Friday, October 15, 2010

Help Making Money

and willowy blondes only take you so far, it turns out. Malefactors are punished. The universe is restored to balance.


This time, Gekko is a repentant father longing to make amends to win his daughter’s approval who also essentially steals a fortune from her to get back in the game.


Gekko is a humble reformed crook who has paid his debt to society and also a sleek alpha male puffing on a phallic cigar who can’t wait to gloat about his prowess at making money.


Gekko is a teacher who shares his knowledge. At times, one could swear that one had wandered into a parallel universe version of An Inconvenient Truth, as Gekko lectures us on the hazards of leverage and financial meltdown. Particularly priceless is when he calls a group of young students “ninjas”—no income, no job, no assets—adding, “You have a lot to look forward to.” But the same guy who observes that the mother of all evil is speculation turns up later in the film dressed in a power suit and giddy over his ability to turn $100 million into $1 billion. I don’t think he earned it at $25 an hour; leverage must have figured in there somewhere.


If we fast-forward 23 years to Wall Street: Money Never Sleeps, we are treated to a curiously different kind of moral equation, the morality of “and also” rather than “either or.”





In the new film, Gordon Gekko is a humble reformed crook who has paid his debt to society and also a sleek alpha male who can’t wait to gloat about his prowess at making money. (20th Century Fox)


This “and also” value system also comes across in Gekko’s attitude to innovation. He is clearly cynical about clean tech and derides the “fusion delusion” as the next bubble. In his words, “the only green is money.” Yet at the end of the film, he gives $100 million away to support alternative energy and do something “good” with his money.


• Randall Lane: Wall Street on Wall Street

• Randall Lane: Gordon Gekko’s Secret Revealed
The film’s title may hold its final moral clue. If money never sleeps, then can greed not be far behind, even in these pinched times? No one in the film seems to be hurting for nice apartments and clothes, for example, even with a financial meltdown that has come from “the mother of all bubbles.” As Gekko himself puts it, “Greed got greedier with a little envy thrown in.”


So we’d all like to find a little absolution in these troubled times, and in fact in the end Gekko’s daughter does melt and forgive him, while we on the other hand—adding up all the “and alsos”—don’t know whether to follow suit.


This “and also” value system comes across in Gekko’s attitude to innovation. He is cynical about clean tech, yet in the end, he gives $100 million to support alternative energy.


Gordon, make up your mind. Maybe a little therapy would help.


Dubbed "Mr. Creativity" by The Economist, John Kao is a contributing editor at The Daily Beast and an adviser to both public and private sector leaders. He is chairman of the Institute for Large Scale Innovation, whose i20 group is an association of national innovation "czars." He wrote Jamming: The Art and Discipline of Business Creativity, a BusinessWeek bestseller, and Innovation Nation. He is also a Tony-nominated producer of film and stage.


Get a head start with the Morning Scoop email. It's your Cheat Sheet with must reads from across the Web. Get it.


For inquiries, please contact The Daily Beast at editorial@thedailybeast.com.









After the coffee. Before deciding if Brett Favre should just quit now.


The Skinny: The Jets beat the Vikings. Oh wait, you're not here for that. Universal has a dilemma on its hands and it's apparently no laughing matter. Lions Gate makes a final run at MGM. Blockbuster is on the hunt for a new CEO and the Weinstein Co. has some new money to play with.


Lions Gate wants to play spoiler. Lions Gate is making a last-ditch run at merging with Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer after that ailing studio already unveiled its plan for Spyglass Entertainment principals Roger Birnbaum and Gary Barber to run the company. That still needs approval by MGM's lenders, and votes are due Oct. 22. The move by Lions Gate is seen as defensive and an effort to keep Carl Icahn, the activist investor who is waging a hostile takeover effort for the production company. But Icahn has been accumulating debt in MGM and has indicated he would support such a merger. More on the never-ending saga from the Los Angeles Times.


Help wanted. Blockbuster Inc., the video store chain that was once the dominant player in the home entertainment business, will look to hire a new chief executive when it emerges from bankruptcy, which the company filed for a few weeks ago. The Wall Street Journal reports that Blockbuster has hired an executive search firm to find a replacement for Jim  Keyes, who may be gone before the end of the year.


Cash infusion. The Weinstein Co., the production company headed by Harvey and Bob Weinstein, got a much-needed investment from billionaire Len Blavatnik. The plan calls for Blavatnik to plunk money into a three-year film fund for a slate of movies with budgets of between $5 million and $20 million. He could end up investing as much as $100 million with the Weinsteins. Per the agreement, the Weinstein Co. will release the films here and in Canada and also control rights in Australia, Germany and France. Blavatnik's U.K.-based production, distribution and foreign sales company, Icon Entertainment, will oversee all other international markets. Details from Deadline Hollywood and the Los Angeles Times.


They can open their own e-mails. The Daily Beast looks at who the most "tech savvy" chief executive is in the media business. As usual, a line said first by Sirius XM chief Mel Karmazin is credited to outgoing NBC chief executive Jeff Zucker about trading analog dollars for digital dimes. Among the findings: Disney boss Bob Iger is savvy and Viacom's Philippe Dauman is not so savvy. No word on how savvy Brett Favre is.


Add them up. With more ways to watch shows whenever and wherever we want, the good news is it is really hard to miss an episode of a program unless you just don't want to see it. The downside is the networks are still primarily getting paid for those people who watch a show on television when it airs in its time period. "There’s a widening gap between ratings and the actual number of people watching," writes Joe Adalian in New York magazine. The TV industry and Nielsen, which measures ratings, need to do a better job of tracking all the viewing that is going on. Just as important, while devices such as the digital video recorder make it easier for consumers watch their favorite shows when they want to, advertisers and networks are wary of ad-skipping. CBS research guru David Poltrack and the rest of the networks are already working on a way to have their cake and eat it too, as the Los Angeles Times notes.


Late to the game? The controversy over a joke from the upcoming Universal Pictures/Ron Howard comedy "The Dilemma," in which Vince Vaughn's character says electric cars are gay (before then explaining he doesn't mean gay in the homosexual sense) is not fading away even after the scene was cut from the trailer and may be yanked from the movie. The Hollywood Reporter says a side story may be whether the Gay & Lesbian Alliance Against Defamation (GLADD) was a little slow on responding to the issue. 


Is your boss on this list? Glass Lewis & Co., a financial advisory firm, has come up with its list of the most overpaid chief executives. On top is Yahoo Chief Executive Carol Bartz, whose 2009 package was valued at almost $40 million. Glass Lewis looks at stock price, operating cash flow and growth in per-share earnings to figure out who it thinks is ripping off shareholders. More on the list from Bloomberg and the New York Post.


Inside the Los Angeles Times: Patrick Goldstein on the controversy surrounding "The Dilemma." Starz Media is selling Film Roman, the animation company whose credits include "The Simpsons" to a group investors that includes Scott Greenberg, a former head of the studio. Iosono Inc. wants to change the way we hear movies.


-- Joe Flint


Follow me on Twitter before it's too late. Twitter.com/JBFlint




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Fox <b>News</b>&#39; Brian Kilmeade: “All Terrorists Are Muslim” « Oliver Willis

18 Responses to “Fox News' Brian Kilmeade: “All Terrorists Are Muslim””. Jay says: October 15, 2010 at 9:13 am. Of course, anybody with a rational mind could understand that Kilmeade was specifically talking about 9/11 and was saying ...

Fox <b>News</b> Remains Far Ahead Of Cable <b>News</b> Competition During Pre <b>...</b>

Fox News Channel finished #4 in prime time on all of cable (total viewers) last week - the week before their ratings are likely to increase even further thanks to the miner rescue coverage. Here's a look at the rest of cable news:

Public Address | Hard <b>News</b>

If Len Brown – cleverly claiming the mantle of Mayor Robbie – can help make that experience possible across more of the big news, city, he'll have done a good thing. View Gallery � View Printable � Link to this Post � Send Feedback to ...


benchcraft company portland or
and willowy blondes only take you so far, it turns out. Malefactors are punished. The universe is restored to balance.


This time, Gekko is a repentant father longing to make amends to win his daughter’s approval who also essentially steals a fortune from her to get back in the game.


Gekko is a humble reformed crook who has paid his debt to society and also a sleek alpha male puffing on a phallic cigar who can’t wait to gloat about his prowess at making money.


Gekko is a teacher who shares his knowledge. At times, one could swear that one had wandered into a parallel universe version of An Inconvenient Truth, as Gekko lectures us on the hazards of leverage and financial meltdown. Particularly priceless is when he calls a group of young students “ninjas”—no income, no job, no assets—adding, “You have a lot to look forward to.” But the same guy who observes that the mother of all evil is speculation turns up later in the film dressed in a power suit and giddy over his ability to turn $100 million into $1 billion. I don’t think he earned it at $25 an hour; leverage must have figured in there somewhere.


If we fast-forward 23 years to Wall Street: Money Never Sleeps, we are treated to a curiously different kind of moral equation, the morality of “and also” rather than “either or.”





In the new film, Gordon Gekko is a humble reformed crook who has paid his debt to society and also a sleek alpha male who can’t wait to gloat about his prowess at making money. (20th Century Fox)


This “and also” value system also comes across in Gekko’s attitude to innovation. He is clearly cynical about clean tech and derides the “fusion delusion” as the next bubble. In his words, “the only green is money.” Yet at the end of the film, he gives $100 million away to support alternative energy and do something “good” with his money.


• Randall Lane: Wall Street on Wall Street

• Randall Lane: Gordon Gekko’s Secret Revealed
The film’s title may hold its final moral clue. If money never sleeps, then can greed not be far behind, even in these pinched times? No one in the film seems to be hurting for nice apartments and clothes, for example, even with a financial meltdown that has come from “the mother of all bubbles.” As Gekko himself puts it, “Greed got greedier with a little envy thrown in.”


So we’d all like to find a little absolution in these troubled times, and in fact in the end Gekko’s daughter does melt and forgive him, while we on the other hand—adding up all the “and alsos”—don’t know whether to follow suit.


This “and also” value system comes across in Gekko’s attitude to innovation. He is cynical about clean tech, yet in the end, he gives $100 million to support alternative energy.


Gordon, make up your mind. Maybe a little therapy would help.


Dubbed "Mr. Creativity" by The Economist, John Kao is a contributing editor at The Daily Beast and an adviser to both public and private sector leaders. He is chairman of the Institute for Large Scale Innovation, whose i20 group is an association of national innovation "czars." He wrote Jamming: The Art and Discipline of Business Creativity, a BusinessWeek bestseller, and Innovation Nation. He is also a Tony-nominated producer of film and stage.


Get a head start with the Morning Scoop email. It's your Cheat Sheet with must reads from across the Web. Get it.


For inquiries, please contact The Daily Beast at editorial@thedailybeast.com.









After the coffee. Before deciding if Brett Favre should just quit now.


The Skinny: The Jets beat the Vikings. Oh wait, you're not here for that. Universal has a dilemma on its hands and it's apparently no laughing matter. Lions Gate makes a final run at MGM. Blockbuster is on the hunt for a new CEO and the Weinstein Co. has some new money to play with.


Lions Gate wants to play spoiler. Lions Gate is making a last-ditch run at merging with Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer after that ailing studio already unveiled its plan for Spyglass Entertainment principals Roger Birnbaum and Gary Barber to run the company. That still needs approval by MGM's lenders, and votes are due Oct. 22. The move by Lions Gate is seen as defensive and an effort to keep Carl Icahn, the activist investor who is waging a hostile takeover effort for the production company. But Icahn has been accumulating debt in MGM and has indicated he would support such a merger. More on the never-ending saga from the Los Angeles Times.


Help wanted. Blockbuster Inc., the video store chain that was once the dominant player in the home entertainment business, will look to hire a new chief executive when it emerges from bankruptcy, which the company filed for a few weeks ago. The Wall Street Journal reports that Blockbuster has hired an executive search firm to find a replacement for Jim  Keyes, who may be gone before the end of the year.


Cash infusion. The Weinstein Co., the production company headed by Harvey and Bob Weinstein, got a much-needed investment from billionaire Len Blavatnik. The plan calls for Blavatnik to plunk money into a three-year film fund for a slate of movies with budgets of between $5 million and $20 million. He could end up investing as much as $100 million with the Weinsteins. Per the agreement, the Weinstein Co. will release the films here and in Canada and also control rights in Australia, Germany and France. Blavatnik's U.K.-based production, distribution and foreign sales company, Icon Entertainment, will oversee all other international markets. Details from Deadline Hollywood and the Los Angeles Times.


They can open their own e-mails. The Daily Beast looks at who the most "tech savvy" chief executive is in the media business. As usual, a line said first by Sirius XM chief Mel Karmazin is credited to outgoing NBC chief executive Jeff Zucker about trading analog dollars for digital dimes. Among the findings: Disney boss Bob Iger is savvy and Viacom's Philippe Dauman is not so savvy. No word on how savvy Brett Favre is.


Add them up. With more ways to watch shows whenever and wherever we want, the good news is it is really hard to miss an episode of a program unless you just don't want to see it. The downside is the networks are still primarily getting paid for those people who watch a show on television when it airs in its time period. "There’s a widening gap between ratings and the actual number of people watching," writes Joe Adalian in New York magazine. The TV industry and Nielsen, which measures ratings, need to do a better job of tracking all the viewing that is going on. Just as important, while devices such as the digital video recorder make it easier for consumers watch their favorite shows when they want to, advertisers and networks are wary of ad-skipping. CBS research guru David Poltrack and the rest of the networks are already working on a way to have their cake and eat it too, as the Los Angeles Times notes.


Late to the game? The controversy over a joke from the upcoming Universal Pictures/Ron Howard comedy "The Dilemma," in which Vince Vaughn's character says electric cars are gay (before then explaining he doesn't mean gay in the homosexual sense) is not fading away even after the scene was cut from the trailer and may be yanked from the movie. The Hollywood Reporter says a side story may be whether the Gay & Lesbian Alliance Against Defamation (GLADD) was a little slow on responding to the issue. 


Is your boss on this list? Glass Lewis & Co., a financial advisory firm, has come up with its list of the most overpaid chief executives. On top is Yahoo Chief Executive Carol Bartz, whose 2009 package was valued at almost $40 million. Glass Lewis looks at stock price, operating cash flow and growth in per-share earnings to figure out who it thinks is ripping off shareholders. More on the list from Bloomberg and the New York Post.


Inside the Los Angeles Times: Patrick Goldstein on the controversy surrounding "The Dilemma." Starz Media is selling Film Roman, the animation company whose credits include "The Simpsons" to a group investors that includes Scott Greenberg, a former head of the studio. Iosono Inc. wants to change the way we hear movies.


-- Joe Flint


Follow me on Twitter before it's too late. Twitter.com/JBFlint




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Fox <b>News</b>&#39; Brian Kilmeade: “All Terrorists Are Muslim” « Oliver Willis

18 Responses to “Fox News' Brian Kilmeade: “All Terrorists Are Muslim””. Jay says: October 15, 2010 at 9:13 am. Of course, anybody with a rational mind could understand that Kilmeade was specifically talking about 9/11 and was saying ...

Fox <b>News</b> Remains Far Ahead Of Cable <b>News</b> Competition During Pre <b>...</b>

Fox News Channel finished #4 in prime time on all of cable (total viewers) last week - the week before their ratings are likely to increase even further thanks to the miner rescue coverage. Here's a look at the rest of cable news:

Public Address | Hard <b>News</b>

If Len Brown – cleverly claiming the mantle of Mayor Robbie – can help make that experience possible across more of the big news, city, he'll have done a good thing. View Gallery � View Printable � Link to this Post � Send Feedback to ...


benchcraft company portland or

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Operation Squeegee: Help Make a Difference by Siara Lorefield


benchcraft company portland or

Fox <b>News</b>&#39; Brian Kilmeade: “All Terrorists Are Muslim” « Oliver Willis

18 Responses to “Fox News' Brian Kilmeade: “All Terrorists Are Muslim””. Jay says: October 15, 2010 at 9:13 am. Of course, anybody with a rational mind could understand that Kilmeade was specifically talking about 9/11 and was saying ...

Fox <b>News</b> Remains Far Ahead Of Cable <b>News</b> Competition During Pre <b>...</b>

Fox News Channel finished #4 in prime time on all of cable (total viewers) last week - the week before their ratings are likely to increase even further thanks to the miner rescue coverage. Here's a look at the rest of cable news:

Public Address | Hard <b>News</b>

If Len Brown – cleverly claiming the mantle of Mayor Robbie – can help make that experience possible across more of the big news, city, he'll have done a good thing. View Gallery � View Printable � Link to this Post � Send Feedback to ...


benchcraft company portland or
and willowy blondes only take you so far, it turns out. Malefactors are punished. The universe is restored to balance.


This time, Gekko is a repentant father longing to make amends to win his daughter’s approval who also essentially steals a fortune from her to get back in the game.


Gekko is a humble reformed crook who has paid his debt to society and also a sleek alpha male puffing on a phallic cigar who can’t wait to gloat about his prowess at making money.


Gekko is a teacher who shares his knowledge. At times, one could swear that one had wandered into a parallel universe version of An Inconvenient Truth, as Gekko lectures us on the hazards of leverage and financial meltdown. Particularly priceless is when he calls a group of young students “ninjas”—no income, no job, no assets—adding, “You have a lot to look forward to.” But the same guy who observes that the mother of all evil is speculation turns up later in the film dressed in a power suit and giddy over his ability to turn $100 million into $1 billion. I don’t think he earned it at $25 an hour; leverage must have figured in there somewhere.


If we fast-forward 23 years to Wall Street: Money Never Sleeps, we are treated to a curiously different kind of moral equation, the morality of “and also” rather than “either or.”





In the new film, Gordon Gekko is a humble reformed crook who has paid his debt to society and also a sleek alpha male who can’t wait to gloat about his prowess at making money. (20th Century Fox)


This “and also” value system also comes across in Gekko’s attitude to innovation. He is clearly cynical about clean tech and derides the “fusion delusion” as the next bubble. In his words, “the only green is money.” Yet at the end of the film, he gives $100 million away to support alternative energy and do something “good” with his money.


• Randall Lane: Wall Street on Wall Street

• Randall Lane: Gordon Gekko’s Secret Revealed
The film’s title may hold its final moral clue. If money never sleeps, then can greed not be far behind, even in these pinched times? No one in the film seems to be hurting for nice apartments and clothes, for example, even with a financial meltdown that has come from “the mother of all bubbles.” As Gekko himself puts it, “Greed got greedier with a little envy thrown in.”


So we’d all like to find a little absolution in these troubled times, and in fact in the end Gekko’s daughter does melt and forgive him, while we on the other hand—adding up all the “and alsos”—don’t know whether to follow suit.


This “and also” value system comes across in Gekko’s attitude to innovation. He is cynical about clean tech, yet in the end, he gives $100 million to support alternative energy.


Gordon, make up your mind. Maybe a little therapy would help.


Dubbed "Mr. Creativity" by The Economist, John Kao is a contributing editor at The Daily Beast and an adviser to both public and private sector leaders. He is chairman of the Institute for Large Scale Innovation, whose i20 group is an association of national innovation "czars." He wrote Jamming: The Art and Discipline of Business Creativity, a BusinessWeek bestseller, and Innovation Nation. He is also a Tony-nominated producer of film and stage.


Get a head start with the Morning Scoop email. It's your Cheat Sheet with must reads from across the Web. Get it.


For inquiries, please contact The Daily Beast at editorial@thedailybeast.com.









After the coffee. Before deciding if Brett Favre should just quit now.


The Skinny: The Jets beat the Vikings. Oh wait, you're not here for that. Universal has a dilemma on its hands and it's apparently no laughing matter. Lions Gate makes a final run at MGM. Blockbuster is on the hunt for a new CEO and the Weinstein Co. has some new money to play with.


Lions Gate wants to play spoiler. Lions Gate is making a last-ditch run at merging with Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer after that ailing studio already unveiled its plan for Spyglass Entertainment principals Roger Birnbaum and Gary Barber to run the company. That still needs approval by MGM's lenders, and votes are due Oct. 22. The move by Lions Gate is seen as defensive and an effort to keep Carl Icahn, the activist investor who is waging a hostile takeover effort for the production company. But Icahn has been accumulating debt in MGM and has indicated he would support such a merger. More on the never-ending saga from the Los Angeles Times.


Help wanted. Blockbuster Inc., the video store chain that was once the dominant player in the home entertainment business, will look to hire a new chief executive when it emerges from bankruptcy, which the company filed for a few weeks ago. The Wall Street Journal reports that Blockbuster has hired an executive search firm to find a replacement for Jim  Keyes, who may be gone before the end of the year.


Cash infusion. The Weinstein Co., the production company headed by Harvey and Bob Weinstein, got a much-needed investment from billionaire Len Blavatnik. The plan calls for Blavatnik to plunk money into a three-year film fund for a slate of movies with budgets of between $5 million and $20 million. He could end up investing as much as $100 million with the Weinsteins. Per the agreement, the Weinstein Co. will release the films here and in Canada and also control rights in Australia, Germany and France. Blavatnik's U.K.-based production, distribution and foreign sales company, Icon Entertainment, will oversee all other international markets. Details from Deadline Hollywood and the Los Angeles Times.


They can open their own e-mails. The Daily Beast looks at who the most "tech savvy" chief executive is in the media business. As usual, a line said first by Sirius XM chief Mel Karmazin is credited to outgoing NBC chief executive Jeff Zucker about trading analog dollars for digital dimes. Among the findings: Disney boss Bob Iger is savvy and Viacom's Philippe Dauman is not so savvy. No word on how savvy Brett Favre is.


Add them up. With more ways to watch shows whenever and wherever we want, the good news is it is really hard to miss an episode of a program unless you just don't want to see it. The downside is the networks are still primarily getting paid for those people who watch a show on television when it airs in its time period. "There’s a widening gap between ratings and the actual number of people watching," writes Joe Adalian in New York magazine. The TV industry and Nielsen, which measures ratings, need to do a better job of tracking all the viewing that is going on. Just as important, while devices such as the digital video recorder make it easier for consumers watch their favorite shows when they want to, advertisers and networks are wary of ad-skipping. CBS research guru David Poltrack and the rest of the networks are already working on a way to have their cake and eat it too, as the Los Angeles Times notes.


Late to the game? The controversy over a joke from the upcoming Universal Pictures/Ron Howard comedy "The Dilemma," in which Vince Vaughn's character says electric cars are gay (before then explaining he doesn't mean gay in the homosexual sense) is not fading away even after the scene was cut from the trailer and may be yanked from the movie. The Hollywood Reporter says a side story may be whether the Gay & Lesbian Alliance Against Defamation (GLADD) was a little slow on responding to the issue. 


Is your boss on this list? Glass Lewis & Co., a financial advisory firm, has come up with its list of the most overpaid chief executives. On top is Yahoo Chief Executive Carol Bartz, whose 2009 package was valued at almost $40 million. Glass Lewis looks at stock price, operating cash flow and growth in per-share earnings to figure out who it thinks is ripping off shareholders. More on the list from Bloomberg and the New York Post.


Inside the Los Angeles Times: Patrick Goldstein on the controversy surrounding "The Dilemma." Starz Media is selling Film Roman, the animation company whose credits include "The Simpsons" to a group investors that includes Scott Greenberg, a former head of the studio. Iosono Inc. wants to change the way we hear movies.


-- Joe Flint


Follow me on Twitter before it's too late. Twitter.com/JBFlint




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Operation Squeegee: Help Make a Difference by Siara Lorefield


bench craft company reviews

Fox <b>News</b>&#39; Brian Kilmeade: “All Terrorists Are Muslim” « Oliver Willis

18 Responses to “Fox News' Brian Kilmeade: “All Terrorists Are Muslim””. Jay says: October 15, 2010 at 9:13 am. Of course, anybody with a rational mind could understand that Kilmeade was specifically talking about 9/11 and was saying ...

Fox <b>News</b> Remains Far Ahead Of Cable <b>News</b> Competition During Pre <b>...</b>

Fox News Channel finished #4 in prime time on all of cable (total viewers) last week - the week before their ratings are likely to increase even further thanks to the miner rescue coverage. Here's a look at the rest of cable news:

Public Address | Hard <b>News</b>

If Len Brown – cleverly claiming the mantle of Mayor Robbie – can help make that experience possible across more of the big news, city, he'll have done a good thing. View Gallery � View Printable � Link to this Post � Send Feedback to ...


benchcraft company portland or

Operation Squeegee: Help Make a Difference by Siara Lorefield


benchcraft company portland or

Fox <b>News</b>&#39; Brian Kilmeade: “All Terrorists Are Muslim” « Oliver Willis

18 Responses to “Fox News' Brian Kilmeade: “All Terrorists Are Muslim””. Jay says: October 15, 2010 at 9:13 am. Of course, anybody with a rational mind could understand that Kilmeade was specifically talking about 9/11 and was saying ...

Fox <b>News</b> Remains Far Ahead Of Cable <b>News</b> Competition During Pre <b>...</b>

Fox News Channel finished #4 in prime time on all of cable (total viewers) last week - the week before their ratings are likely to increase even further thanks to the miner rescue coverage. Here's a look at the rest of cable news:

Public Address | Hard <b>News</b>

If Len Brown – cleverly claiming the mantle of Mayor Robbie – can help make that experience possible across more of the big news, city, he'll have done a good thing. View Gallery � View Printable � Link to this Post � Send Feedback to ...


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Fox <b>News</b>&#39; Brian Kilmeade: “All Terrorists Are Muslim” « Oliver Willis

18 Responses to “Fox News' Brian Kilmeade: “All Terrorists Are Muslim””. Jay says: October 15, 2010 at 9:13 am. Of course, anybody with a rational mind could understand that Kilmeade was specifically talking about 9/11 and was saying ...

Fox <b>News</b> Remains Far Ahead Of Cable <b>News</b> Competition During Pre <b>...</b>

Fox News Channel finished #4 in prime time on all of cable (total viewers) last week - the week before their ratings are likely to increase even further thanks to the miner rescue coverage. Here's a look at the rest of cable news:

Public Address | Hard <b>News</b>

If Len Brown – cleverly claiming the mantle of Mayor Robbie – can help make that experience possible across more of the big news, city, he'll have done a good thing. View Gallery � View Printable � Link to this Post � Send Feedback to ...


benchcraft company portland or

Fox <b>News</b>&#39; Brian Kilmeade: “All Terrorists Are Muslim” « Oliver Willis

18 Responses to “Fox News' Brian Kilmeade: “All Terrorists Are Muslim””. Jay says: October 15, 2010 at 9:13 am. Of course, anybody with a rational mind could understand that Kilmeade was specifically talking about 9/11 and was saying ...

Fox <b>News</b> Remains Far Ahead Of Cable <b>News</b> Competition During Pre <b>...</b>

Fox News Channel finished #4 in prime time on all of cable (total viewers) last week - the week before their ratings are likely to increase even further thanks to the miner rescue coverage. Here's a look at the rest of cable news:

Public Address | Hard <b>News</b>

If Len Brown – cleverly claiming the mantle of Mayor Robbie – can help make that experience possible across more of the big news, city, he'll have done a good thing. View Gallery � View Printable � Link to this Post � Send Feedback to ...


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benchcraft company scam

Operation Squeegee: Help Make a Difference by Siara Lorefield


benchcraft company portland or
benchcraft company scam

Fox <b>News</b>&#39; Brian Kilmeade: “All Terrorists Are Muslim” « Oliver Willis

18 Responses to “Fox News' Brian Kilmeade: “All Terrorists Are Muslim””. Jay says: October 15, 2010 at 9:13 am. Of course, anybody with a rational mind could understand that Kilmeade was specifically talking about 9/11 and was saying ...

Fox <b>News</b> Remains Far Ahead Of Cable <b>News</b> Competition During Pre <b>...</b>

Fox News Channel finished #4 in prime time on all of cable (total viewers) last week - the week before their ratings are likely to increase even further thanks to the miner rescue coverage. Here's a look at the rest of cable news:

Public Address | Hard <b>News</b>

If Len Brown – cleverly claiming the mantle of Mayor Robbie – can help make that experience possible across more of the big news, city, he'll have done a good thing. View Gallery � View Printable � Link to this Post � Send Feedback to ...


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Many people try to make money online through many different methods. Some try doing survey while other create blogs or websites. They way I am talking about are between Both Associated Content (AC) and eHow. Both Sites have many similarities and also many various differences. Below is a list of some differences and similarities between AC and eHow.

One major similarity between both sites is the fact that they both deal with making money by writing articles. On both sites you write articles dealing with a variety of topics. You are free to write about almost anything you want. There is one difference between the writing styles however and that is the fact that for eHow you can only write about "How to" articles. AC on the other hand lets you write in any type of writing including; poetry, stories, how to, news, etc the list goes on and on.

One difference when writing your articles on AC your articles must have a minimum length of 400 words. AC offers the choice to write about articles they want which they call Calls for Content which at times are allowed to have less then 400 words but not always. eHow only requires a writer to write a minimum of 150 words. This can be good because it allows their users to pump out more articles faster but those "how to" articles might not be as well written or not have a great amount of information because of the length.

How you earn your money nearly the same way on both sites. eHow pays there members by page views. Meaning for every time someone reads your article you earn a small amount of money. The more people that read your article the more money your make. eHow does not explain the exact amount you get paid for every view but that is how they pay their members. AC also pays its members through page views. You can earn anywhere from $1.50 to $2.00 for every 1000 views. The amount of money you earn per view will increase as you write more and more content and get more and more views. AC also gives you the opportunity to earn money through upfront payments. This means if you want to publish an article you have the possibility to earn money instantly on top of also making money with the page views.

Both sites pay their writers only through Paypal and not check or any other form. They both also tend to only pay U.S. citizens so if you are not a U.S. citizen then you don't have an opportunity to earn money. Another downfall to some is that fact that you will have to enter your Social Security Number after you make a certain amount of money. With eHow once your earnings add up to ten dollars they will ask for your SS#. AC on the other hand will let you reach 500 in a calendar year before the stop your payments. AC is defiantly the better choice when it comes to not entering any extremely personal information right away.

One final difference is the overall layout and design of the websites. If you take a look you will see that eHow's website seems a little more mashed together then AC. They try and fit as much as they can on one page and everything about eHow is not always clear. eHow is more of a do it yourself website where they let you figure things out on your own. AC has a nicer, crisper, and easier to read website compared to eHow. Associated Content has more possibilities to talk with people and find out interesting facts about the site. AC really tries to help their members find what they need to know.


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Fox <b>News</b>&#39; Brian Kilmeade: “All Terrorists Are Muslim” « Oliver Willis

18 Responses to “Fox News' Brian Kilmeade: “All Terrorists Are Muslim””. Jay says: October 15, 2010 at 9:13 am. Of course, anybody with a rational mind could understand that Kilmeade was specifically talking about 9/11 and was saying ...

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If Len Brown – cleverly claiming the mantle of Mayor Robbie – can help make that experience possible across more of the big news, city, he'll have done a good thing. View Gallery � View Printable � Link to this Post � Send Feedback to ...


big seminar 14

Fox <b>News</b>&#39; Brian Kilmeade: “All Terrorists Are Muslim” « Oliver Willis

18 Responses to “Fox News' Brian Kilmeade: “All Terrorists Are Muslim””. Jay says: October 15, 2010 at 9:13 am. Of course, anybody with a rational mind could understand that Kilmeade was specifically talking about 9/11 and was saying ...

Fox <b>News</b> Remains Far Ahead Of Cable <b>News</b> Competition During Pre <b>...</b>

Fox News Channel finished #4 in prime time on all of cable (total viewers) last week - the week before their ratings are likely to increase even further thanks to the miner rescue coverage. Here's a look at the rest of cable news:

Public Address | Hard <b>News</b>

If Len Brown – cleverly claiming the mantle of Mayor Robbie – can help make that experience possible across more of the big news, city, he'll have done a good thing. View Gallery � View Printable � Link to this Post � Send Feedback to ...


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