MySpace Joins Google Alliance to Counter Facebook

Stories

BEBO IN TOO

free-fat-tully31.gif

November 2, 2007

SAN FRANCISCO, Nov. 1 — MySpace and Bebo, two of the world’s largest social networking sites, on Thursday joined a Google-led alliance that is promoting a common set of standards for software developers to write programs for social networks.

The alliance now presents a powerful counterweight to Facebook, which, after opening up its site to developers last spring, has persuaded thousands of them to create programs for its users. The addition of MySpace, the world’s largest social network with 110 million active members, and Bebo, the No. 1 site in Britain with 39 million active users, could also put pressure on Facebook to drop its own standard and join the alliance, called OpenSocial.

“OpenSocial is going to be become the de facto standard for developers right out of the gate,” said Chris DeWolfe, chief executive of MySpace, in a press conference at Google’s headquarters in Mountain View, Calif. “It will have access to 200 million users, making it way bigger than any other platform out there.”

The open standards could create a boom of innovation around social networks as applications reach more users than ever and encourage developers to create more Internet tools.

Google and others said they had invited other social networks, including Facebook, to participate. “The most important principle about openness is that everyone is invited to join,” said Eric E. Schmidt, Google’s chief.

But a spokeswoman for Facebook said the company had not yet been fully briefed on the initiative, though it expected to have a meeting with Google engineers Friday. The company said in a statement that it would evaluate OpenSocial one it had a chance to study it.

Other members of the OpenSocial alliance include the social networks Friendster, Hi5, LinkedIn, Plaxo, Ning and the blogging network SixApart, as well as the software makers Oracle and SalesForce.com. Creators of several of the most popular programs on Facebook, including Slide, RockYou, iLike and Flixster, have announced their intention to write programs conforming to the OpenSocial standards.

The alliance is not likely to erode the popularity of Facebook or immediately alter the dynamics of the social networking market. But it could help revitalize the sites of some of its members, which have seen their social networks eclipsed by the popularity of MySpace and Facebook. Orkut, Google’s social network, for instance, is popular in Brazil and a few other countries, but not in the United States.

Google may benefit in other ways. As other social networks draw more users, it could sell more advertising on those sites. The Internet search giant already has a $900 million advertising partnership with MySpace, and sells advertising on various other social networks. Its ads sometimes appear inside the applications created by third-party developers.

At a news conference, Joe Greenstein, the chief executive of Flixster, whose applications allows users to share movie recommendations, demonstrated his program running inside MySpace.

“We are excited about OpenSocial,” Mr. Greenstein said. But he added that Flixster was not planning to pressure Facebook, where millions of members use the company’s program, to adopt OpenSocial.

Other developers said that the OpenSocial standard does not necessarily mean their programs will work seamlessly on all the partner sites. They say they will have to wait to see how deeply and effectively each social network implements the common standards into their sites.

Blake Commagere, the creator of popular Facebook programs like the Vampire and Zombie games, said certain social networks may not cater to developers as well as Facebook.

Jia Shen, the chief technology officer of RockYou, a top developer, said his company would still concentrate much of its efforts on Facebook. “Facebook is still the default social network you are going to go with right now,” he said

Joe Torre Named Manager of The Los Angeles Dodgers

Stories

Torre accepts Dodgers post, gets 3-year, $13M contract

Joe Torre

November 2, 2007 | Baltimore Sun

Joe Torre grew up in Brooklyn rooting against the Dodgers. Now, a half-century after they moved west, he’s their manager.

Torre was hired by Los Angeles to succeed Grady Little yesterday, taking the job two weeks after walking away from the New York Yankees.

The winningest manager in postseason history, Torre moved from one storied franchise to another, agreeing to a three-year, $13 million contract. He becomes the Dodgers’ eighth manager since they left his hometown, where he rooted for the rival New York Giants.

“As a kid growing up, you didn’t like them,” Torre said on WFAN radio in New York less than an hour before the hiring was announced. “As a player, to me the Dodgers were the Yankees of the National League because … you either loved them or you hated them.”

Torre, 67, will be introduced at a news conference Monday at Dodger Stadium. Little resigned Tuesday after completing two seasons of a three-year deal.

Torre joins the Dodgers for their 50th anniversary season in Los Angeles, hoping to spur October success.

Favored to win the National League West this year, the Dodgers finished fourth. They have only one playoff victory since winning the 1988 World Series under Tom Lasorda.

“I’m so happy for him. I think his record speaks for itself,” said Lasorda, a special adviser to Dodgers owner Frank McCourt. “I think what he accomplished with the Yankees, he should have been able to control his destiny.

“We’re happy that he’s here – very happy.”

Torre guided the Yankees to four World Series championships from 1996 to 2000, and they made the playoffs in all 12 years he managed them. New York lost to the Cleveland Indians last month, eliminated in the first round for the third straight year.

After that defeat, the Yankees offered Torre a one-year contract with a pay cut. He earned $7.5 million last season – more than any other big league manager by far.

Calling the performance incentives in the proposal “an insult,” Torre turned it down.

los.gif

Hollywood Writers Guild Will Go on Strike; Start To Be Voted On Today

Stories

Filed at 2:09 a.m. ET

LOS ANGELES (AP) — Hollywood writers who have long complained of being underpaid and getting little respect said Thursday they would go on strike for the first time in nearly 20 years to fight for a bigger piece of the television and movie industry action.

Writers Guild of America President Patric Verrone made the announcement in a closed-door session, drawing loud cheers from the crowd, several writers told The Associated Press.

”Where the membership stands could not be more clear,” said Carlton Cuse, an executive producer of the television drama ”Lost” and a member of the guild negotiating committee. ”There was not a single dissenting voice in the room.”

Writers said the guild board would meet Friday to formally call a strike and decide when it would start. They said guild members would be told Friday afternoon.

Nick Counter, president of the Alliance of Motion Picture and Television Producers, said in a statement the alliance was not surprised by the action.

”We are ready to meet and are prepared to close this contract this weekend,” he said.

After the meeting, Jeff Hermanson, assistant executive director of the WGA, West, was asked whether the delayed strike was a negotiating tactic.

Hermanson said he hoped the move would bring the alliance back to the table. ”We hope they will come to their senses,” he said.

Guild members recently authorized their negotiators to call the first strike since 1988. Officials had called a meeting of the union’s 12,000 members Thursday night. About 3,000 attended.

Writers said the line of questioning inside the meeting wasn’t whether the group was going to strike, but how it would be carried out. The mood was subdued as writers filed out of the building.

Janis Hirsch, a veteran TV writer, was among the 10 percent who voted against striking.

”It’s sad, but I’ve got to support my union. At this point it makes sense,” she said.

Many writers said that beyond royalties, respect was at stake. They said they had never commanded the same clout in the entertainment industry as actors and directors.

”I don’t think it’s something we can negotiate for,” said Paul Guay, who co-wrote the movies ”Liar, Liar” and ”Heartbreakers.” ”What we can negotiate for is money. How we assess respect and worth in this town is money.”

The first casualty of the strike will likely be late-night talk shows, which are dependent on current events to fuel monologues and other entertainment.

The strike will not immediately affect film or prime-time TV production. Most studios have stockpiled dozens of movie scripts, and TV shows have enough scripts or completed shows in hand to last until early next year.

The key financial issue in the talks involves changing the formula for paying writers a share of DVD revenue, then applying the same equation to money made from material offered over the Internet and other digital platforms.

Studios, represented by the Alliance of Motion Picture and Television Producers, are dead set against increasing DVD royalties.

Writers and actors have been fighting for years to reverse what they see as a huge mistake made at the dawn of home video, when no one was sure if selling movies on VHS cassettes would ever make money.

The unions agreed to ignore the first 80 percent of revenue from the tapes and later DVDs, assuming most of the money represented the cost of manufacturing and distribution.

Writers settled for just 1.2 percent of the remaining 20 percent, a figure that amounts to about 3 cents on a DVD that retails for $20.

Writers are now asking for their share to be calculated on 40 percent of revenue and argue the same formula should be used for digital distribution because studios have almost no costs associated with that technology.

Consumers are expected to spend $16.4 billion on DVDs this year, according to Adams Media Research.

By contrast, studios could generate about $158 million from selling movies online and about $194 million from selling TV shows over the Web.

”Every incremental window of distribution has added revenue and profitability to the business model,” said Anthony DiClemente, an entertainment analyst for Lehman Brothers Equity Research. ”Digital is likely to be a positive thing for the studios.”

Studios argue that it is too early to know how much money they can make from offering entertainment on the Internet, cell phones, iPods and other devices.

Producers are uncertain whether consumers prefer a pay-per-view model over an advertising-supported system. They want the economic flexibility to experiment as consumer habits change in reaction to technology.

The negotiations had revolved as much around emotions as economics, said Doug Wood, a partner with the law firm of Reed Smith who has negotiated with actors on behalf of advertising agencies.

”The industry negotiates form logic, and the creative community negotiates from emotion,” he said. ”Trying to understand those differences on both sides of the table is a big challenge in any of these negotiations.”

——

AP Television Writer Lynn Elber contributed to this report.

Don Imus Returns To Radio On WABC AM New York

Stories
Shock Jock Don Imus Returns to Airwaves

2226122.jpg


Nov 1
By LARRY McSHANE
Associated Press Writer

NEW YORK (AP) – Don Imus will return to the airwaves Dec. 3 on New York’s WABC-AM, only nine months after the cantankerous shock jock’s career seemed doomed over his racist, sexist remark about a women’s college basketball team.

Citadel Broadcasting Corp. made the announcement Thursday, confirming long-rumored reports that Imus was returning to morning drive time in the same city where he was banished in April.

“We are ecstatic to bring Don Imus back to morning radio,” said 77 WABC President and General Manager Steve Borneman. “Don’s unique brand of humor, knowledge of the issues and ability to attract big-name guests is unparalleled. He is rested, fired up and ready to do great radio.”

Imus will return with his longtime newsman, Charles McCord, and other members of his morning team, Citadel said in announcing the move. It did not specifically mention Bernard McGuirk, the producer who was fired along with Imus.

Imus will replace the morning team of Curtis Sliwa and Ron Kuby on the Citadel Broadcasting-owned station.

The acid-tongued broadcasting icon was fired in April after he called the Rutgers University’s women’s basketball team “nappy-headed hos” on the air, sparking a national furor and calls by civil rights leaders and broadcast journalists to resign.

But just three months later, Rev. Al Sharpton, one of the strongest voices calling for the shock jock’s firing, said Imus had a right to make a living and could return to radio.

Citadel Broadcasting CEO Farid Suleman also recently defended Imus, telling The New York Times in a recent interview: “He didn’t break the law. He’s more than paid the price for what he did.”

But prospects of Imus’ return, anticipated for months, have outraged critics including the National Association of Black Journalists and the National Organization for Women, who said the idea of him coming back to the airwaves months after he was fired is nearly as insulting as the comments that drove him off the air.

The radio industry has eagerly awaited his return and the ratings he brought on his WFAN-AM morning show program, which had also been simulcast on the MSNBC cable channel.

Suleman’s WABC-AM is already home to several syndicated hosts: Rush Limbaugh, Sean Hannity and Mark Levin.

Imus’ national presence would trump the local Arbitron ratings, where his WFAN-AM show consistently drew fewer listeners than Sliwa and Kuby.

WABC release.

Lawsuit Against NBC's Predator Dismissed

Stories


TVGuide‘s Stephan Battaglio reports a lawsuit filed by a former NBC News producer has been dismissed. Marsha Bartel
claimed NBC fired her because she complained about the tactics used in
the To Catch a Predator series. The judge rejected her claims. NBC
maintains she was let go when the network made cuts in the Chicago
bureau.

Another lawsuit against the Dateline series is still pending. A woman filed a $110 million suit against NBCU after her brother, Bill Conradt,
committed suicide. Police, and a Dateline crew, were approaching his
Terrell, TX home when he killed himself. Conradt, a local prosecutor,
had been accused of chatting with an actor posing as a 13-year-old boy.

mediabistro.com: TVNewser

Powered by ScribeFire.

It's A long Way From Monte Carlo :: Jacques Villeneuve in Craftsman Truck Series

Stories

Question: Tell us what you’ve learned so far in a day and a half, driving the Car of Tormorrow here in Texas?

JACQUES VILLENEUVE: It’s definitely a different beast than the truck to drive. More speed down the straight. Corners more speed, have to slow down. It’s very different to drive and it’s very difficult to drive.
And the tires drop off quite quickly as well. So to get your best lap out, you really have to go out hard and try to figure out a lot of things at the same time. So it’s tough. But it’s fun. So progress every time and that’s what matters.

Question: Can you talk about the brush with the wall today, what happened and also did running the trucks help you the last couple of days?

JACQUES VILLENEUVE: First of all, with the truck, they drive very differently, because you carry the throttle all the way into the corner, just lift a little bit. Slower down the straight quicker around the corner. It drives very differently, different lines through the corner. Not a huge help.

The brush with the wall, yesterday we ended up running the high line and brushed the wall with the rear of the car a few times. Seemed like it was okay. The car was tighter today, went in fast like yesterday and didn’t turn. So used the wall to cushion to turn, which was okay, didn’t really do any damage. But that’s not the way to go.

Question: If you could just kind of give your impressions of Montoya’s rookie season and what kind of benchmark or expectations do you think he’s maybe created for you?

JACQUES VILLENEUVE: Juan Pablo did a great rookie season, without any stock car experience. And after having driven one now, it’s obvious to me anyway how difficult a job it is and how good he’s done.

Question: Do you think the big adjustment for you might be the schedule and the demands for time, 38 weekends a year to race and all the other things that go on being a Cup driver?

JACQUES VILLENEUVE: The schedule is demanding, obviously, but I don’t think it’s any worse than what I’ve been used to and one where there was less racing but a lot more testing, and with overseas flight going to Australia and all that, it made it very difficult. So I don’t see that as a negative. If anything, when you’re in the car you’d rather be racing than testing anyway.

Question: How much of your former fan base do you expect will follow you to NASCAR?

JACQUES VILLENEUVE: I guess the ones in Europe might find it a little difficult because it’s not easy to see NASCAR in Europe. But I know I’ve been chatting with people on forums. Some of them have got set up to be able to see what was going on. There’s a fan base in Canada obviously being Canadian, and after having raced in the states and in IndyCar and winning the Indy 500, there was a fan base in the states. So hopefully this will carry on.

Source: NASCAR.com

Spokesman For General Patraeus In Iraq Shows Signs of Cracking Up

Stories

5170120.jpg

Is the military’s top spokesman in Iraq a loose cannon who routinely fires off angry, impetuous e-mails to bloggers who criticize the war and the spin surrounding it? Or is Col. Steven Boylan, instead, an innocent victim — an online wallflower whose identity has been hijacked by a pro-war hacker who has managed to break into the most well-fortified space on the planet in order to taunt lefty critics? Neither scenario paints a comforting picture of the situation in Iraq — and even though the e-mails in question are coming from military servers in Iraq, the military seems strangely uninterested in solving the mystery of who is writing them.

Farhad Manjoo on Glenn Greenwald and the Angry Colonel Boylan

 

 

Stop Looking At My Vajayjay

Stories

 

ms_studio2.jpg

Michael Smerdouchebag (AP)

This is why I’m among the many who’ve hailed the arrival of “vajayjay.” Finally, we seemed to be making progress – we’d identified a word that can safely be used by men, women and children. While I knew it was gaining in usage, I didn’t recognize, until I read it in Sunday’s New York Times that the first media utterance of “vajayjay” came during a 2006 episode of “Grey’s Anatomy” when a pregnant doctor told a male intern: “Stop looking at my vajayjay.” The word’s mainstream appeal was cemented when Oprah started using it on her program.

PHILLY DOT COM

Solarfest in D.C. And No Hippies In Sight

Stories

01pogue_336.jpg

The top 20 teams got a unique invitation: to transport the houses, by truck or ship, piece by piece, from their schools to the Mall in Washington, D.C., the strip between the Washington Monument and the Capitol. The Energy Department gives each finalist team $100,000 to defray the transportation costs, although that’s a drop in the bucket compared to the total amount some of these teams spent on their homes: up to $1 million, usually from donations and alumni.

There they were, last month: 20 houses, reassembled, arrayed in a little solar village, fully operational and open to the public. (You can see a lot of photos at www.solardecathlon.org.)

David Brooks and Rich Lowry Heart Mike Huckabee

Stories

 free-fat-tully.gif

DAVID BROOKS: From the Back of the Pack

NYT

Rindge, N.H.

The first thing you notice about Mike Huckabee is that he has a Mayberry name and a Jim Nabors face. But it’s quickly clear that Huckabee is as good a campaigner as anybody running for president this year. And before too long it becomes easy to come up with reasons why he might have a realistic shot at winning the Republican nomination:

First, Republican voters here and in Iowa are restless. That means that there will be sharp movements during the last 30 days toward whoever seems fresh and hot.

Second, each of the top-tier candidates makes certain parts of the party uncomfortable. Huckabee is the one candidate acceptable to all factions.

Third, Huckabee is the most normal person running for president (a trait that might come in handy in a race against Hillary Clinton). He is funny and engaging — almost impossible not to like. He has no history of flip-flopping in order to be electable. He doesn’t seem to be visibly calculating every gesture. Far from being narcissistic, he is, if anything, too neighborly to seem presidential.

Fourth, he is part of the new generation of evangelical leaders. Huckabee was a Baptist minister. But unlike the first generation of politically engaged Christian conservatives, Huckabee is not at war with mainstream America. As a teenager, he loved Jimi Hendrix, and he’s now the bass player in a rock band that has opened for Willie Nelson and Grand Funk Railroad.

Fifth, though you wouldn’t know it from the past few years, the white working class is the backbone of the G.O.P. Huckabee is most in tune with these voters.

He was the first male in his family’s history to graduate from high school. He paid his way through college by working 40 hours a week and getting a degree in two and half years. He tells audiences that the only soap his family could afford was the rough Lava soap, and that he was in college before he realized showering didn’t have to hurt. “There are people paying $150 for an exfoliation,” he jokes. “I could just hand them a bar of Lava soap.”

His policies reflect that background. At the recent Republican economic debate, he was the candidate who most vociferously argued that the current economy is not working for the middle class. As the others spoke, he thought to himself: “You guys don’t get out much. You should meet somebody who’s not handing you a $2,300 check.”

He condemns “immoral” C.E.O. salaries, and on global trade he sounds like a Democrat: “There’s no free trade without fair trade.” (Polls suggest most Republican voters are, sadly, with him on this).

Sixth, he’s a former governor. He talks about issues in a down-to-earth way that other candidates can’t match. For example, he’s got a riff on childhood obesity that rivets the attention of his audiences. He asks them to compare their own third-grade class photos with the photos of third graders today. Then he goes down the list of the diseases that afflict preteens who get Type 2 diabetes.

“The greatest challenge in health care is not universal coverage,” he argues while introducing his health care plan. “It’s universal health. A healthy country would be less expensive to cover.”

Seventh, he’s a collaborative conservative. Republicans have tended to nominate heroic candidates in the Reagan mold. Huckabee is more of an interactive leader. His Legislature in Arkansas was 90 percent Democratic, but he got enough done to be named among the nation’s top five governors by Time.

He endorses programs that are ideologically incorrect for conservatives, like his passion for arts education. He can’t understand how the argument over the size of the S-chip funding increase became an all-or-nothing holy war. He also criticizes the Bush administration for its arrogance. “There was a time when people looked up to the U.S. Now they resent us, not because we’re a superpower but because we act like one.”

Huckabee has some significant flaws as a candidate. His foreign policy thinking is thin. Some of his policy ideas seem to come off the top of his head (he vows, absurdly, to make the U.S. energy independent within eight years).

But Huckabee is something that the party needs. He is a solid conservative who is both temperamentally and substantively different from the conservatives who have led the country over the past few years.

He’s rising in the polls, especially in Iowa. His popularity with the press corps suggests he could catch a free media wave that would put him in the top tier. He deserves to be there.

§   §   §   §   §

Huckabee’s Sweet Spot

By Rich Lowry
Former Arkansas Gov. Mike Huckabee told a gathering of social conservatives in Washington last weekend, in a boffo speech that received repeated standing ovations, that “it’s important that the language of Zion is a mother tongue and not a recently acquired second language.”

Not only is Huckabee a native speaker, he is a surpassingly silver-tongued one. By the time he finished his speech, with a stirring peroration invoking biblical underdogs beginning with David (“that little shepherd boy with five smooth stones”), the audience seemed ready to follow this presidential long shot into the lion’s den.

Huckabee’s speech had echoes of Howard Dean’s fiery call to the faithful at a Democratic National Committee meeting in 2003; to paraphrase Dean, Huckabee was saying that he’s from the social-conservative wing of social conservatism. That Huckabee has a pure social-conservative pedigree helps him in a race where none of the major candidates do, but much of his appeal is in the sheer nothing-to-lose joie de vivre of his candidacy.

 

Huckabee is in that golden campaign space once occupied by Pat Buchanan in 1992 and 1996 and by John McCain in 2000 — dark-horse candidates unencumbered by large staffs or expectations who can afford to act on gut political instincts and enjoy themselves in the process. Buchanan and McCain both were rewarded with upset victories that made them major factors in the nominating contest, and Huckabee — moving up in Iowa — could yet enjoy a similar moment.

With almost no organization, Huckabee lives off his words. In oratorical talent, he’s something of a cross between Billy Sunday and Ronald Reagan. He rose to the leadership of the Arkansas State Baptist Convention on his speaking ability. As governor, he didn’t have a speechwriter, and there was no such thing as an advanced text. His staff got reporters copies of his annual state of the state addresses by doing a quick transcription of his off-the-cuff remarks.

Huckabee shines in the verbal contests of the debates, and his wise-cracking, guitar-playing persona ingratiates him to journalists. But for all his eloquence, what Huckabee lacks, fundamentally, is a message. Unlike past long-shot crusaders like Buchanan and McCain, there is no new direction in which he wants to take the party. He has different mood music than his rivals — acknowledging middle-class anxieties and sounding nationalistic notes — but these are more rhetorical riffs than part of an integrated worldview.

“I don’t want to see our food come from China, our oil come from Saudi Arabia and our manufacturing come from Europe and Asia,” he said in his Washington speech. There is so much foolishness in that one sentence it is hard to unpack: We import a mere 3.3 percent of our food from China; we’re not going to be independent of foreign oil in 10 years as Huckabee promises; and foreign manufactured goods, by keeping prices low, are a boon to the middle class that Huckabee champions.

Lines like this are just part of Huckabee’s act — an act not in the sense of being inauthentic, but in the sense of being literally a rhetorical roadshow. Pundits now say that Huckabee has made the Republican contest a “five man” race. This is overkill. Without organization, money or an agenda, Huckabee is very unlikely to win the nomination. A presidential candidate has to be more than a performer. As one top social conservative says, “He’s not running for Toastmasters.”

But he could be running for vice president. He’s a natural fit for Rudy Giuliani. If Huckabee wins an upset in Iowa, he will deal a potentially mortal blow to Giuliani competitor Mitt Romney. If Giuliani becomes the nominee, he will have to shore up the social-conservative base. A vice-presidential nominee with impeccable social-conservative credentials will be a must, and one like Huckabee — an incredibly talented communicator with crossover appeal to the media — will be a plus.

As for Huckabee’s presidential campaign, it’s a blast. Enjoy it while it lasts.

 

© 2007 by King Features Syndicate