Photos: Masekos. Argentine design firm Masekos has a fresh take on the rolled fabric tied with a belt idea: their stool is made with natural wool felt mixed with fabric scraps in the middle, which give the item some color. The piece, which also works as a table thanks to the strength of the material, is of course easy to disassemble and reuse if you ever decide you’re done with it. With the same technique they’ve come up with a cute pencil cup which seems like an easy DIY p… Read the full story on TreeHugger
Continue reading …Photo: Sara Novak When I think back to the days of elementary school a few books remain crystal clear above the other hazy recollections. There’s that book report on Charlie and the Chocolate Factory and who could forget the Secret Garden ? But from kindergarten on up through high school, barely a moment was spent on environmental education. Now, a modern interpretation of these ethical ideals has begun molding the next generation into eco-savvy adults. E Is For Environment by Ian Ja… Read the full story on TreeHugger
Continue reading …As leaders prepare to discuss climate change at the World Economic Forum in Davos, some emerging nations say economic growth is a higher priority than emissions targets. (Jan. 27)
Continue reading …We’re still waiting to see just what the fallout for Hulu is going to be from the recent Comcast acquisition of NBC , and while many have feared that the cable company would try to kneecap Hulu to protect its market, a Wall Street Journal article has us wondering if maybe things could go a rather different way. The article, coming hot on the heels of Netflix posting promising Q4 results , suggests that Hulu management is considering transforming the purely on-demand service into more of a traditional cable network, offering “live” TV content in addition to the current archive of episodes. That could certainly give Comcast new life. Meanwhile, NBC, Disney, and News Corp., three companies that recently teamed up to speak out against FCC stipulations to the Comcast buyout, are apparently at odds regarding how much of what Hulu offers should be available to non-subscribers. There’s talk that Disney may pull some ABC content and News Corp. may pull some Fox content from Hulu’s free offerings, offering it instead on Netflix and other premium competitors. It all sounds a bit speculative at this point but, with cable subscriptions declining for the first time in years and online content viewership skyrocketing, it’s obvious that some changes are afoot. Hulu looking to become more like cable, at risk of losing some ABC and Fox content? originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 27 Jan 2011 08:21:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds . Permalink
Continue reading …Score one for a worker’s right to choose his own tie: a Chicago car salesman fired for wearing a Green Bay Packers tie to work has a new job at a rival Chevrolet dealership. John Stone says his former boss offered him his old job back after his firing made…
Continue reading …At their website, NPR tried to add to the controversy that CNN would dare to air Rep. Michele Bachmann offering a Tea Party response to Obama's State of the Union address, despite her “history of inflammatory remarks.” Reporter Corey Dade underlined that it could undermine CNN's image of neutrality, as if it wasn't a liberal network: “I can't figure how you can partner with a political action committee and claim to be neutral,” says Kelly McBride, who teaches media ethics at the Poynter Institute, a journalism training center. In an interview, Sam Feist, CNN's political director and vice president of Washington-based programming, said any suggestion that CNN couldn't cover the debate impartially is “ludicrous. It reveals a lack of understanding by the people bringing this up. Almost all debates are partnerships with other organizations. In every case, we maintain editorial control.” …Poynter's McBride said CNN made a “business decision. I have not talked to anyone at CNN about this, but when I see this decision I think this is a strategic play for Fox's audience”…. “It may gain credibility with a certain segment of the audience,” McBride said of politically conservative viewers, “but it undermines CNN's independence with a broader audience.” Dade interviewed more supportive voices — including leftists like Jay Rosen, who think potential GOP fissures are a big news story (and liberals always agree with that.) But he avoided any look at CNN's past alliances in debates. For example, in 2008, they co-sponsored a debate with the Congressional Black Caucus Institute. Does anyone remember the Poynter Institute objecting that this could bias CNN in favor of the Congressional Black Caucus? Or is Poynter just another liberal-media entity pretending to be objective? (It should be noted that this year, Anderson Cooper harped on how Rep. Eddie Bernice Johnson abused CBC's scholarship program to enrich aides and relatives.) Dade underlined some don't believe the Tea Party deserves any establishment respect: Some political strategists and media critics believe CNN helped legitimize what had been a nascent but disorganized assortment of local movements. Or, as Slate.com blogger Dave Weigel put it: “CNN has a longstanding romance with the Tea Party Express, the PAC that's putting on the Bachmann speech.” Weigel was referring to the Tea Party group's political action committee, which will partner with CNN to host a Republican presidential candidates' debate in September. The arrangement has left McBride and others saying CNN faces a conflict of interest by co-sponsoring an event with a political group that endorses and raises money for candidates whom CNN purports to cover without bias…. On her show Tuesday night, MSNBC host Rachel Maddow lambasted CNN's broadcast of the Bachmann speech as a “remarkable act of journalistic intervention to elevate, in effect, a group with which they are co-sponsoring a presidential debate.” CNN host Piers Morgan, whose new show competes with Maddow's in the same time slot, fired back in a tweet, dismissing her criticism as “nonsense.” “At roughly the same time Rachel Maddow was attacking CNN, Brian Williams at NBC was interviewing Michele Bachmann,” CNN's Feist said. “Was she also attacking Brian Williams and NBC?” Liberals would have been annoyed that Bachmann was interviewed, but it was the unedited broadcast of a Bachmann speech (slamming Obama harder than Paul Ryan did) that outraged them. Someone ought to ask Rachel Maddow if CNN's alliances with the Gay and Lesbian Alliance Against Defamation is a “remarkable act of journalistic intervention” as they've made incredibly one-sided documentaries like “Gary and Tony Have a Baby” and “Her Name Was Steven,” or if supportively touting GLAAD's purple ribbons and heavily promoting gay leftist Dan Savage's “It Gets Better” video campaign compromises their independence.
Continue reading …Peter Jackson has surgery for ulcer in New Zealand; Penelope Cruz and Javier Bardem have a son; Sean ‘Diddy’ Combs set to guest on ‘Hawaii Five-O.’ (Jan. 27)
Continue reading …Jon Stewart found plenty to poke fun at in President Obama’s State of the Union address—and the rebuttals. The Daily Show host homed in on Obama’s “Night of Too Many Promises,” specifically the president’s claim that now is a ” Sputnik moment .” “I’m with you!” said Stewart. “Where are we…
Continue reading …Hawaii’s governor never said he couldn’t find President Obama’s birth certificate, says the journalist who said otherwise last week . In fact, celebrity journalist Mike Evans now says that he hasn’t even talked to Gov. Neil Abercrombie since he took office. Evans’ excuse? Radio fatigue. “I was on 34 radio stations…
Continue reading …