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Jessica emerged victorious in the HOH competition on Big Brother 8 Episode 16, which means there are about 2-3 people who will be surprised if the nominations are Dick and Danielle, but there’s still plenty of room for fireworks and drama.
Dick is upset about being lied to and tells Eric he doesn’t deserve to be here (as if lying is something new in this game). The LNC goes nuts over Jessica’s HOH win, reminiscent of season 6. There are no secrets any more how this house is divided. For a change, instead of just listening to what Dick says and taking it, everybody gets up in his face. And it’s another argument about religion between Jameka and Dick… because that won’t piss anybody off.
Dick plans to sacrifice himself for Danielle if they’re both nominated. He says he will do whatever it takes to make them hate him so bad they won’t be able to stand him for one more minute. Apparently that would be a change. At some point we go from entertaining and lots of drama to just uncomfortable to watch. Tonight’s theme seems to be religious wars.
Danielle, who turned on her alliance last week, attempts get Jen on her side. Unlike the alliance with Dick, which was most likely equally fake on both parts, this one may actually work. They don’t exactly trust each other but don’t completely hate each other either. Jen’s still just a big floater, but it doesn’t hurt to have people at least not hate her.
The food competition had to do with smashing guitars. Looks like a lot of fun and a great way to relieve the tension that’s been building up in the house. Dick, Danielle, Jen, and Eric lose and are on slop, but Dick wins a slop pass. Dick tries to give it to Danielle, but she tells him to give it to Jen instead, which is a great strategic move.
America wants Eric to get Dustin nominated. Great. Trying to screw him over again, and this time he lets us know. Now it’s Dustin’s turn to start with the bashing. Alcohol never works out well in the BB house. It does, however, open the door for Dustin to say he wants to go up as a pawn, which gives Eric an opportunity to at least make a weak effort in pleading for a Dustin nomination.
So we don’t forget he’s in the house, we get to see some footage of Zach in a bunny suit.
It’s nomination time.
Jameka-Safe
Jen-Safe
Eric-Safe
Amber-Safe
Zach-Safe
Dustin-Safe
Danielle and Dick have been nominated for eviction. Wow. Shocker. Jessica wants Danielle out rather than Dick because Danielle’s a stronger player, but Dick wants no part of that.
This week’s America’s Choice question: Who should Eric give the silent treatment to this week? Yikes, another heavily loaded question.
Want to know who wins veto and what they do with it before the next show? Check out the Big Brother 8 spoilers page.
Stay tuned to dingoRUE for another live blog of Big Brother 8 episode 18, which airs Tuesday at 9/8c on CBS.
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New MediaThis morning’s opening session of the Newspaper Association of America’s annual convention at the Marriott Marquis did not, for the most part, stray from the now-tired narrative about newspapers and their modern troubles. The publisher and CEO of the Washington Post, the rather improbably named Boisfeuillet Jones Jr., said that newspapers are preserving something called youth-oriented content. (Think of the children!) Journalism, he reminded the crowd, advances a great value to the nation. The crowd seemed to totally agree! John Sturm, who is the president of the Newspaper Association of America—whose board has five women among its 35 members, including Times Co. CEO Janet Robinson—made a joke about the Broadway play Spamalot, which some conference attendees are attending tomorrow night. Synergy! He also said that the Internet is the future. “When you add everything together, our audience is increasing!” he promised the crowd.
1:19 PM ON MON MAY 7 2007
BY DOREE
1,292 views, 7 comments
Latest by TedSez: “Born in Atlanta in 1946, Jones went to high school at St. Albans School in Washington, D.C. and later received… more
New MediaPortfolio’s website has mostly avoided the intense scrutiny that the Condé Nast magazine itself has sustained. True, it’s still in Beta. (But so is Google Mail, and it’s been around for ages!) We wondered whether the website would prove to be fulfilling the magazine’s purported mandate of “serious business journalism.”
The website’s tagline is “Breaking Business News and Opinion, Executive Profiles and Careers.” So what did they break today? There’s a piece about Hugo Chavez forcing oil companies out of Venezuela; a much longer and thoughtful piece ran on the front page of the Wall Street Journal today. There’s a perfunctory (330 words) update about the Rupert Murdoch-Dow Jones takeover. There’s an article about business spending that essentially summarizes a Bloomberg article about the same thing, and another about the Bear Stearns hedge fund bailout that’s also a takeaway from a Bloomberg piece. Their fifth lead story is about the pricing plans for the iPhone, with zero analysis or new insight—just a list of prices and features. There’s nothing terrible really. None of these are must-reads, or unique stories that the average business executive hasn’t already read when he picks up his WSJ in the morning.
Also on the front page today is a story about art market hedge funds, including The Art Trading Fund, which isn’t that dissimilar from that outfit’s mention in the Economist last month.
And as the magazine spends the next month closing its second issue, are any of the staff writers going to have stories for the web? Not likely. It’s like a more serious version of the Radar effect: The more stressful the magazine closing, the less content there is on the website.
Okay. So the Breaking Business News is a wash. How about those much-vaunted bloggers? Well, a couple of them are doing some decent stuff. Veteran technology writer Kevin Maney, who used to write a tech blog on USAToday.com, has a serviceable general-interest technology blog, but it’s a far cry from anything you can find on, say, Wired.com. Felix Salmon seems to be updating his Market Movers finance blog the most out of any of the Portfolio bloggers, and it’s probably the best one on there. Matt Cooper’s politics blog is, surprisingly, mostly a snore, and Lauren Goldstein Crowe’s fashion blog suffers in comparison to the others out there. Or to reading Lucky.
What should be a huge red flag, though, is that almost none of the posts—on any of the blogs—are getting comments. Are the bloggers writing into a void? Each post has a big orange link to “Start the Conversation” at the bottom, but no one seems to be taking them up on the offer.
Salmon didn’t seem particularly troubled by this when we spoke to him yesterday. “I absolutely don’t worry about that,” he said. “The way I’m looking at it at the moment is that if people feel like they have something to add to what I’m saying, then leave a comment.” Blog posts, Salmon said, are not edited, and bloggers have freedom to write about whatever they want.
Most of Condé Nast’s magazine’s websites fall under the umbrella of the company’s online division, CondéNet—to the growing displeasure of some magazine staffers, who resent the control CondéNet has over their magazines’ sites. But Portfolio’s website is an experiment: It’s managed by Portfolio, and not by CondéNet. Still, the print magazine and the website have little crossover; insiders say that magazine editor Joanne Lipman is almost entirely hands-off, leaving the operation of the website to managing editor Chris Jones, who was a reporter and editor at Wired and Yahoo before coming over to Portfolio.
“The magazine had months of people sitting around and working on it,” Salmon told us. “With the website, they were basically hiring people at launch. It was all very last-minute.” Hence, beta! Of course, that’s a slightly odd state of affairs; the original announcement about the launch of the magazine, in August 2005, included the information that there would be a website that Lipman and publisher David Carey would be developing.
The website still has some kinks—in addition to the uneven content—to work out. “The site will be cleaned up,” a source at the magazine told us. “Right now it’s hard to find some stuff.” There are also little things that make us think that no one’s minding the store; the five articles on the Most Emailed Stories list were all published at the beginning of May, which raises two questions: Is that feature broken? Or is no one reading the site? (Also, letting Portfolio contributor Deborah Schoeneman pimp Hampton Style, which she’s editing, on the site is pretty tacky.)
According to Portfolio spokeswoman Perri Dorset, the website will be moved out of beta in September, when the second issue of the magazine comes out, and at that time several new features (she declined to say what they were) would also be rolled out.
The website’s advertising structure mimics the print magazine’s; according to Dorset, the website sold 10 packages “for this first beta testing” period, from April to September, and advertising for the fall is being sold now. “People are very interested,” she said.
Traffic information would not be available until September, Dorset said. According to Nielsen/NetRatings, the website did not hit Nielsen’s reporting threshold of 360,000 unique visitors in May. By comparison, neither did business-related websites like Dealbreaker.com and TraderDaily.com. More established sites include Forbes.com, which pulled in over 6.4 million uniques in May, while BusinessWeek Online had just over 2.3 million unique visitors, according to Nielsen/NetRatings.
5:45 PM ON WED JUN 27 2007
BY DOREE
3,235 views, 3 comments
The other day a friend from Utah sent me a clipping of a Robert Kirby column from the Salt Lake Tribune about a stake president’s directive that all home and visiting teaching is to be done in Sunday uniform, regardless of the day of the week or hour of the day, that is, white shirts and ties for men (no Dockers, please) and proper skirts for women (no denim, please).
The white shirt and tie uniform is definitely spreading. Here in Sammamish, Washington, my grandson, made a deacon a couple of weeks ago, had to lie out from passing the sacrament on his first Sunday because the white shirts his mother had ordered online hadn’t arrived yet.
I don’t suppose anything is to be done about the Sunday white shirt and tie rule. It appears to be a practice as deeply entrenched in the Mormon sense of ritual as making sure the concluding speaker in sacrament meeting is always a priesthood holder. However, a simple way of protesting the white shirt and tie directive for home teaching does occur to me. The head of a household need only to inform his or her home teachers that if they show up in Sunday best on a day that isn’t Sunday they aren’t welcome in that home. If they want to home teach that household, they need to look like they have some individuality.
I decided to take a break from a seemingly endless web site redesign by categorizing some hundreds of posts I wrote before the site had categories (something I’ve now abandoned in favor of writing this), and ran across one about Don Rumsfeld’s somewhat mystic approach to the War on Terra®. The subject was a briefly infamous memo in which Rumsfeld acknowledged that contrary to public declarations at the time, he, and presumably the administration, lacked the ability to either quantify success in The Long War or level with the public about it.
The wayback machines for our expedition into history are columns by Slate’s Fred Kaplan and Newsweek’s Eleanor Clift from October of 2003. Along the way we’ll stop in for a cuppa with our auld friend William “Jerry” Boykin — no relation to L. Paul “Jerry” Bremer, or Tom and “Jerry” — the then and current Deputy Under Secretary of Defense for Intelligence, best known for trotting around the country in uniform and telling church audiences that Islam is evil.
Although the whole memo is worth reading, most of what attention it received was focused on this excerpt:
Today, we lack metrics to know if we are winning or losing the global war on terror. Are we capturing, killing or deterring and dissuading more terrorists every day than the madrassas and the radical clerics are recruiting, training and deploying against us?
Does the US need to fashion a broad, integrated plan to stop the next generation of terrorists? The US is putting relatively little effort into a long-range plan, but we are putting a great deal of effort into trying to stop terrorists. The cost-benefit ratio is against us! Our cost is billions against the terrorists’ costs of millions.
Loosely translated, that means “We don’t have much of a plan and even if we did, we have no way of knowing whether it’s working or not.” Little has changed since then except that now we do have metrics and we know the “plan,” whether still imaginary or not, isn’t working especially well.
Kaplan’s reaction to what he said might be “the most important, even stunning official document yet to come out of this war” was focused on the chasm between the administration’s public statements and Rumsfeld’s more candid assessments and on the planning deficit.
Have you ever read a more pathetic federal document in your life? What is being stated here can be summed up as follows: We’ll probably win the battle for Afghanistan and Iraq (or, more precisely, it’s “pretty clear” we “can win” it, “in one way or another” after “a long, hard slog”), but we’re losing the struggle for hearts and minds in the broader war against terrorism. Not only that, we don’t know how to measure winning or losing, we don’t have a plan for winning it, we don’t know how to fashion a plan, and the bureaucratic agencies put in charge of waging this war and drawing up these plans may be inherently incapable of doing so.
[…]
What makes the Rumsfeld memo a major document, however, is that it confirms much of the news reporting coming out of Iraq—the same reporting that Bush officials (including Rumsfeld) have publicly derided as biased. NPR’s Deborah Amos reported Wednesday morning that Donald Evans, Bush’s secretary of commerce, came to Baghdad recently and admonished the American reporters there to start paying more attention to the good news about the occupation. “The American people have a far different view from the reality that we all know is here,” Amos quoted Evans as saying, “You should report what we’re really seeing.” How long had Evans been in Iraq? About 24 hours. Where did he sleep that night? In Kuwait.
Rumsfeld’s memo makes plain that our top officials suffer no illusions about the war. They are trying only to sell illusions to the rest of us. The leaking of Rumsfeld’s memo puts a tailspin on the sales pitch.
That tail has been spinning for quite some while now, but Kaplan’s astonishment at the time is understandable given the close proximity of the memo and VI Day.
Clift, writing the day after Kaplan, described the memo as “refreshing,” reiterated Kaplan’s concerns and added a bit of local color.
Rummy’s revelations are exquisitely timed. Just as Bush is complaining about the national press “filter,†along comes Mr. Filter himself with a sour assessment of the administration’s success in combating terrorism. This is classic Washington. You have to read the entrails. Did Rumsfeld intentionally leak this memo? Was he getting back at the White House for that little reorganization deal they pulled a few weeks ago that seemed to move him aside to make room at the top for Condoleezza Rice?
It’s hard to believe that Rumsfeld would go to these lengths to strike a bureaucratic blow at the White House. “He laid a giant turd on the front doorstep of all the happy talk,†says a Senate Republican aide. If Rumsfeld didn’t intend for this memo to get out, then it was a “revenge of the toes,†the aide speculates. “He stepped on so many toes that this was somebody’s way of getting back at him.â€
Apparently not much has changed in that regard either. Land sharks bearing turd-grams still abound, and to as little immediate practical effect now as then.
I’ll be dropping a note to Eric Brewer, our White House writer, to suggest a question for Tony Snow:
In October of 2003, Don Rumsfeld asked his top aides to consider whether the US needed “a broad, integrated plan to stop the next generation of terrorists.” Can you tell us whether the administration decided we do need that long-range plan and if so, what the elements of it are and whether it’s working?
If anyone has suggestions for other memo-related questions to Snow, or for that matter on any other subject, please drop them off in our “Ask The White House” section.
Lest we forget, here’s Clift on Boykin as an emblem of Rumsfeld’s arrogance management problem.
Rumsfeld’s handling of the controversy over remarks made by one of his top generals likening Islam to Satan crystallizes much of the problem. Bush had to spend valuable time on his Asian trip convincing leaders that Lt. Gen. William Boykin was not speaking for the U.S. government. Boykin is Rumsfeld’s point person on intelligence, a job that demands clear-eyed, hard-edged thinking free of ideological or religious bias. It’s no place for simplistic comparisons between good and evil.
In a speech that Boykin regularly gives, he tells the story of an aerial photo he took over Mogadishu that, when it was developed, revealed a black smudge over the city. Rather than accept the mark as a thumb print from whoever processed the film, Boykin became convinced that it was a sign of the evil hanging over the Somali city.
Lawd, lawd, deliver us from the Thumbprints of Evil. That is, as I mentioned earlier, our Deputy Under Secretary of Defense for Intelligence. I got a bad feeling about this plan …
At seven years of age, I’d barely progressed past trying not to pick my nose and eat it in public.
Come to think of it, I’ve only developed more stealthy ways of doing it.
Anyway,
Trip is 7 and he has a fuckin’ unreal band.
Check it.
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Coincidiendo con una caÃda de servidor de un par de dÃas, la web del script libre de foros de debate phpBB ha cambiado, casualmente, la estructura y el diseño de su página web. Están contentos, y no es para menos, porque un cambio, siempre que sea para mejor, es bienvenido. No me entusiasma demasiado el nuevo logotipo, y la web sigue la lÃnea de otros servicios similares, con un cuadrado con esquinas redondeadas y fondo con un color difuminado en la parte derecha con un enlace a la descarga de la última versión del script.
Muy bonito el cambio, y al menos algo nuevo en el universo phpBB, pero una web que se jacta de ser la del sistema de foros open-source más usado en Internet no puede seguir existiendo sin una versión en otro idioma que no sea el inglés. También el cambio es descafeinado puesto que todos los que usamos phpBB en alguna web sabemos que la versión 3.0 está en el horno desde tiempos inmemoriales, hartando al personal puesto que, si bien se trata de algo gratuito y por lo que no hay que exigir nada a nadie, clama al cielo que anunciaran tan pronto el inicio del desarrollo del 3.0 (Olympus, como ellos también lo llaman) y que aún no sepa cuándo *%&$@*! van a hacer pública la versión final de este script que ya anda por la beta número cinco (y contando). En la lÃnea del Windows Vista, ya puestos a dejar en evidencia al personal.
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Ewww…
At age seven, Andrew G was still dining,
On the fruit of his labours, nose-mining.
Now his method’s more stealthy
For this habit, most healthy,
So it’s payed off that those skills, he’s refining.
Jeffro, ive said this before but i’ll say it again, you are quite amazing, love your ‘anagrams of the day’ and limericks-i am very impressed and i do definitely appreciate your great comments,and im sure Andrew does too.
do you do an english course or something? or is it just a very cool talent, either way, keep up the god work!
and also, kudos on the new pic andrew-although now i sort of miss the serenity of the old one.
wish you well
xx f
aw how cute was that they are sweet i wish i joined a band at 7… ha ha see u later bye now