Thursday, February 28, 2008

Obama, Clinton debate in Ohio

Watch the entire debate as Democratic presidential candidates Sen. Hillary Clinton and Barack Obama face off in Cleveland on MSNBC TV before crucial contests in Ohio and Texas.

Saturday, February 23, 2008

Charlie Rose - An Hour with Quincy Jones

A rebroadcast of an hour conversation with legendary musician, composer, producer and arranger Quincy Jones about his musical career and ... todos » his feature on the PBS "American Masters" series entitled "Quincy Jones: In the Pocket". He also discusses the release of his book "Q: The Autobiography of Quincy Jones", in which he explores his road to success, his career highlights and his evolution into one of the most powerful and respected entrepreneurs in the music industry:

Nation Of Andorra Not In Africa, Shocked U.S. State Dept. Reports (A JOKE!!!!!)

The United States gave billions of dollars in aid to the wealthy European principality of Andorra, which it mistakenly assumed was a poor African country.THIS IS A JOKE!!!!

Nation Of Andorra Not In Africa, Shocked U.S. State Dept. Reports

PBS FRONTLINE The Merchants of Cool

They spend their days sifting through reams of market research data. They conduct endless surveys and focus groups. They comb the streets, the schools, and the malls, hot on the trail of the "next big thing" that will snare the attention of their prey--a market segment worth an estimated $150 billion a year.

They are the merchants of cool: creators and sellers of popular culture who have made teenagers the hottest consumer demographic in America. But are they simply reflecting teen desires or have they begun to manufacture those desires in a bid to secure this lucrative market? And have they gone too far in their attempts to reach the hearts--and wallets--of America's youth?

FRONTLINE correspondent Douglas Rushkoff examines the tactics, techniques, and cultural ramifications of these marketing moguls in "The Merchants of Cool." Produced by Barak Goodman and Rachel Dretzin, the program talks with top marketers, media executives and cultural/media critics, and explores the symbiotic relationship between the media and today's teens, as each looks to the other for their identity.

Teenagers are the hottest consumer demographic in America. At 33 million strong, they comprise the largest generation of teens America has ever seen--larger, even, than the much-ballyhooed Baby Boom generation. Last year, America's teens spent $100 billion, while influencing their parents' spending to the tune of another $50 billion.

But marketing to teens isn't as easy as it sounds. Marketers have to find a way to seem real: true to the lives and attitudes of teenagers; in short, to become cool themselves. To that end, they search out the next cool thing and have adopted an almost anthropological approach to studying teens and analyzing their every move as if they were animals in the wild.

Take MTV. Long considered to be the arbiter of teen cool, the late 1990s saw MTV's ratings on the wane. To counter the slide, MTV embarked on a major teen research campaign, the hallmark of which was its "ethnography study"-- visiting teens' homes to view first hand their lives, interests and ask some quite personal questions.

But what lessons do MTV and other companies draw from this exhaustive and expensive study of teenagers' lives? Does it result in a more nuanced portrait of the American teen? In "The Merchants of Cool," FRONTLINE introduces viewers to the "mook" and the "midriff" -- the stock characters that MTV and others have resorted to in order to hook the teen consumer.

The "midriff"--the character pitched at teenage girls, is the highly-sexualized, world-weary sophisticate that increasingly populates television shows such as Dawson's Creek and films such as Cruel Intentions. Even more appealing to marketers is the "midriff's" male counterpart, the "mook." Characterized mainly by his infantile, boorish behavior, the "mook" is a perpetual adolescent: crude, misogynistic--and very, very, angry.

But also very lucrative. To appeal to the "mook," MTV has created programs such as Spring Break -- a televised version of teen beach debauchery--as well as a weekly program capitalizing on the current wrestling craze.

"What this system does is it closely studies the young, keeps them under constant surveillance to figure out what will push their buttons," says media critic Mark Crispin Miller. "And it blares it back at them relentlessly and everywhere."

Of course, there is resistance to the commercial machine. FRONTLINE takes viewers to downtown Detroit, where media analyst Rushkoff speaks with teens at a concert by the Detroit-based Insane Clown Posse, purveyors of a genre of music that's become known as "rage rock." When asked to describe what appeals to them about such music, the teens invariably respond that it belongs to them; it hasn't yet been taken and sold back to them at the mall. Full of profanity, violence, and misogyny, rage rock is literally a challenge thrown up to marketers: just try to market this!

But marketers have accepted the challenge: rage rock is now big business. Not only has Insane Clown Posse become mainstream, but much bigger acts like Eminem and Limp Bizkit are breaking sales records and winning industry accolades in the form of Grammy nominations and other mainstream music awards.

In "The Merchants of Cool," correspondent Rushkoff details how MTV and other huge commercial outlets orchestrated the rise of Limp Bizkit--despite the group's objectionable lyrics--and then relentlessly promoted them on-air.

But in doing so, critics ask, is MTV truly reflecting the desires of today's teenagers, or are they stoking a cultural infatuation with music and imagery that glorifies violence and sex as well as antisocial behavior and attitudes?

In today's media-saturated environment, such questions, it seems, are becoming increasingly difficult to answer.

"It's one enclosed feedback loop," Rushkoff says. "Kids' culture and media culture are now one and the same, and it becomes impossible to tell which came first--the anger or the marketing of the anger."

Therein lies the danger of today's teen-driven economy, observers say: As everyone from record promoters to TV executives to movie producers besieges today's teens with pseudo-authentic marketing pitches, teenagers increasingly look to the media to provide them with a ready-made identity predicated on today's version of what's cool. Rather than empowering youngsters, the incessant focus on their wants and desires leaves them adrift in a sea of conflicting marketing messages.

"Kids feel frustrated and lonely today because they are encouraged to feel that way," Miller tells FRONTLINE. "You know, advertising has always sold anxiety and it certainly sells anxiety to the young. It's always telling them that they are not thin enough, they're not pretty enough, they don't have the right friends, or they have no friends...they're losers unless they're cool. But I don't think anybody, deep down, really feels cool enough, ever."

And as more and more teens look to the media to define what they should think and how they should behave, even some cool hunters are no longer sure that their work isn't having a negative impact.

"Even though I work at MTV...I am starting to see the world more like someone who's approaching forty than someone who's twenty," says Brian Graden, the channel's president of programming. "And I can't help but be worried that we are throwing so much at young adults so fast. And that there is no amount of preparation or education or even love that you could give a child to be ready."

PBS FRONTLINE: "Medicating Kids"

In "Medicating Kids," FRONTLINE examines the dramatic increase in the prescription of behavior-modifying drugs for children. Are these ... todos » medications really necessary--and safe--for young children, or merely a harried nation's quick fix for annoying, yet age-appropriate, behavior?

A discussion about the films There Will be Blood & No Country for Old Men

A discussion about the Oscar nominated films There Will be Blood & No Country for Old Men.Includes Daniel-Day Lewis, Javier Bardem, Joel Coen, Ethan Coen, Paul Thomas Anderson, Josh Brolin:

Charlie Rose - NYT & McCain / Samantha Power

A discussion about John McCain and the NY Times lobbyist allegation and Samantha Power:

Saturday, February 16, 2008

The Power of Nightmares - BBC TV Documentary

This is an interesting documentary about terrorism from the BBC TV network in Britain.

Sunday, February 10, 2008

Bill Gates vs. Steve Jobs (BBC)

Bill Gates heads the biggest software, services and Internet technologies company in the world. Steve Jobs predicted the personal computer ... all » revolution and made it happen. So who is the most powerful in the world of computing?

Saturday, February 9, 2008

Friday, February 1, 2008

Grammar & Writing Book in Catalan & English

Here's some useful information in Catalan & English. It's impossible to read here, so I'd download it (see bottom):

More English Connectors

Here's a shorter list of some really good ones:
DOWNLOAD FILE

Part 12 Democratic Presidential Candidates' Debate 1-31-08

Part 11 Democratic Presidential Candidates' Debate 1-31-08

Part 10 Democratic Presidential Candidates' Debate 1-31-08

Part 9 Democratic Presidential Candidates' Debate 1-31-08

Part 8 Democratic Presidential Candidates' Debate 1-31-08

Part 7 Democratic Presidential Candidates' Debate 1-31-08

Part 6 Democratic Presidential Candidates' Debate 1-31-08

Part 5 Democratic Presidential Candidates' Debate 1-31-08

Part 4 Democratic Presidential Candidates' Debate 1-31-08

Part 3 Democratic Presidential Candidates' Debate 1-31-08

Part 2 Democratic Presidential Candidates' Debate 1-31-08

Part 1 Democratic Presidential Candidates' Debate 1-31-08