1958 Edward R. Murrow Speech

Edward R. Murrow:

Our history will be what we make it. And if there are any historians about fifty or a hundred years from now, and there should be preserved the kinescopes for one week of all three networks, they will there find recorded in black and white, or color, evidence of decadence, escapism and insulation from the realities of the world in which we live. I invite your attention to the television schedules of all networks between the hours of 8 and 11 p.m., Eastern Time. Here you will find only fleeting and spasmodic reference to the fact that this nation is in mortal danger. There are, it is true, occasional informative programs presented in that intellectual ghetto on Sunday afternoons. But during the daily peak viewing periods, television in the main insulates us from the realities of the world in which we live. If this state of affairs continues, we may alter an advertising slogan to read: LOOK NOW, PAY LATER.

via Xeni

Part-Time Entrepreneurs: www.cmbsweets.com

Stephen Grocer:

Carolina Braunschweig, 28, worked as a reporter covering the venture-capital industry for Thomson Corp. in San Francisco. During that period, she also began contemplating the direction of her career and considering ways to supplement her modest reporter salary.

Ms. Braunschweig launched cmbsweets in June 2004, selling jams over the Internet at cmbsweets.com. Today her product line, which includes strawberry, boysenberry and olallieberry jams and apple-honey butter, is also sold in stores in New York, Chicago and the San Francisco Bay Area.

Bruce Springsteen’s Madison Concert Notes

Bruce Springsteen’s acoustic concert tour stopped in Madison this evening. I found the event quite enjoyable. A few notes:

  • The 8:00p.m. event began at 8:20. He finished a great show 10:50.
  • The tour program was $20 (I offered 10)
  • T-Shirts were $45 while a coffee mug was $15.00
  • I purchased tickets (section 212) via ticketmaster the “moment” they were available. I understood that there would be 4,000 seats. That seems to have changed. I wonder how the seating distribution actually worked out?
  • I thought his performance was wonderful. His voice was powerful and he seemed to be quite engaged, mentioning that someone told him it had been 30 years since he performed (commercially) in Madison.
  • Mentioned he had not been invited to the White House lately – though he had been there some years ago, “when it was more fun”.
  • Former State Senate Majority Leader Chuck Chvala sat not far from our seats.
  • I was very impressed with the rather elegant lighting.
  • Springsteen mentioned a number of “almost stalkers” who follow him around, including one who passed along photos on top of various mountains with a Bruce Springsteen banner.
  • He also spoke briefly about what it’s like to be the “boss” ie rich (“Houses, money”)
  • He said he would be back with the E Street Band but when a fan asked for a date said that he did not know when it would be.
  • The crowd was a very interesting cross section of Madison area (I think) people. I’d say the average age was late 40’s to early 50’s.
  • Tickets were being sold outside the Coliseum for 40 to 45 each.

Springsteen appears next in Worcester, MA on October 20.

Tax Shelters: Miers to the Supreme Court While KPMG, etc. are Indicted?

A rather amazing paradox: Harriet Mier’s Dallas law firm: Locke, Liddell & Sapp provided legal opinions for Ernst & Young’s tax shelters. The firm, unlike KPMG and it’s former partners, has not been indicted.
Allen Kenney has more (PDF):

“Ms. Miers was obviously not directly involved in the CDS opinions. Most otherwise sophisticated non-tax lawyers inside law firms wouldn’t be able to decipher what is or isn’t accurate in a lengthy tax opinion,” said Chuck Rettig, a tax litigator in the Beverly Hills, Calif., firm of Hochman, Salkin, Rettig, Toscher & Perez. “If [E&Y] approved something like CDS, it was historically unlikely to be significantly questioned by other professionals.”
However, members of the Senate Judiciary Committee might be forced to consider whether Locke’s involvement with the opinion letters affects Miers’s fitness to serve on the country’s highest court. President Bush has emphasized her experience managing a major law firm in defending her nomination.
“She had the opportunity to have her ethical antennas tweaked here,” said Paul Caron, a tax law professor at the University of Cincinnati and the operator of the popular “TaxProf Blog” Web site. “Those ethical antennas were, perhaps, not as sensitive that they should have been.”
One item on the Judiciary Committee’s questionnaire for Miers asks her to disclose if her firm has been subject to any investigations: “State whether, to your knowledge, you or any organization of which you were or are an officer, director, or active participant has ever been under federal, state, or local investigation for a possible violation of any civil or criminal statute or administrative agency regulation.” Another item asks Miers to provide the committee with any “unfavorable information that may affect your nomination.”

Telco and Cable Companies in the Internet Era

Doc Searls is correct that internet providers should be racing to offer internet services rather than trying to resuscitate dying products:

Phone and cable companies will never be Internet companies. Never. Nor will Newspapers or TV networks. But the latter don’t matter as much, because they don’t deliver Internet service to homes and businesses. Phone and cable companies do. The Net depends on them.

If Phone and cable companies took the trouble to provide unencumbered symmetrical service — same speeds up and down — and stood prepared to help individuals and businesses of every size use the Net in original ways that they see fit — to engage in Free Enterprise in the open marketplace the Net truly is — countless ways of making money on service to those customers would manifest themselves to the providing companies.

For example, I would gladly pay $100 per month for a block of six IP addresses, no port blockages, and 1Mb of symmetrical service to my home. I would also gladly pay more on a tiered basis for higher levels of traffic and higher grades of provisioned service. Also perhaps for hosting. Offsite data backup (a potentially huge business for which high upstream speeds are required). And perhaps much more. And I’m sure there are millions of small businesses out there that would be glad to do the same. But most of us are stuck with a choice between 1) a shitty asymmetrical service from a phone company that wishes it could still charge for time and distance; and 2) and a shitty asymmetrical service from a cable company that wishes it were still just in the TV channel delivery business.

Locally, TDS, to their credit does offer 4MB symmetrical dsl service (4mbps up and down).

Bob Iger and Apple Save Network TV?

Mark Cuban:

On the ITunes Store, you can buy the latest episode to Lost and some other shows the day after they air on Network TV. in this case ABC, for $1.99. Sounds simple and reasonable. Not anything earth shattering right ?

I think this is correct – but – I’m not sure about the pricing. Some of it is not worth much, while other shows/documentaries (PBS?) are quite well done.

The New De Young


Zahid Sardar:

With its elegant low-slung copper-clad building in a sophisticated garden setting and gravity-defying, twisting tower, the M.H. de Young Museum in Golden Gate Park will achieve every museum’s goal — to educate the public — about art as well as architecture.
Not since Frank Lloyd Wright’s futuristic Marin Civic Center was completed in 1957 has the Bay Area seen a significant new civic structure that does not affect a classical or postmodern pose. For architecturally conservative San Francisco, it’s the equivalent of St. Louis’ 1960s stainless steel arch, a gateway to bigger, more exhilarating ideas in a post-Bilbao Guggenheim age.

Listenomics

Bob Garfield:

Why? Because the information society is reversing flow. What began as an experiment among a few software nerds has, thanks to the Internet, expanded into other disciplines, notably media and law. But it won’t stop there. Advertising. Branding. Distribution. Consumer research. Product development. Manufacturing. They will all be turned upside down as the despotism of the executive suite gives way to the will, and wisdom, of the masses in a new commercial and cultural epoch, namely: The Open Source Revolution.

“We’re tired of the 20th-century model of being passive consumers of mass content,” says J.D. Lasica, author of Darknet: Hollywood’s War Against the Digital Generation. “We’re transitioning to a new kind of culture. More participatory, more open, more interactive where the locus of control passes.”

Lasica, who believes for example that by now Mickey Mouse should be in the public domain, doesn’t think he’s demanding anything outlandish.