Issue #146
Disinfotainment Today
By Michael Dare
'Best of TBH Politoons'
Weekly Link
Sick Of This Crap!
The Pope is dead. I'm not feeling too good myself. Nonetheless, the crack team at Sickofthiscrap.com ambles forward with our weekly rants on the ills of this little rock we call Earth.
This week's stories:
* Schaivo and the Pope - gone but not forgotten
* Right Wing Thought Police on Campus
* "Unvarnished" Report on intelligence - aka Everyone's Fault But Mine
Join us won't you? We're just a click away....
Recommended Reading
from Bruce
Atrios: Wingnuttery Everywhere (Eschaton, Sunday, April 03, 2005)
If I were running CNN, once I fired most of the people that worked there and replaced them with decent TV journalists, I'd get rid of their little daily blog show and replace it with the "Fox News Fuckup of the day." They could just steal it from Media Matters. Then I'd add a "crazy shit people are hearing on talk radio which aren't true" segment.
Pope John Paul dies at 84 (The Advocate)
Pope John Paul II, the third-longest-sitting pope in the Catholic Church's history, whose many statements condemning homosexuality and the rights of gays and lesbians routinely angered members of the worldwide gay community, died on Saturday evening.
Kurt Vonnegut: Dear Mr. Vonnegut (In These Times, from 2003)
Q: What on earth happened to American journalists so that they let fanatics toy with them?
A: They became rich and famous.
Kurt Vonnegut: Knowing What's Nice (In These Times, from 2003)
We Humanists try to behave well without any expectation of rewards or punishments in an afterlife.
The Josephine Bruce Rose
and
The Josephine Bruce Rose
Movie Trailers
Save the Filbuster Commercial
Selected Readings
from that Mad Cat, JD
In The Chaos Household
Last Night
Sunny & windy.
Jo, the (lucky) lizard molted. He's all nice & shiny again.
Been working on resurrecting the 'Archives' - kinda lost track back in August with the server change.
Launches TV Channel
Al Gore
Al Gore has a plan for luring the Internet generation back to television: make it more participatory by having viewers contribute their own video.
The former vice president and longtime Internet champion joined investors Monday to announce the creation of Current, a cable TV channel that will target younger viewers with a blend of news, culture and viewer-produced video.
Gore will serve as chairman of the board of the new venture, which will be based in San Francisco.
He and Joel Hyatt, the founder of Hyatt Legal Services who will serve as Current's chief executive, assembled an investment team that paid $70 million last year to acquire the Newsworld International channel from Vivendi International.
The channel, to launch Aug. 1, will remain privately financed and initially will be available in 19 million cable-subscriber homes.
Al Gore
Newspaper Awards Announced Monday
Pulitzer Prizes
The winners and finalists for this year's Pulitzer Prizes were announced this afternoon at Columbia University in New York. The Los Angeles Times won the public-service award, for its series on problems and a public hospital, and also the international-reporting award, for Kim Murphy's coverage of Russia.
The Wall Street Journal was the only other paper to nab more than one award, receiving the beat-reporting award, for Amy Dockser Marcus' stories on cancer survivors, and the criticism award, for Joe Morgenstern's film reviews.
The Willamette Week, an alternative weekly in Portland, Ore., won the investigative-reporting prize, becoming only the fifth non-daily to win a Pulitzer.
Here are the newspaper winners:
Public Service
Winner: Los Angeles Times, for inner-city hospital investigation
Finalists: Pensacola (Fla.) News Journal, for hurricane coverage; The Orange County (Calif.) Register, for investigation on lead in candy
Breaking News Reporting
Winner: The Star-Ledger (Newark, N.J.), for coverage of Gov. Jim McGreevey's resignation
Finalists: Charlotte (Fla.) Sun, for hurricane coverage; South Florida Sun-Sentinel (Fort Lauderdale), for hurricane coverage
Investigative Reporting
Winner: Willamette (Ore.) Week, Nigel Jaquiss, for investigating Gov. Neil Goldschmidt's sex scandal
Finalists: The Des Moines (Iowa) Register, Clark Kaufman, for an investigation into a law-enforcement scandal; The New York Times, Diana B. Hendriques, for an investigation of insurance and investment scams targeting servicemen
Explanatory Reporting
Winner: The Boston Globe, Gareth Cook, for an examination of the ethics of stem-cell research
Finalists: Newsday (Melville, N.Y.), staff, for the history of hip-hop; The New York Times, William Broad and David E. Sanger, for stories on proliferation issues
Beat Reporting
Winner: The Wall Street Journal, Amy Dockser Morris, for coverage of cancer survivors
Finalists: Los Angeles Times, Ron Brownstein, for coverage of the 2004 campaign; The Washington Post, Dana Priest, for coverage of U.S. intelligence
National Reporting
Winner: The New York Times, Walt Bogdanich, for coverage of deadly railroad crossings
Finalists: The Washington Post, staff, for coverage of the Abu Ghraib revelations; The Oregonian (Portland), Steve Suo and Erin Hoover Barnett, for stories on crystal meth
International Reporting
Winners: Los Angeles Times, Kim Murphy, for Russian coverage; Newsday, Dele Olojede, for Rwanda coverage
Finalist: The Star-Ledger (Newark, N.J.), Borzou Daragahi, for Iraq coverage
Feature Writing
Winner: Chicago Tribune, Julia Keller, for post-tornado coverage
Finalists: The Star Ledget (Newark, N.J.), Robin Gaby Fisher, for "Last Chance High"; The Washington Post, Anne Hull, for "Young and Gay in Real America"
Commentary
Winner: The Plain Dealer (Cleveland), Connie Schultz
Finalists: The New York Times, Nicholas Kristof; The Charlotte (N.C.) Observer, Tommy Tomlinson
Criticism
Winner: The Wall Street Journal, Joseph Morgenstern
Finalists: The Chronicle of Higher Education, Carlin Romano; The New York Times, Frank Rich
Editorial Writing
Winner: The Sacramento Bee, Tom Philp
Finalists: San Jose Mercury News, Daniel Vasquez and David Yarnold; The Washington Post, Sebastian Mallaby
Editorial Cartooning
Winner: The Courier-Journal (Louisville, Ky.), Nick Anderson
Finalists: The Palm Beach Post, Don Wright; "Doonesbury," Garry Trudeau
Breaking News Photography
Winner: The Associated Press, Staff, for Iraq photography
Finalists: Reuters, Arko Datta, for tsunami photos ; The Palm Beach Post, staff, for hurricane photos
Feature Photography
Winner: San Francisco Chronicle, Deanne Fitzmaurice
Finalists: Los Angeles Times, Luis Sinco; The Star Tribune (Minneapolis), Jim Gehrz
Also, a book prize in the category of general nonfiction went to Steve Coll, the former managing editor of The Washington Post, for his Ghost Wars: The Secret History of the CIA, Afghanistan, and Bin Laden, from the Soviet Invasion to September 10, 2001."
Pulitzer Prizes
Vampire Musical To Premiere In San Francisco
Elton John
Elton John's next stage production will have its debut in San Francisco. John and his longtime lyricist Bernie Taupin have been working on Lestat, which is a musical version of the Anne Rice vampire novels. Lestat will open at the Curran Theatre in the fall, with a Broadway run in New York City being planned for next year. John's had great success with the stage musicals Aida and the Lion King, both of which he did with Tim Rice, but this is his first Broadway production with Taupin.
Lestat is drawn from the character Lestat in the Anne Rice vampire novels, which include Interview With The Vampire, the Vampire Lestat, and Queen Of The Damned. When the musical was announced, John said that he thought Interview With The Vampire would make a perfect setting for a musical: "I think that the book is so beautifully written, and there's so many different areas--in Paris, in New Orleans, whatever, the different scenarios at the opera. It is a very visual book. This is a very good subject matter for music. Some books aren't -- this is, I think."
Elton John
Returns to USA Network
WWE'S RAW
World Wrestling Entertainment Inc. has reached a three-year agreement with NBC Universal Inc. that will return its "WWE Raw" cable program to USA Network in October, company officials said Monday.
The deal resolves a major issue for the Stamford-based producer of televised wrestling matches. "Raw," which is regularly among the most popular cable programs, needed to find a new home after Spike TV decided not to extend its contract with WWE that ends in September.
Monday Night RAW aired on USA from 1993 until 2000, when it moved to Spike TV, a unit of Viacom Inc. NBC Universal is a unit of General Electric Co.
In addition to "Raw," USA will air a one-hour weekend "Raw"-branded program, and NBCU's Telemundo will air Spanish-language versions of "Raw." NBC will also air at least two yearly, 90-minute Saturday late night "Raw" specials.
WWE'S RAW
Ending After 10-Year Tour
'JAG'
The drama series "JAG," which mixed real war and conflict with fiction, is ending after a 10-year run. The final episode will air 9 p.m. April 29, CBS announced Monday.
Canceled after a single season on NBC, the show was picked up by CBS and became a reliable ratings performer and part of the network's turnaround, said CBS Chairman Leslie Moonves.
But the series' popularity had begun to ebb. It was averaging 9.8 million weekly viewers for the season to date, compared to 14.8 million viewers in the 2001-02 season.
'JAG'
Raises Profile With Hollywood Push
Yahoo
Five years ago, a handful of companies with names like Pop, Pseudo and Icebox promised a future when original shows produced for the Internet would replace traditional TV viewing. The dot-com bust deflated those grand ambitions. But the vision of creating unique, interactive multimedia programming for a generation weaned on video games is very much alive at Yahoo Inc.
The giant Internet portal isn't talking about its plans for content. But analysts suggest a profound shift may be at work, with Yahoo using its enormous reach to force Hollywood studios, among other video creators, to produce programming with the Internet in mind.
Yahoo can offer up a worldwide audience of more than 300 million - a number that some analysts say could reach 1 billion by the end of the decade.
Yahoo has already forged partnerships to webcast content from other media. It showed the entire debut episode of the Showtime series "Fat Actress," starring Kirstie Alley, at the same time the episode was broadcast on cable.
Yahoo
ABC Debuts Network with No Distributor
Digital
ABC News on Monday said it would launch an expanded suite of video news products available on the Internet, wireless devices, and someday, maybe even on cable television.
Now, all it has to do is find someone actually willing to put it on television.
ABC's ambitious plan takes the unusual approach of making its programming available to new media outlets even before it completes a plan to get it on TV. ABC is a unit of the Walt Disney Co. (NYSE:DIS - news)
The product is known as ABC News Now and will be offered in both a traditional "linear" format, like the regular TV news, and in some cases as an on-demand platform where users can see the reports they want in any order.
Digital
Delays Wedding
Prince Charles
Britain's Prince Charles has postponed his marriage to long-time lover Camilla Parker Bowles from Friday to Saturday so that he can attend the funeral of Pope John Paul in Rome.
The heir to the British throne cut short his skiing holiday in Switzerland on Monday and flew back to London so he and Parker Bowles could attend a memorial in London's Westminster Cathedral for the Pope, who died on Saturday aged 84.
Charles will be Queen Elizabeth's representative at the funeral. Parker Bowles will not accompany him to Rome, Clarence House added.
Prince Charles
Networks Placing Faith
Religious Shows
The Gospel according to Mel, as the TV industry views it, is that religion sells. With Mel Gibson's "The Passion of the Christ" ranked among the 10 highest-grossing movies ever and with glowing visions of "The Da Vinci Code" profits before them, TV networks are embracing a newfound faith.
A miniseries about the Book of Revelation airs next week, while shows about a Catholic priest probing the supernatural and an Episcopalian minister who converses with God are on the drawing board.
Traditionally soft-focused spirituality, exemplified by "Touched by an Angel" and "Joan of Arcadia," is giving way to programs rooted in specific religions and their elements.
Religious Shows
Man Tries To Fool Breathalyzer
Potty Mouth
An accused drunk driver tried but failed to foil a police breathalyzer after stuffing his mouth full of feces.
Arrested Sunday after his Ford pickup was pulled over on a highway just outside Barrie, Ont., the 59-year-old driver was loaded into a cruiser and taken to a police station for testing.
En route, Sgt. James Buchanan said the prisoner vomited, urinated and defecated in the rear of the squad car.
After arriving at the station, he said the man grabbed a handful of his own waste "and placed it in his mouth, attempting to trick the breathalyser machine."
It didn't work, Buchanan said.
He alleged the machine registered two readings of intoxication from samples the suspect provided. Both were more than twice the legal limit.
Potty Mouth