Saturday, April 15, 2006

Very Easter 2006



Very haunting indeed

Today's View



A reflection on us all

Today's View



Building King's Cross

Sunday, January 29, 2006

Today's view



Early Morning London, late January after the whale


For I have known them all already, known them all:
Have known the evenings, mornings, afternoons

Thursday, January 12, 2006

Today's view



Is a little abstract

Wednesday, January 11, 2006

Re: Brands

A great idea:

Here's a startup idea: a consultancy that goes into corporations to discover ideas and innovations that languish there. The job: to extract brands.


From Brandflakes for Breakfast

And much more here

Remaking shake and go



A Great Advert for the Red Cross

Today's View


sometimes needs no caption or comment

Rebranding and the Plame Case

Just for the notebook, a little buried branding guidance on two of the media players in the Plame case from the Huffington Post:

Newspapers and broadcast news have different business models. The New York Times business model is selling readers a bundle of hard and soft news and advertising (people do like to browse the ads). For MSNBC, the model is selling Chris Matthews. Since MSNBC invested millions in the Chris Matthews brand - his contract extends into 2009 - it must protect it.

"Branding" is MBA-speak for that shopworn pitch: "Accept no substitutes." Just as Bayer insinuates that its aspirin is better than the generic kind, MSNBC wants you to believe that no one else offers Chris Matthews' entertaining and insightful take on Washington politics.


Or

For NBC News, the same business model and brand marketing applies to Tim Russert, who, as NBC News' Washington Bureau Chief, operates in a more traditional news venue.

The Russert brand transformed "Meet the Press" into a complete misnomer. Before Russert's arrival in 1991, the Sunday program's format showed politicians taking questions from "the press," a rotating group of Washington reporters. These days, politicians and journalists "Meet Tim Russert," who asks all the questions and sets the entire agenda. In 1991, Meet the Press netted about $800,000 a year. When Russert renewed his contract in 2001, the program earned $50 million a year. The upshot: Presidents will come and go, but Russert's contract keeps him on Sunday mornings through 2012.

Reposition now

The news that certain parts of the Merrill Lynch & Co. Inc. retail investment management products (yup) are to be rebranded this year reminds me of one my favourite early twenty-first century quotes

We have a wonderful business, a wonderful franchise. We just need to be repositioned

Stan O’Neal
COO and acting CEO, Merrill Lynch
quoted: The Economist, June 29th 2002


I don't know why, it always makes me laugh.

Not quite Monster yet

However...

Remake, rebrand, I am, I said

Neil Diamond has Johnny Cash treatment with "12 Songs" says New Yorker.

Happily, [Rick] Rubin reins in Diamond’s floridity more than any other producer he has worked with since the sixties, highlighting the weird mixture of guilelessness and gravitas at the center of his work.


Of his canon the magazine writes winningly:
The best ones sound like the pleas of a love-struck man from another place—perhaps a small Eastern European city—who has an unusual gift for melody but who grew up not speaking English.


But which city? Sofia? Prague? Novi Sad? Budapest?

Rebrand (Levis as music source)

Once it was wearable computing, but that seems so long ago.
Now it's all so easy - well, by the Autumn of 2006, anyway.

The Original Denim Brand Kicks Off the Next Revolution in Digital Music Storage

The Levi's(R) Brand Launches First iPod Compatible Jeans Worldwide

SAN FRANCISCO--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Jan. 10, 2006--The Levi's(R) brand, the denim authority, is launching a wearable technology revolution with the introduction of new Levi's(R) RedWire(TM) DLX Jeans, available worldwide in fall 2006. Designed for both men and women, the jeans seamlessly integrate iPod plug and play technology giving music enthusiasts the most innovative and fashionable way to enjoy music on the go. The jean is designed to be compatible with most iPod systems and features include a special joystick incorporated into the jeans' watch pocket to enable easy operation of the iPod.


"The Levi's(R) RedWire(TM) DLX Jean is the latest extension of the Levi's(R) brand leadership position by merging fashion and technology that provides consumers with the most innovative way to enhance their portable, digital music lifestyle," said Robert Hanson, Levi's(R) U.S. brand president. "In designing the jeans we considered both function and fashion -- the result is a uniquely functional, yet stylish, great fitting jean."

Design features include:

Easy Pocket Storage -- An iPod docking cradle is built into the jeans and is "invisibly" housed within a side pocket. The Levi's(R) design team took special care to ensure the iPod unit remains neatly and securely stored in the jean, while the iPod "bump" in the pocket is virtually eliminated. The cradle is equipped with sophisticated technology housed in a red conductive ribbon that allows users to quickly and easily remove their iPod from the pocket to view its screen while staying connected. The jean is machine washable once the iPod is removed.

"Hip" Controls -- A special joystick remote control is externally designed into the jeans' watch pocket to enable operation of the iPod. Four-way controls allow the wearer to easily play/pause, track forward, track back and adjust the volume control without ever removing the iPod from the pocket.

Handy Wire Retractor -- A handy retractable headphone unit has been built directly into the jean to help prevent tangles and efficiently manage the iPod earphone wires.

The new Levi's(R) RedWire(TM) DLX jeans have been developed to be practical and leading-edge in their aesthetic. A crisp white leather patch and joystick, bluffed back pockets with hidden stitching, and clean minimalist buttons and rivets allude to the iPod's famously pure design. Special care has been taken to marry the physical design with a great-fitting jean.

Tuesday, January 10, 2006

Computers were cooler once




From, PDP Planet, a portal for the Paul Allen collection of Digital Equipment Corporation mainframes and minicomputers.

When you've got everything else you need, rock and roll gallery, sports teams, 747s...

Ahead of the curve(s)

Five years ago I started writing a book with an architect about the relationship of physical space and the way we buy things. Retailisation had a tricky birth (quite a few of the websites we mentioned had a tendancy to go bust, and this wasn't a warts and all book, rather a guide to what's coming, informed by what had gone before) though it did make it eventually. One of the throwaways in the text was the significant role of pornography on the evolution and adoption of new technologies - it's a fairly well known jounrney. Now, signs that pornography not only boosts the "democratizing" of new technoligies, but it moves into the space before the technology is even ready.

Digital Playground, one of the adult industry's top software suppliers, recently released a $2 million film, "Pirates," which was shot entirely in high definition. It was released on video in a three-disc set, two of them standard DVDs and the third in HD.

"Right now, most consumers can't play the HD disc because next-generation players aren't yet on the market," said Martin Blythe, spokesman for the Video Software Dealers Assn., which co-sponsored the show with AVN. "But the point is, these companies are already ahead of the curve."


Adult Video News estimates $12.6 billion spent on porn in 2005

And I'm sure I read somewhere when the I-Pod video launched that porn wouldn't play a part.

The New Yorker on American film

America is a formidable machine for moviemaking, with all the fuel it needs, but the kinds of story that it now chooses to tell of itself, and the appetite for such nourishment—the taste for mass public shows, that is, rather than unhypnotic home entertainment, which you can snap out of when you need a beer—may be shrinking beyond recall.


More from Anthony Lane here

Today's View


Is last night's

Why, oh why?

The man in charge of new media at the Guardian makes sensible point (that has been being made for about 61 years now):

And I also know that thanks to the net; and thanks to the fact that a small team of really smart coders can build something that flies round the world - there is no physical/ geographical/ economic reason why del.icio.us/ Flickr/ Furl/ Foldershare or any one of a dozen other smart tools couldn’t have come from this side of the Atlantic.


But they don't, do they?
Why is this?

Remake, Remake

Thanks to Tim Blair, who is collecting the quotes of last year together, I found this makeover masterpiece:

“When I need to work up my nerve to write a tough column, I try to think of myself as Emma Peel in a black leather catsuit, giving a kung fu kick to any diabolical mastermind who merits it.”


That's the New York Times's Maureen Dowd running roughshod over a very English icon. How did I miss that?

Dowd may be hated by many - but that's good, we like a feisty journalist. And Emma Peel is always nothing but feisty. It all sounded like just the right moment to juxtapose the two through Google Image Search. But no....there's no need at atll



With thanks to the very fine Yankee Pot Roast

Rebranding ITV

Three years since the last rebrand, though ITV now has four channels. Research commissioned by the channel showed that BBC was "dad" and C4 a "cool brother". So now ITV 1 wants to be "Robbie Williams" according to the Independent. The key, is emotion:

ITV1 has a new gold logo and is represented by clips of real people displaying the gamut of emotions, from children rolling down a hill to a woman crying alone in bed.

Monday, January 09, 2006

Word of the year

Truthiness

ALBUQUERQUE — A panel of linguists has decided the word that best reflects 2005 is "truthiness," defined as the quality of stating concepts one wishes or believes to be true, rather than the facts.



By Heather Clark
The Associated Press

Rebranding newspapers' panic (Again)

Once, I would drive across town if necessary. Today, I open the front door and if the paper isn't within about 10 feet I retreat to my computer and read it online. Only six months ago, that figure was 20 feet. Extrapolating, they will have to bring it to me in bed by the end of the year and read it to me out loud by the second quarter of 2007.


From Slate, and Michael Kinsley, once its editor. Been written before, of course. But anyway...

Bill Gates says that in technology things that are supposed to happen in less than five years usually take longer than expected, while things that are supposed to happen in more than 10 years usually come sooner than expected.

Rebranding "Syriana"



Already much reviewed in the US, and elsewhere, and coming to the UK in March.

Interesting take from Amir Taheri, born in Iran, who was between 1980 and 1984 the Middle East editor for the London Sunday Times, and has been a contributor to the International Herald Tribune since 1980. He has been a columnist for Asharq Alawsat since 1987. Here's a little...

One answer to why anyone might want to make such a film is, of course, the very American desire to make money. And as things stand today there is a large market for dissent in the United States. In a recent trip to the US I noticed that unless you took a dig at the Americans no one would even listen to you. In one session when I politely suggested that George W Bush might be a better choice than either Mullah Omar or Saddam Hussein I was nearly booed by my American interlocutors.

The truth is that there is a market for self-loathing in the US today and many, including the producers of “ Syriana”, are determined to cash in on it.

Rebranding blogs (of war)

From the blog of Donald Sensing, "concentrating on foreign and military policy and religious matters." Mr. Sensing took early retirement from the US Army in August 1995 at the rank of major to:

answer my call to ordained ministry. I began classes at Vanderbilt Divinity School the same month. I have served full-time as a United Methodist Church pastor since 1997. I was ordained an elder in full membership of Tennessee Conference of the UMC in June 2002.


Anyway...
Late this week I received this email:
From: “Charlie Kondek”
Sent: Friday, January 06, 2006 3:17 PM
Subject: Exclusive Contact from the Army

Hi, Donald. I’m writing from a PR firm on behalf of the U.S. Army. We’re contacting a few bloggers to test a new outlet for public information. The Army believes that military blogs are a valuable medium for reaching out to soldiers. To that end, the Army plans to offer you and selected bloggers exclusive editorial content on a few issues you’re likely to be interested in. If you do decide you are interested in receiving this material, whether you choose to write about what we send you is, of course, entirely up to you. (I notice you’ve been on a blog sabbatical for a while so am not sure where you stand there.)

Like I said, we’re only contacting a handful of bloggers at this time. If you are interested, please let me know, and we’ll send you further information as it becomes available. Either way, thanks for your time.
____________
Charlie Kondek
Account Executive
Web Producer
Hass MS&L

My response was, “Count me in.” I spent long enough in Army Public Affairs to know when I’m being fed baloney. But the colonel who emailed Glenn is right – this is long overdue. And I predict the Post and others of the dinosaur media will scream bloody murder. I don’t care. They’ll say we are biased, as if they are not. As Glenn wrote, “I’m glad that the folks at the Times and the Post are “true believers” in objective reporting. Now if they’d just become true practitioners thereof… .”

But I am biased, I freely admit (another difference between bloggers and the MSM is we admit we have a point of view. They do, too, but pretend they don’t).

Most translated authors

Walt
Agatha
Jules...

But interesting nonetheless: Sheldom trumps Wilde; Alistair Maclean v. Hemingway...

Lots of searches at the UNESCO Index Translationum

Today's view



Jan 8, 2006

Sunday, January 08, 2006

Friday, January 06, 2006

Rebranding (cities)

The Top 50 U.S. City Slogans
Easier if American

1.What Happens Here, Stays Here.
Las Vegas, NV
2.So Very Virginia.
Charlottesville, VA
3.Always Turned On.
Atlantic City, NJ
4.Cleveland Rocks!
Cleveland, OH
5.The Sweetest Place on Earth.
Hershey, PA
6.Rare. Well Done.
Omaha, NE
7.The City Different.
Santa Fe, NM
8.Where Yee-Ha Meets Olé.
Eagle Pass, TX
9.City with Sol.
San Diego, CA
10.Where the Odds Are With You.
Peculiar, MO
11.Where Your Ship Comes In.
Gulfport, MS
12.Soul of the Southwest.
Taos, NM
13.Experience Our Sense of Yuma.
Yuma, AZ
14.The City Was So Nice They Named It Twice.
Walla Walla, WA
15.There’s More Than Meets the Arch.
St. Louis, MO
16.Keep Austin Weird.
Austin, TX
17.Where Chiefs Meet.
Meeteetse, WY
18.City with a Mission.
San Gabriel, CA
19.Where the Trails Start and the Buck Stops.
Independence, MO
20.The City That Never Sleeps.
New York City, NY
21.The Aliens Aren’t the Only Reason to Visit.
Roswell, NM


For more of this, and thanks to, the Tagline Guru City Survey

Today's view



Jan 6th 2005
Whistler and the Tower Blocks

Thursday, January 05, 2006

Wednesday, January 04, 2006

Overheard and misunderstood



“Where you going, Viagra?”

59 Bus crossing the Thames

“Ok, I’ll give you £900 next week, for living expenses and the Messerschmitt.”

Two men, Russell square

"I don’t drink on Saturdays because I don’t work on Sundays.”

British Library attendants

“Rap rhythms are an emotional undercurrent for ballards.”

Patrick Swayze in The Times

Rebrand (very old, quite famous)


Today’s New Discovery is:

#1. Mary Wickham Bond, the wife of the bird watcher and author, James Bond, (whose name provided Ian Fleming with his licenced-to-kill hero) wrote a book about it in 1966.

How 007 Got His Name is a 62-page trip into pre pre-history:

“…And after reading Dr. No, my JB thought you’d been to Dirty Dick’s in Nassau and talked with old Farrington and got from him the story about the “Priscilla” and a wild trip about Jim’s collecting parrots on Abaco. That was the time spent several nights in a cave full of bats to get away from the mosquitoes…
…This is a hurried letter because we’re getting off to Yucatan and Cozumel this afternoon, thence back to Nassau where we’ll spend a few days with the Chaplins.
I tell my JB he could sue you for defamation of character but he regards the whole thing as a joke.
Sincerely yours…”


To which Fleming replied in a friendly letter:

“In return I can only offer your James Bond unlimited use of the name Ian Fleming for any purpose he may think fit. Perhaps one day he will discover some particularly horrible species of bird he would like to christen in an insulting fashion…”

Today's view


London, Jan 4th, 2006

Tuesday, January 03, 2006

A gentle start from 55 years ago

There are always echoes to be heard in the reading rooms of the British Library

What is especially interesting about Longley-Cook’s* summer 1951 reflections is the extent to which he highlights the differences between British and American intelligence assessments of the Soviet threat. He had been alarmed during the combined US/UK intelligence conference in Washington in October 1950 by the degree to which the American equivalent of the JIC produced assessments that “tend to fit in with the prejudged conclusion that a shooting war with the Soviet Union at some time is inevitable…Although the Americans were eventually persuaded to endorse a combined appreciation of the Soviet threat, based on reason and factual intelligence, they were quick to alter it to fit their own preconceived ideas as soon as the London team had returned to this country.”


* Vice Admiral Eric Longley-Cook, Director of British Naval Intelligence, 1951.

From: The Secret State. Whitehall and the Cold War
Peter Hennessy. Penguin books, 2002.

The author (in tandem with a former Cabinet Secretary) was the best thing on television over Christmas - albeit after midnight on the BBC Parliament channel. Here, without the laughter from the stands (and members of the Public Administration Select Committee) is a transcript of a great old fashioned discussion about political memoirs.

Tuesday, December 27, 2005

First 2006 prediction of the day

Google Crash Coming

By the end of 2005, Google's stock was closing at over $400, a flurry of new services had been released, and newly energized competitors AOL, MSN, and Yahoo! were playing catch-up. But 2005 also saw the beginning of the Google backlash. In 2006, Google will bypass Microsoft as the most hated (and feared) company in tech. The eerily accurate Mark Anderson, founder and publisher of the influential Strategic News Service newsletter, thinks Google is headed for a big fall. "If one Chinese (or MIT) guy comes up with a better search engine, they are out of business in 20 minutes… literally, the whole thing could just go poof."



From PC Mag Editor-in-Chief Jim Louderback

That's a great name too. More here

Corporation "street"



PlayStation Portable graffiti photographed in San Francisco's Warehouse District

The launch of the Sony Playstation portable was backed by a "controversial" graffiti based advertising campaign.

"We're really looking at our target as urban nomads," Sony spokeswoman Molly Smith said


in an interview with Reuters.

The Seattle Times considers the implications further. Of course Sony is not the first company to use such techniques.

Nike, Time magazine and even stodgy IBM are among the growing list of companies that have dabbled in street art to get their marketing messages out.


And it can have some impact, it is claimed

Time magazine marketing director Taylor Gray said the stunt was a success because it "cut through the clutter" of marketing messages to which New Yorkers are exposed every day.

Wednesday, December 21, 2005

Monday, December 19, 2005

rebrand - competition

The owners of the Drunken Monkey are considering changing the controversial name of their bar - and they want the community to help.


Yes in Fort Collins rebranding is big for Christmas

rewrite, he said

Op-Eds for Sale
A columnist from a libertarian think tank admits accepting payments to promote an indicted lobbyist's clients. Will more examples follow?


In the continuing debate about where we find out our truths

from Business Week

Sunday, December 18, 2005

rebranding special: "Dave" Cameron

In a revealing interview with The Observer, the new Tory leader jettisoned his party's hardline image on immigration, saying he welcomed those fleeing genuine persecution abroad. He also demanded greater social responsibility from business and offered new support for working parents.


For more on the great shift to the centre of British politics.

There will more of these, one feels sure

Because we want clarity, right?

The Yahoo! Search 2005 Overall Top 10 Searches:

1. Britney Spears
2. 50 Cent
3. Cartoon Network
4. Mariah Carey
5. Green Day
6. Jessica Simpson
7. Paris Hilton
8. Eminem
9. Ciara
10. Lindsay Lohan



Business Week has a take on this...
I guess we all do

Saturday, December 17, 2005

rebrand two


SANTA MONICA, Calif. and VANCOUVER, British Columbia, Dec. 15
The premier independent filmed entertainment production and distribution studio, Lions Gate, today announced that it has changed its name to "Lionsgate" and unveiled its new logo in kickoff ceremonies at the Lionsgate Screening Room in Santa Monica.

The simplification of the Lions Gate name into the single word "Lionsgate"represents the ongoing unification of the Company's diversified motion picture, television, home entertainment, family entertainment, documentary film, music publishing and video-on-demand businesses into a single, highly recognizable brand.

Tuesday, December 13, 2005

how men are

interesting survey analysis from Spike TV, an American channel aimed at men

according to research conducted by the upstart male-oriented network Spike TV, which interviewed thousands of young men to determine what that coveted and elusive demographic likes most in its television shows.

Spike found that men responded not only to brave and extremely competent leads but to a menagerie of characters with strikingly antisocial tendencies: Dr. Gregory House, a Vicodin-popping physician on Fox's "House"; Michael Scofield on "Prison Break," who is out to help his brother escape from jail; and Vic Mackey, played by Michael Chiklis on "The Shield," a tough-guy cop who won't hesitate to beat a suspect senseless. Tony Soprano is their patron saint, and like Tony, within the confines of their shows, they are all "good guys."

The code of such characters, said Brent Hoff, 36, a fan of "Lost," is: "Life is hard. Men gotta do what men gotta do, and if some people have to die in the process, so be it."


feeling marginalized yet?

remakes (classics)

From the Film Asylum

Variety reports that Warner Bros. will be releasing the company’s remake of The Wicker Man next year. Written and directed by Neil LaBute, the film stars Nicolas Cage as a sheriff who travels to a remote island in search of his missing daughter. There he discovers that the female residents are part of a cult who engage in strange sexual rituals.Nu Image/Millennium’s Boaz Davidson had this to say about the project:

“Because it was a remake, we spent a lot of time in developing the script. The original movie took place in another time and era, and we wanted to adapt it for a newer audience. So we went through a lot of stages—because it’s kind of a tricky script—working very closely with Neil. This was quite different from his other movies. He’s never done a remake before, and I don’t think that he’s really done a genre movie before, especially anything as scary as this.”

The film will co-stars Ellen Burstyn, Leelee Sobieski, Molly Parker and Frances Conroy.

Monday, December 12, 2005

interesting stats 1

India contributes 28 per cent to the total talent pool of knowledge workers in the world.


But there is a problem

From Hindustan Times

guess the book, if there is one, and more

A narcissistic, self-pitying drug fiend gets a shot at redemption when movie star Jayne Dennis, an old flame, offers to marry him. The deal is that he must now connect with Robby, the son he has shunned for 11 years.


After a young woman loses her job as a radio disc jockey, she meets a stranger who promises her a steady income working for a high-society "escort" service. With thoughts of dodging the repo-man, past due bills, and an impending eviction, the woman decides she has no choice but to plunge into a world where the line that separates sex and money is blurred beyond recognition. But complications arise when she meets the man of her dreams.


A veteran covert operative, who seeks redemption for his dark deeds, quits a CIA-like agency and starts to look out for the little guy. He ads in the paper that read simply: "Got a problem? Odds against you? Call the Equalizer." He takes on the cases for little or no money.


Actually, it's often much worse. These stories have all been sold to Hollywood, for this or that. One of these three is a novel, one an old TV series, and the other is just....

All from Scriptsales, the sort of site that makes writers wise up, and dumb down

this is the kind of exchange...

from New York, via London

more tales of early adoption

I spend 10 hours a week in the car. In the morning, I listen to the news. On the way back, I listen to a book. I probably go through about a book a week


Books next.

school's out

15 Indiana colleges have signed on with iParadigms, an Oakland, Calif., company that runs Turnitin.com, an Internet service that checks term papers against databases of online resources. Among the universities already using the software are Indiana, Notre Dame and Indiana State.

From the Indiana Star

And just to help

Examples of plagiarism
• Paraphrasing someone else's words too closely.

• Copying from another person's paper.

• Buying, stealing or downloading a paper from a Web site and claiming it as your own.

• Turning in your big sister's paper from last year.

• Using someone else's ideas or materials without acknowledging them or without crediting the other person.

• Cutting and pasting information from a Web site without saying where it came from.

Source: Purdue University Online Writing Lab

always interesting Rushkoff

Indeed, as my lectures bring me from industry to industry, I find myself amazed by just how little fun most people are having. Whether separated from one another by policy, competition, or cubicle, the last thing that seems to occur to people is to have fun together—when it should be the first priority. Instead, managers feel obligated to reign over employees; executives think they must hoodwink their shareholders; sales believe they must strong-arm their clients; and marketers assume they must manipulate the consumer. All for the life-or-death stakes of the next quarterly report.


From Get Back in the Box, Rushkoff's latest



And here's his blog

today's view



Busy weekend, Catskills

a mirror on the west?

Russia begins broadcasting a new 24-hour English language satellite TV news channel on Saturday, aimed at presenting a more positive image of Russia abroad. The channel, which is called Russia Today, can be seen throughout Asia, Europe, and the United States. According to its directors, the channel will aim to reflect Russia's position on the main international issues of the day and seek to inform viewers about Russian life.


More here

And here

"When I talk to friends and they say, 'Hey John, what are you doing there? What's with the new project?' I usually describe it in English or in Russian as a propaganda tool for the Russian government," he says.

remakes (headlines)

From Salon

Friday, December 02, 2005

Headless insurgency found in topless war

more on books

I am convinced that we are only one device away from a digital publishing tsunami. Consider what happened when Apple launched the iPod in October of 2001. They provided an end-to-end solution that made downloading music easy, portable, and fun. Now, 30-plus million iPods later, iPods are everywhere.


From a publisher too, called Michael Hyatt

before google there was gutenberg

In a typical week, there are at least a million downloads. We get a lot of Thackeray downloads, a lot of James Joyce, a lot of Dickens. "Pride and Prejudice" is always up there. Sherlock Holmes is always up there. … There are always some you don't expect, like "Manners, Customs, and Dress During the Middle Ages, and During the Renaissance Period" by Paul Lacroix. …We also have reference material, which most people probably wouldn't think of - like Roget's Thesaurus. Plus, the Koran, along with the Bible.


Project Gutenberg founder Michael Hart interviewed in the WSJ

another journalist

BEIRUT, Lebanon Dec 12, 2005 — A prominent anti-Syrian journalist and lawmaker was killed by a car bomb Monday, a day after returning from France, where he had been staying periodically for fear of assassination.


From AP

book with booze, or booze with book?

A bonsai of sighs?

But what's most striking is the extra mini-cover that conceals the lower 1/4 of the book. It's an advertisement for a green drink you get from a plastic bottle that gives one, if I'm reading the marketing correctly, enlightenment. Witness:


Now, maybe my cultural radar is all whacked, and perhaps I'm having a Koontz moment, but if you look at this gentleman's collar, does he not look like a Buddhist monk? And that expression--is he not in the later stages of enlightenment, staring directly into nirvana?