals in London. "There's this
one line about a really great brothel run by Pakistanis who pimp out their kids for Mars bars." She
smiles: an attractive smile, heavy on the lippy. "I'm like, 'Oh we'll cut that, won't we?' Well,
no, we can't, because what about all the other things people might find offensive? Cut them all and
you won't have much of a play left."/ppOther lines trouble her. Orton's gleeful description of a
sexual assault, complete with tooth-breaking detail. "That specific image is just really horrible.
Do you lose a portion of your audience when you leave that in? Do people stop thinking it's a great
play? Or as my mum would say, 'Ooh, Orton's so kinky; yes, I love all that.' " /ppDoon plays Fay,
an Irish Catholic home nurse and a prolific serial killer (87 in one week alone). She has lately
buried her seventh husband and has her eighth in her crosshairs, having just dispatched his wife
with a syringe of poison. Loot takes place on the day of the wife's funeral, and charts the power
struggle between Fay, Hal (whose mother is being buried), Dennis, Hal's boyfriend, with whom he has
robbed a bank and put the money in mum's coffin, and Detective Truscott, the sinister inspector who
comes calling. /ppOrton's stage instructions put Kay in her late 20s; other than that Mackichan,
46, is a good fit. She is Celtic, by nurture at least. She grew up in Surrey but moved to Fife with
her family when she was nine. She survived the transition, she says, by acting, specialising in
"posh bitches". This is something she still does: she is a natural authoritarian, physically
pneumatic, temperamentally tough - a few years back she swam the English channel with a team of
paratroopers. /pp"Yes, I could kill someone," she says, without thinking too hard about it. "It
must be so easy to just nip a needle in, or hold a pillow over an old person's face. The power and
the buzz you'd get." She has been boning up on True Crime magazine to further understand her
character's homicidal motivation. "But I just can't read the books. There's such an orgasm about
they way they're written. 'Women who kill! Viciously!' When it comes to sex and violence, we're an
island of obsessives. I mean, how does it help people to know the details of how someone was
physically tortured?"/ppTen years ago, Mackichan got her fingers burned over an Anglican sketch on
her Radio 4 show, Doon Your Way, but it hasn't left her any more on-message when it comes to
religion. "It's been extraordinary finding out what Catholics actually believe!" she says of the
research process. "All the rituals and superstition. The whole voyeurism of talking to someone
behind a little screen. The idea that you can think, OK, I'll be a bitch, then on Sunday I'll say,
'Oh, I was a bit of a bitch' and then feel great!"/ppShe is not religious herself, "but I don't
think I'm in an atheistic universe. I do think there's a higher power". Has she ever prayed? "Oh,
I've been down on my knees many times." She pauses and then roars with laughter - it's a genuine,
accidental Orton-ism. /ppIt turns out that Mackichan has had an extremely tough few years. Her
father recently died. She is in the process of getting divorced from her husband, Common As Muck
actor Anthony Barclay, with whom she has three children, India, 11, Louis, 10, and Ella-Rose, four.
And, three years ago, Louis contracted leukaemia. Much of the past three years has been spent with
him in hospital. He is now in remission, but shadows still hollow out her face. She wells up
frequently, and there is something frayed behind the raucous laugh and actorly tics. "I do find
authority hard to deal with now," she growls, after an assistant gives us a 10-minute warning that
she needs to get back to work. "I feel a bit of an anarchist. I don't think I could work for
someone who was an arsehole any more." She gulps down some fruit juice. "I can't actually have
confrontations with people. It's too much. I'm a single muvva with three kids and a show to do."
She laughs but she's dead serious./ppWhen things were at their worst, she says, her monopoly on
heartache was hard to handle. "People would tut behind me in a supermarket queue and I'd have to
go, 'Please, go ahead of me, you've obviously got somewhere to go. I'm just going back to the
children's cancer ward.' I once had an actress telling me her hair was falling out because of her
new kitchen and I thought, I'm not going to say anything, because this is quite interesting,
because I remember how I was before it all." And how was she before it all? "Quite selfish,
neurotic. Up my own arse. It's made me very tough. I do think I have endurance beyond the pale."
/ppWhen Louis was well enough, Mackichan took her children with her to Africa to shoot a BBC2
series, Taking the Flak, loosely based on John Simpson's reporting from poverty-stricken,
war-ravaged places. After such harrowing experiences, how she can cope with her relatively
comfortable existence? "You walk into your house and you go: I'm a millionaire. I'm a princess; I
live in a palace. And you think: I don't have a lot of shoes, but I do have too many shoes. You
look at yourself and think: Party's over, mate. Time to be useful."/ppAnd yet she is not an aid
worker in Africa. She is in north London, rehearsing a play. "I did think, I can't go back to
acting. It's too vain, too ridiculous. I was going to retrain as a play specialist in Louis' cancer
ward. But this is what I've done for 20 years. It's what I do." /ppShe's right. Mackichan is a
natural born thesp, right down to her floaty black blouse and stripy woollen leg-warmers. Slice her
in half and you would see "actor" written right through the middle of her. "I have a real mission
now to be in work that will be cathartic for people. [Work] that's really honest about just how
fucking hard it is to stay afloat."/ppLoot isn't exactly what she had in mind, she admits, but its
no-nonsense attitude to tragedy has been cathartic. "My whole life lately has been a bit of a black
comedy." She snorts. Might she consider turning it into one? "There's a lot of mileage in a
children's cancer-ward comedy. All the opening curtains and waving at people being sick into bowls.
You could set it in the tiny coffin-like kitchen where only the adults are allowed. You see these
little bald children running past the window. It was like suddenly being in a war."/ppCould she
really bear to return there, even imaginatively? "I don't know. They haunt me, those nighttime
corridors. The characters, too: the carers and nurses and staff and the petty quarrels. And getting
high on Quality Street till 3am. But I would like to." /ppstrongmiddot; /strongLoot is at the
Tricycle, London NW6, from December 11. Box office: 020-7328 1000./pdiv style="float: left;
margin-right: 10px; margin-bottom: 10px;"ullia
href="http://www.guardian.co.uk/stage/theatre"Theatre/a/lilia
href="http://www.guardian.co.uk/stage/orton"Joe Orton/a/lilia
href="http://www.guardian.co.uk/culture/television"Television/a/li/ul/diva
href="http://www.guardian.co.uk"guardian.co.uk/a copy; Guardian News Media Limited 2008 | Use of
this content is subject to our a
href="http://users.guardian.co.uk/help/article/0,,933909,00.html"Terms Conditions/a | a
href="http://www.guardian.co.uk/webfeeds/1,,1309488,00.html"More Feeds/a pa
href="http://feedads.googleadservices.com/~at/lAQCNb9eC0BbtenHfBz0jZUDjxo/a"img
src="http://feedads.googleadservices.com/~at/lAQCNb9eC0BbtenHfBz0jZUDjxo/i" border="0"
ismap="true"/img/a/p

|
Media Matters for America -
1 days and 17 hours ago
Several media figures have recently promoted the notion of division among supporters of
President-elect Barack Obama, claiming that "the left" has been or should be disappointed with
his Cabinet selections. But the media figures fostering this notion of significant disappointment
with Obama's actions rarely offer actual support for their position, which is undermined by
recent polling data. A USA Today/Gallup
poll released December 2 found that 94 percent of Democrats "approve of the way Obama is
handling his presidential transition." The poll also found that 89 percent of Democrats approve
of Sen. Hillary Clinton's nomination to be secretary of state and that 79 percent of Democrats
approve of Obama's decision to reappoint Defense Secretary Robert Gates.
In a December 2 USA Today
column headlined "Left behind: Obama's centrist Cabinet picks must have Democratic ideologues
wondering what happened to the change they can believe in," conservative commentator Jonah
Goldberg wrote that Obama's Cabinet picks have yielded "dismayed followers" among "the left."
Goldberg wrote:
You almost have to feel sorry for the left.
President-elect Barack Obama was supposed to be their guy. That woman, Hillary Clinton, was the
centrist, reach-across-the-aisle type. They picked Obama because he was going to be the
"transformative" leader who didn't need to compromise with the right or even with reality. Heck,
Obama the Wise would magically change reality itself, right around the same
moment he'd force those pesky oceans to recede.
[...]
Obama promised to turn the page on, first and foremost, the Bush years, but also the political
approach that marked the Clinton years. Nonetheless, he has not only embraced Hillary, he also
has hired Bill Clinton's Treasury secretary, Larry Summers, to head his National Economic
Council, tapped former Clintonite fixer Rahm Emanuel to be his chief of staff, and former Clinton
chief of staff John Podesta to run his transition.
[...]
Even Bush holdovers, nominal and actual, outnumber and outrank serious progressives in the Obama
Cabinet. Leading the pack is Robert Gates, President Bush's secretary of Defense -- the man who
oversaw the very troop surge in Iraq that Obama opposed. Timothy Geithner, head of the Federal
Reserve Bank of New York, will run the Obama Treasury Department. But Geithner has been a de
facto right-hand man of current Bush Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson.
Indeed, of all Obama's confirmed or reported picks, only Eric Holder, Obama's nominee for
attorney general, will cause any furor from the right. Even so, the former Clinton deputy AG is
no darling of the left.
To his dismayed followers, Obama says fear not, I am the change. "Understand where the vision for
change comes from, first and foremost," he told supporters. "It comes from me. That's my job, to
provide a vision in terms of where we are going, and to make sure, then, that my team is
implementing."
Similarly, Weekly Standard executive editor Fred Barnes wrote in a
column
posted on the Weekly Standard's website as of December 3 that Obama's Treasury
Department and national security selections indicated "he's pragmatic (so far) in one direction
-- rightward. Who knew?" Barnes wrote:
So the scoreboard looks like this: Three of the four cabinet posts that matter most are going to
those with views acceptable to the center-right of the Democratic party. That's Geithner,
Clinton, and Gates. The fourth, attorney general, will provoke a confirmation fight if Obama
chooses his buddy Eric Holder, famous as President Clinton's deputy attorney general for
facilitating the pardon of Marc Rich.
Three out of four isn't bad. Conservatives aren't jumping for joy. But imagine how the left wing
of the Democratic party -- the dominant wing, after all -- feels. Let down would be an
understatement.
[...]
If Obama wants to pursue economic and national security policies that would thrill MoveOn.org,
William Ayers, and the Democratic left, he has a funny way of showing it. The only reasonable
conclusion is he's spurning the left.
Obama has dozens of lesser posts to fill, and no doubt he'll use some of those jobs to assuage
the left.
During the November 26 edition of his Cincinnati-based radio show, Bill Cunningham characterized
Obama's Cabinet selections as "Reagan's economic team, Clinton retreads, and George Bush's
national defense secretary" and stated, "If you're a Democrat and a liberal, especially an
African-American Democrat liberal, are you this stupid?" He continued: "Don't you grasp what he's
doing to you? Or are you gonna sit with your -- with your mouths shut, not voicing concern about
the guy you thought you were electing, and you weren't electing him." Cunningham later stated:
Maybe Barack Hussein Obama is a brilliant politician. He gets the liberals to vote for him, then
he governs like a conservative. And the liberals are so stupid; they're never gonna vote against
Obama, right? In fact, I look forward -- if you voted for Obama, especially if you're an
African-American -- more than 97 percent voted for Obama -- you should have a big sign put around
your neck that says, "I am a dumb ass." Because you thought you were voting for change. Instead,
you were voting for Ronald Reagan and George Bush. Get the signs out, put them around your neck
like a sandwich board, and say, "I am a dumb ass."
In a December 3 Politico article headlined "Obama enemies
are cheering," senior political writer Jonathan Martin reported that Republicans are "heaping
praise on Obama's national security and economic teams" and uncritically quoted "Republican
strategist and the former spokesman for the Coalition Provisional Authority in Iraq" Dan Senor's
claim that Obama's "real fight will be with the hard left of his own party." Martin wrote:
Patience isn't easy, especially for a GOP that is already frustrated at having taken severe
beatings in consecutive elections. Yet the hope is that Obama's moves, however shrewd in the
sunshine of his honeymoon period, will eventually create openings.
"This may be frustrating for Republicans," acknowledged Senor. "But it's an opportunity. It
signals that Obama's real fight will be with the hard left of his own party. We should stand with
him when he breaks with the left. It's looking like it will be a target-rich environment. This is
a much better course than nit-picking on details, while he's doing the right thing on big
issues."
In a December 1 CNN.com commentary, Julian E.
Zelizer asserted that "[s]ome of Obama's core supporters are surprised and upset with his
[Cabinet] choices," but did not cite or quote any of these purported "core supporters."
Also on December 1, Kirsten Powers wrote in a New York Post column,
"They're Ba-a-ack: Obama Hires Hill -- and Bill," that Obama's selection of Hillary Clinton as
secretary of state "infuriates many Obama supporters. Pulling the lever for Obama was supposed to
usher out the Clinton era of baby-boomer entitlement and drama." Like Zelizer, Powers did not
provide any examples of "infuriat[ed] Obama supporters."
But a USA Today/Gallup
poll, conducted December 1, undermines the suggestion of significant disappointment with
Obama. That poll found that in addition to Democrats' approval of Obama's handling of the
transition and their support for Obama's selections of Clinton and Gates, 77 percent of Democrats
indicated that Obama's administration will be "more effective" because he has chosen individuals
who held positions in Bill Clinton's administration, with only 3 percent saying those choices
will render his administration "less effective."
From the November 26 broadcast of the Clear Channel's The Big Show with Bill Cunningham:
CUNNINGHAM: You know, (Watchdog on Wall Street radio show host) Chris Markowski, Obama
is redoing the Bush administration. For the last two years, he complained from pillar to post,
from New Hampshire to California, all 58 states -- complained vociferously, Obama did -- about
the conduction of the Iraqi war, especially the last two or three years. He voted against the
surge, correct?
MARKOWSKI: Yep.
CUNNINGHAM: And who did he keep as -- as secretary of defense?
MARKOWSKI: Gates is back.
CUNNINGHAM: Robert Gates, who was in charge of the surge.
MARKOWSKI: Yeah.
CUNNINGHAM: And I'm thinking, "Wait a minute, I got Paul Volcker, I got Robert Gates, I have a
slew of moderate to conservatives appointed by Obama." And I hear nothing from the
African-American community or lefties that this is a remake of the Bush-Reagan administration.
[...]
CUNNINGHAM: The fact of the matter is he has just appointed Ronald Reagan's chief economic
adviser, Paul Volcker, and he kept George Bush's secretary of defense, who for the last two years
has been in charge of the Iraqi war that he campaigned against. Does anyone other than me see the
delicious irony in any of this? Remember "change you can believe in?" Every sign, every bumper
sticker, the commercials he ran. USA Today's got a story today that during this election
cycle, Obama ran 450,000 commercials on television. I said 450,000 separate commercials on
television. And after the election, who does he keep? Ronald Reagan's economic adviser and George
Bush's secretary of defense.
Wow. Now that's change you can believe in. If you're a Democrat and a liberal, especially an
African-American Democrat liberal, are you this stupid? Don't you grasp what he's doing to you?
Or are you gonna sit with your -- with your mouths shut, not voicing concern about the guy you
thought you were electing, and you weren't electing him. I support Barack Hussein Obama. I think
the guy's gonna do a great job. With Reagan's economic team and George Bush's military team, how
can Obama fail? Twenty-nine minutes after the hour, Billie Cunningham. You've been suckered.
[...]
CUNNINGHAM: Every day that goes by it becomes more obvious to me that Obama suckered something
like 62 million people into voting for change when change ain't coming. I said it before the
election, and I'm saying it after the election: This guy's gonna run like a liberal and he's
gonna govern like a moderate to a conservative. He has three things: Ronald Reagan's economic
team, Clinton retreads, and George Bush's national defense secretary, which, when you think about
it, is not bad.
[...]
CUNNINGHAM: At this point, the war is over. America won, and the soldiers will start coming home.
So, Obama -- who talked about the disasters in Iraq, about the hundreds of billions of dollars
that were wasted, voting against the surge; keeps as the secretary of defense a guy who was in
favor of the surge and participated in the strategy that resulted in Obama's election by
criticizing it. Obama said nothing nice about George Bush and Robert Gates during the campaign,
but once he gets into office, he says, give me Bush's military policy, give me the Clinton
retreads, and give me Ronald Reagan's economic team.
And I can't believe that the 62 million fools and idiots and misinformed that put this guy in
office can be happy with this. Because, you know what? I am. If I knew that this was the Obama
that was gonna campaign -- I didn't want to vote for McCain. I held my nose and voted for John
Sidney McCain III. I didn't want to do it. If I would have known that Paul Volcker was gonna --
Paul Volcker was gonna be there, and Robert Gates was gonna be there, and that Bubba and Hillary
would be secretary of state, dodging the sniper fire in Bosnia for years to come, I would have
voted for Obama in a heartbeat.
[...]
CUNNINGHAM: Maybe Barack Hussein Obama is a brilliant politician. He gets the liberals to vote
for him, then he governs like a conservative. And the liberals are so stupid; they're never gonna
vote against Obama, right? In fact, I look forward -- if you voted for Obama, especially if
you're an African-American -- more than 97 percent voted for Obama -- you should have a big sign
put around your neck that says, "I am a dumb ass." Because you thought you were voting for
change. Instead, you were voting for Ronald Reagan and George Bush. Get the signs out, put them
around your neck like a sandwich board, and say, "I am a dumb ass." I love this guy. Bill
Cunningham stands with Barack Obama. B.O., keep doing what you're doing, because you're making,
to me, a lot of sense -- especially that stuff about no tax increases for high-income Americans.
Good job, I like that, too.

|
Air Liquide : cours action, informations société - Boursier.com -
2 days and 4 hours ago
Le PDG de Ford Alan Mulally, actuellement à Washington pour les audiences qui se tiennent au
Congrès sur d'éventuelles aides aux constructeurs...img width='1' height='1'
src='http://rss.feedsportal.com/c/268/f/3632/s/27cfbff/mf.gif' border='0'/div class='mf-viral'table
border='0'trtd valign='middle'a
href="http://res.feedsportal.com/viral/sendemail2_fr.html?title=Ford Motor : le PDG se met au
sandwich
dinde-saladelink=http://www.boursier.com/dispatch/ford-motor-le-pdg-se-met-au-sandwich-dinde-salade-news-310451.htm"
target="_blank"img src="http://rss.feedsportal.com/images/partagez.gif" border="0" //a/tdtd
valign='middle'a href="http://res.feedsportal.com/viral/bookmark_fr.cfm?title=Ford Motor : le PDG
se met au sandwich
dinde-saladelink=http://www.boursier.com/dispatch/ford-motor-le-pdg-se-met-au-sandwich-dinde-salade-news-310451.htm"
target="_blank"img src="http://rss.feedsportal.com/images/bookmark.gif" border="0"
//a/td/tr/table/divbr/br/a
href="http://da.feedsportal.com/r/25853511749/u/89/f/3632/c/268/s/41745407/a2.htm"img
src="http://da.feedsportal.com/r/25853511749/u/89/f/3632/c/268/s/41745407/a2.img" border="0"//a

|
|
What is Matoumba?
A website that sorts everyday the most relevant information to you.
Vote for the news and Matoumba will learn your tastes and the information that you like the most.
It is all FREE!
|