Home » Posts tagged with » media (Page 127)
Bozell Column: Skipping Violent Talk on the Left

After the mass shooting in Tucson of Rep. Gabrielle Giffords, a federal judge, and other bystanders, President Obama gave one of those unite-the-divide speeches that give journalists leg thrills. We need to “sharpen our instincts for empathy,” he said. He lamented political finger-pointing: “It's important for us to pause for a moment and make sure that we are talking with each other in a way that heals, not a way that wounds.” The initial speculation was that conservatives were responsible for the Tucson horror. Even after this proved to be false, the attacks were relentless, with a barrage of media reports on the alleged excesses and mean-spiritedness of the Tea Party and all things right of center.

Continue reading …
Wales fan dies following crowd trouble outside Wembley

• Trouble flares prior to qualifier between England and Wales • Metropolitan police confirm murder investigation is under way Police have launched a murder investigation after a Wales supporter aged 44 died when trouble flared before the Euro 2012 qualifier with England at Wembley. The man was taken to hospital with serious head injuries, after having suffered a heart attack. Emergency services were called to the concourse outside the stadium at about 7.20pm on Tuesday night. The man was pronounced dead at 8.50pm. Six people have been arrested in connection with the incident. A Metropolitan police spokesman said the victim and the suspects were Wales fans. A London ambulance service spokesman said: “I can confirm that LAS got a call at 7.20pm to reports of an assault outside Wembley Stadium. Staff treated a 44-year-old man who had suffered a cardiac arrest. Extensive efforts were made to resuscitate the patient and he was taken to hospital.” Staff on standby at the international match, which England won 1-0, were on the scene within three minutes, the spokesman said. The victim was taken to a north London hospital in an ambulance belonging to a private medical contractor employed by Wembley. He was pronounced dead at 8.50pm. A postmortem examination will be arranged in due course. Police believe they have identified the victim but await formal confirmation that all his next of kin have been informed. Officers from the Met’s homicide and serious crime command are now investigating his death. Cardiff City released a statement to confirm that the deceased was a supporter of the club. “Late on Tuesday night, details reached us concerning a tragedy where a Wales and Cardiff City supporter died at the match between England and Wales,” the statement read. “Out of respect for the family of the supporter, the sensitivity of the situation and until full details and circumstances are ascertained, no statements will be made until deemed fit by proper channels.” The death of fans in violence in or outside grounds is a comparatively rare phenomenon. In 2010, a football fan from Darwen, Lancashire died after appearing to head a bin thrown by a fan during Stoke City’s match with Blackburn Rovers at the Britannia Stadium. An Aston Villa steward died in 2003 during a running battle between more than 100 rival hooligans after a game between Villa and Queens Park Rangers. 1985 was said to be when football reached its lowest point in England. At a Second Division game, Leeds and Birmingham fans clashed before, during and after the match, ripping up St Andrews and killing a 14-year-old-year old fan when a wall collapsed on top of him. On 24 August 1974, 17-year-old Blackpool fan, Kevin Olsson, was stabbed to death at the back of the Spion Kop, Bloomfield Road at Blackpool’s home match with Bolton Wanderers. In 2009, Blackpool supporters raised money for a memorial plaque for Olsson. In August of that year, on the 35th anniversary of his death, the plaque was unveiled beside the club shop. Football violence Wales London Crime Dominic Fifield guardian.co.uk

Continue reading …
THX Media Director coming to Star Wars Blu-ray discs

While you were tastefully voicing your concerns over the latest changes to the original trilogy, THX exec Rick Dean let slip that the upcoming Star Wars Blu-ray release will feature the company’s new Media Director. The technology offers up metadata on the disc, allowing THX Media Director-enabled home theater devices like TVs and Blu-ray players to adjust to the appropriate settings. The decision to offer up the technology for the Star Wars release first is all about “keeping it in the family” for Lucasfilm, says Dean — because if there’s one thing Star Wars knows, it’s keeping it in the family, right? The Blu-ray release is set to September 16th. THX Media Director coming to Star Wars Blu-ray discs originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 06 Sep 2011 19:08:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds . Permalink

Continue reading …
Mitt Romney Compares Unions Making Campaign Donations to a ‘Form of Corruption’

Click here to view this media Mitt Romney has come under fire for his statements saying that right-to-work laws should remain a state issue , even though, as he reiterated here during Sen. Jim DeMint’s GOP Presidential Forum, he said that he would sign a national right-to-work law if it came across his desk as President. Romney has also previously had some praise for unions , making similar statements to the one here where he said “unions play an important role in our country.” Apparently Romney doesn’t think much of that role if you’re either talking about government worker’s unions, or heaven forbid unions being allowed to have any influence over our politicians and making campaign donations. Jim DeMint explained what the Republican Party’s real issue with unions being involved in our politics is with the way he framed this question to Mitt Romney — they support Democratic politicians. And of course with all of the corporate money pouring into Republican campaign coffers these days after the Citizens United ruling, no one in the Republican Party wants to see anything remaining to balance that on the left. Romney said he was concerned about anyone in union leadership being allowed to make decisions for their membership as to who they make campaign donations to, but he doesn’t share that concern for the all of the workers in America of varying political affiliations that have their bosses and CEO’s making decisions about which politicians to donate to, or that corporations being allowed to buy off our politicians might also be “almost like a form of corruption.” No, that’s just free speech in Romney-GOP world. And his criticism of unions and closed shops of course does not address what open shops and these so-called right-to-work laws really are. They are nothing more than a way to bust unions financially because when someone opts out of paying their union dues, those unions are still forced to represent those workers. They’re allowed to reap the benefits of union membership without any of the costs for those protections. Republicans seem fine with the idea of democracy when it comes to electing our politicians and citizens who did not vote for those politicians having to live with the results of their actions. They don’t think so highly of democracy in the workplace, where if a majority of the workers want to join a union, they get a union and once that union is in place, everyone contributes to pay for the benefits and wages that are negotiated for them. And where if they don’t like the decisions or the actions of the leaders that their union puts in place, they’re free to vote them out during the next election, just as we are when we don’t like the way our politicians behave. The GOP has decided that they were going to do an all out assault on labor unions this year, which isn’t working out that terribly well for them in places like Wisconsin and Ohio. It appears Romney has decided that it’s a good idea to follow their lead. Let’s hope it doesn’t play too well for him either if he does end up being their presidential nominee. Given Romney’s propensity for flip-flopping on issues when it suits him politically, I won’t be shocked to see him try to backtrack from some of these statements later. Transcript via CNN : DEMINT: Mitt, thanks for being here. Let’s start talking about unions. For me it’s becoming one of the biggest issues that we’re dealing with on the federal level because there’s such an insidious relationship between unions and the Democrat Party. The president and the Democrats are trying to expand government unions at the state and the federal level because of the political support that comes back and we seeing the difficulty at the state level to make the reforms and cut back because of the resistance of government unions. Where are you on unions? And I’ll put it in this context, there’s a federal law right now that requires an American to join a union if their work place is unionized. It’s only if your state opts out of that law that your people are free not to join a union. And there are 22 states that have opted out, but there’s still a federal law that requires Americans to join unions and we have legislation at the federal level to repeal that with a federal right to work law. I understand that you’ve said that’s a state issue and the federal government shouldn’t be involved. But the federal government is involved because they have the law that requires that. Where are you on the federal right to work? And what is your opinion about government unions at the federal and state level? ROMNEY: First of all, what I said was if a right to work piece of legislation reached my desk at the federal level I would sign it. DEMINT: OK. ROMNEY: And the right course I believe politically at this stage is to have states carry out their own right to work legislation. And as you know, right to work states, those 22 have created three million jobs over the last 10 years. The union states have lost about half a million jobs. So right to work is the way to go if you want good jobs. That’s number one. Government unions — and unions play an important role in our country and can be — the Carpenter’s union, for instance, trains their people in ways to provide good services when people want to compare in a fair basis, that’s great. When the government has people in unions, it presents a particular problem and there are a couple of ways it presents a problem in my view. When unions are allowed to collect money from members, and then one person, the chief executive of that union could give that to whichever candidate they want, that’s simply a violation of the personal rights of that individual, and that shouldn’t be allowed. And number two, I really have the problem with the idea that one person is able to collect money from all their members and then give it to a party or an individual who that person made them be the one that decided on matters of legislation directing that union. It’s almost like a form of corruption. I’ve got all this money I’m going to elect the person to give me what I want. So the power of unions in influence elections is a real problem and the place I would address it is with legislation saying that individual union members may not have money taken out of their paycheck to go into funds, which can then be directed by an individual in a way that might be different than what they would have preferred themselves. That should not be allowed.

Continue reading …

This morning Tammy Baldwin officially announced her candidacy for the Wisconsin Senate seat being vacated by Herb Kohl. If you haven’t already seen the announcement video, you should: Tammy already has the boots on the ground – now she needs capital. Will you join us in endorsing Tammy Baldwin by giving something to her campaign today? Because of her outstanding record in the House, Blue America immediately endorsed her Senate campaign– just minutes after her announcement. And this isn’t just a matter of a terrible alternative– a whole gang of conservatives vying for the seat. Tammy is a proven progressive leader who doesn’t hesitate to take the right stands, whether that means opposing Bush when he’s wrong… or opposing Obama when he’s wrong. She has been a consistent leader in ending the occupations of Iraq and Afghanistan and she’s been a consistent leader in standing up for working families against the excesses of Big Business. Because she’s the first woman to have ever won a congressional seat from Wisconsin and the first openly gay person to campaign and win a House seat, Tammy is an historic figure. I imagine her presence in the Senate could be especially discomforting to right-wing hypocrites Lindsay Graham and Mitch McConnell, while she serves as a model for progressives across the country. If Wisconsin Democrats need an inspiring figure near the top of their ticket, they couldn’t hope for a better one than Tammy Baldwin! Wisconsin is the epicenter of the progressive grassroots movement, with organizing on the ground ready and able to take on the machine.  Tammy is a known leader among them and they will work their hearts out for her. But they will need our help — the Koch Brothers aren’t going to abandon their stake in the state and the Republicans who serve them will do everything to prevent a Democrat seizing the seat. Over 400 Blue America donors have contributed to each of the Senate campaigns of Bernie Sanders and Elizabeth Warren. Please consider giving that kind of enthusiastic support to Tammy Baldwin as well. It would be hard to imagine that there will be any other candidates on this page this year.

Continue reading …
Perry’s Gun Control Policy: ‘Use Both Hands’

Click here to view this media Republican presidential candidate Rick Perry delighted a conservative audience in South Carolina Monday with his simple stance on gun control legislation. “Honestly, the next question is so easy that I don’t even want to ask it,” event host Rep. Tim Scott (R-SC) told Perry. “Are you for gun control?” “I am actually for gun control,” Perry deadpanned. “Use both hands.” The Texas governor followed his joke by flashing a toothy grin and giving the audience a thumbs up.

Continue reading …

In what it’s describing as a “WORLD EXCLUSIVE” (this is big news, people), MediaTakeOut is reporting that the rounded belly Beyonce debuted to the world at the MTV VMAs may have in fact been a fake. Oh, the singer is definitely pregnant, but according to a “TOP INDUSTRY INSIDER,” she’s…

Continue reading …

Is Groupon the future of financial aid? Probably not, but National Louis University is taking the site for a spin, offering prospective grad students almost 60% off its introduction to teaching course, the Chicago Tribune reports. The course is specifically designed for Groupon, and assumes students have no prior teaching…

Continue reading …
Engadget HD Podcast 264 – 09.06.2011

This week’s podcast was recorded on a holiday, squeezed between IFA last week and CEDIA this week. Of course, all those balls in the air gave us plenty to talk about, not the least of which included definitive word on the status of Media Center in Windows 8. DirecTV’s new UI in testing and latest channel addition also made for interesting discussion as well as expansions internationally by Hulu and Netflix. IFA dumped some unexpected 3D hardware in our laps in the form of Toshiba’s ZL2 and Sony’s HMZ-T1 — we’ll see which one is the bigger draw this holiday season. We’ve got all that and plenty more so before you sit down to watch the NFL kick off later this week, press play and give us a listen. Get the podcast [ iTunes ] Subscribe to the Podcast directly in iTunes (MP3). [ RSS - AAC] Enhanced feed, subscribe to this with iTunes. [ RSS - MP3] Add the Engadget HD Podcast feed to your RSS aggregator [ Zune ] Subscribe to the Podcast directly in the Zune Marketplace [ MP3 ] Download the show (MP3). Host s : Ben Drawbaugh ( @bjdraw ), Richard Lawler ( @rjcc ) Producer : Trent Wolbe 00:02:05 – Microsoft confirms Media Center will be in Windows 8 00:10:09 – DirecTV’s new HD UI revealed to testers, is prettier and faster than the current one 00:16:03 – DirecTV adds AMC-HD next week, too bad Mad Men is still six months away 00:22:09 – Dish Network’s Tailgater brings you portable satellite TV, won’t cool your beer (video) 00:24:45 – Dish reportedly launching Blockbuster movie streaming service next month 00:28:25 – Starz ends renewal negotiations with Netflix, will pull movies from streaming in February 00:39:58 – Hulu launches streaming in Japan for about $20 US monthly 00:46:35 – Netflix lands in Brazil, 43 other Latin American countries within the week 00:47:25 – Sony’s new internet TV box, projector and Blu-ray player make an appearance at IFA 00:51:00 – Haier’s mind control TV prototype hits IFA, we go foreheads-on (video) 00:52:47 – Sony’s head-mounted 3D visor is real, HMZ-T1 arrives in Japan November 11th 00:57:47 – Sony HMZ-T1 headset hits IFA, we go hands-on (video) 00:59:03 – Toshiba’s glasses free 3D TV launches in Europe as the ZL2 this December 01:02:09 – Must See HDTV (September 5th – 11th) Hear the podcast LISTEN (MP3) LISTEN (AAC) Engadget HD Podcast 264 – 09.06.2011 originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 06 Sep 2011 16:34:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds . Permalink

Continue reading …
George Osborne to stick to austerity plans despite double-dip fears

Chancellor admits damage caused by credit crunch is forcing him to revise down already weak estimates for growth George Osborne insisted that the government would stick unwaveringly to its austerity plans, despite admitting that the long-term damage caused to the economy by the credit crunch was forcing him to revise down estimates for growth that were already weak. Raising fresh concerns that the UK is slipping towards a double-dip recession, the chancellor said Britain’s broken economic model meant there could be no return to “business as usual” and signalled that he would resist growing domestic and international pressure to boost activity by cutting taxes or slowing the pace of public spending cuts. Finance ministers and central bank governors from the G7 group of industrial nations are likely to call for fresh measures to stimulate growth when they meet in Marseilles this weekend following warnings this week from the International Monetary Fund and the World Bank of the dangers of seeking to cut budget deficits too hard. But the chancellor said the coalition had no intention of rethinking its tax and spending plans, and instead dropped a broad hint that he expected the Bank of England to take action against growing recessionary pressures with a second round of the electronic money creation process known as quantitative easing. His comments came on a fresh day of turbulence in the financial markets, which saw the Swiss central bank prompt fears of global currency wars when it stepped in to halt the franc’s rise against the euro. The shadow chancellor, Ed Balls, said Osborne was in denial about the damage being caused to the UK by increases in VAT and the toughest curbs on spending since the 1970s. Following a run of downbeat economic data, Osborne acknowledged that he would have to cut his forecast of UK growth when he delivers his autumn statement to parliament on 29 November, blaming the necessity for the fourth downgrade since the coalition came to power 16 months ago on the government’s legacy from Labour. Recoveries from financial crises were slower and choppier than recoveries from other types of recession, Osborne said. “So, while we have all had to revise down our short-term expectations over recent weeks, the only people who should be fundamentally re-examining their view of the world are those who thought that this time was different.” The chancellor will be discussing the slowdown in the global economy and plans for deficit reduction with the IMF’s Christine Lagarde on Friday before flying off to the G7 meeting. Both Lagarde and the president of the World Bank, Robert Zoellick, have issued strong statements this week about the risks that the recovery from the recession of 2008-09 is at risk of being aborted. Zoellick, speaking on Bloomberg TV, said: “We are moving into a dangerous period.” He also warned that the drive to cut national deficits across Europe could sink the region’s economic recovery. “Sometimes people hope that you can muddle through by providing financing and liquidity … they now recognise that’s not going to happen and instead what you see is with some of the weaker economies, that the austerity policies are pushing them into slower and slower growth and so this could be a downward spiral.” The United Nations has added its voice to the international organisations expressing concerns about the outlook for the world economy. Heiner Flassbeck, a former German finance minister and the director of the UN Conference on Trade and Development’s globalisation and development division, said the current economic situation was “extremely dangerous”. Speaking to AFP, Flassbeck said: “The best that could happen if we do nothing at this moment of time in the world economy is that we are looking [at] two lost decades, Japanese-like, in stagnation and deflation.” Most City firms believe that the economy – which has grown by 0.2% in the nine months to June – will continue to struggle. HSBC, one of Britain’s biggest banks, predicted yesterday that national output would expand by 1.1% in 2011 and 1.3% in 2012, the slowest recovery from recession since the second world war. Weak surveys for manufacturing, construction and services in the past week have increased the pressure on the Treasury and the Bank of England to provide a boost to growth, but Osborne said his strategy had ensured Britain had remained insulated from the sovereign debt crisis affecting other nations. “We had an emergency budget last summer on our own terms – not this summer on the market’s terms – unlike so many other countries. We have been ahead of the curve. We have been a safe haven in the sovereign debt storm. We have delivered record low interest rates for families, businesses and taxpayers. We can remain masters of our own destiny.” Osborne said ministers had always understood there could never be a return to the “business as usual” conditions that existed before the 2007 financial crisis. “We understood right from the beginning that the world of the boom years had changed beyond recognition,” he said. “We identified the problems and the risks – an overleveraged economy, an unsustainable budget deficit and a broken model of growth.” Balls said Britain faced a growth crisis. “Without strong growth and more people in work it will be harder to get the deficit down. That’s why we urgently need leadership from the chancellor on the world stage to agree a global plan for growth and a more balanced deficit plan here in Britain.” George Osborne Economic policy Ed Balls Recession Economic growth (GDP) Credit crunch Market turmoil Financial crisis Global recession Economics Nicholas Watt Larry Elliott guardian.co.uk

Continue reading …