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by Sheila Lennon
'
Bottom-up' journalism from the pros

April 1, 2002

This is not an April Fool's joke: I am technically on vacation, leaving tomorrow for Europe, thanks to British Airways' panicky fire sale in January. By the end of the week I'll be settled into a houseboat on an Amsterdam canal, and will file from there. Expect flower photos, since I have press credentials for the once-a-decade Floriade flower show. I am writing this from the floor surrounded by a Dell laptop, a Nikon digital camera, battery chargers, 220-volt adapters, serial cables and a USB port card reader (the card, a tiny piece of portable storage, replaces "film"). If I get it all working together on the boat, you'll see reports from a city that, by all accounts, is vastly different from America's current "Mommy Culture" (Wear your seat belt, don't smoke, eat fat-free and die anyway!).

Anniversary: Marvin Gaye (photos) might have turned 63 tomorrow, had he not been fatally shot by his father, Marvin Gay Sr., 18 years ago today. Tai Moses, editor of Metro Santa Cruz, looks at What's Goin' On (song from NPR report, longer background story), Gaye's 1971 break from Motown pop (I Heard It Through the Grapevine) during the Vietnam war era, the man and his legacy in The Rebirth of Marvin Gaye. Undeniably, an everyday part of that legacy: Gaye's 1982 song Sexual Healing is now on nearly every bar jukebox in America,

Timely segue: Is protest music dead?

How Power Shapes the News: The Second Annual FAIR Report, Fear & Favor 2001 from Fairness & Accuracy In Reporting

Fight for the future (continued): Biased reporting is frustrating. Democrats vs. New Media by Glenn Harlan Reynolds gets the pie in the face today: "And nothing illustrates the problem more than what happened the same day that (Democratic National Committee chairman Terry) McAuliffe got his $7 million check from an entertainment mogul: Democratic Sen. Fritz Hollings of South Carolina, himself a recipient of nearly $300,000 in entertainment-industry money during the last election cycle, introduced legislation that seems guaranteed to ensure that the small-media world will hate the Democrats, whose support for copy protection -- and receipt of campaign contributions from the entertainment industry -- far outweighs that of Republicans. "

Hey, these are the opening steps of the dance. Since then, Rep. Adam Schiff (R-CA) has announced that he is looking for sponsors for a House bill like Hollings's.

Weblog indexes Daypop and Blogdex also show lots of links to a Wired story by Declan McCullough headlined, "Hollings Howls Will Have to Wait." The news here is "Sen. Patrick Leahy (D-Vt.) says a controversial proposal to embed copy protection in electronics gear will not become law this year. Since Leahy is the powerful chairman of the Senate Judiciary committee, his opposition instantly boosts the difficulty Hollywood studios will encounter in their attempts to enact sweeping copyright legislation. The Vermont Democrat said through a spokesman that he 'does not' support the Consumer Broadband and Digital Television Promotion Act (CBDTPA), which Sen. Fritz Hollings (D-South Carolina) introduced this month. "

(The judiciary committee seeks your input at http://judiciary.senate.gov/special/input_form.cfm?comments=1 )

There are excellent responses to Reynolds, linked to pop up in a small vertical window on the page. One suggests, "In the end, I have no idea what's going on in this issue other than that Reynolds seems to have something against successful members of the entertainment industry and against Democrats. Not what I'd call news I can use." A response to that fills in the concrete background on what the bill would require and prohibit, and sneers at the previous media critic, "Educate yourself next time you decide to make a comment. " (Jerk.) Pooling the input of all three, we have a more complete story.

Webcasting labyrinth: How to operate an Internet radio station legally.

April Fool's 1: A somewhat nonsensical story in the (U.K.) Register : "AOL gets it! Steve Case gets it!" beamed Dave Winer today, after brokering a deal that sees two hundred of the most popular weblogs become part of the AOL-Time Warner publishing empire."

Winer is the author of a program called Radio Userland (software and a year of updates plus hosting for your weblog costs $39.95 per computer) which allegedy permits people who don't know html to publish weblogs. But it looks like a clunky html editor to me, not really for the novice; unlike real html editors, whose WYSIWYG (what you see is what you get) windows work on Macs or PCs, NS or IE, if you aren't using I.E. on a PC, you have to code. This eliminates not only novices using Netscape, but Mac users who, as a breed, tend to create the cool artsy sites. Indeed, tracking technology is a big part of many weblogs' daily buzz, making some incomprehensible to those of other religions. Members of this Radio Userland user group belong to a network called Weblogs.com, and it is these that AOL is allegedly to take on board.

The Register describes the reaction of an AOL executive to the deal: "...we think we have 78 per cent of the libertarian news blogs, 91 per cent of the ClueTrain Manifesto fan sites, and 59 per cent of all blogging female arts graduates, many of whom are Virgos." (Not me. I'm a Cancer.)

"And the possibilities for vertical integration are endless," he enthused. "No cat will ever go ill again in America again in obscurity." This is perhaps a refernce both to the personal nature of many West Coast weblogs ("my day" in Proustian detail) and to an English cat named Frank, who was hit by a car in January, which made him a wildly popular celebrity in the land of tea and crumpets:: Frank's recovery from a broken pelvis has been broadcast live on a webcam ever since at http://www.cathospital.co.uk/

April Fool's 2: AOL announces its intent to acquire Saltire, a weblog devoted to covering business and technology. "The transaction, which is expected to close in April, is contingent on obtaining necessary consents and approvals from various regulatory agencies. As part of the deal, Saltire will be required to divest its shares in the Titanic Deck Chair Rearrangement Corporation (NASDAQ:TDCRC). AOL Time Warner CEO Gerald M. Levin said, "this acquisition will really increase the depth of our content coverage, and will allow us to extend our brand reach into the weblogging world." Saltire editor Steve MacLaughlin said, "Hey, I figured that if you can't beat 'em, join 'em. Plus, they threw in free cable television for life."

April Fool's 3:
Google's PigeonRank

April Fool's 4:
Georgia Tech Archaeologists Close to Finding Treasure of Ponce de Leon

Hilarious, these geek humorists, eh?

Time waster: See if you have what it takes to quit your day job and be a retail entrepreneur! Playing the online Lemonade Game. You have a lemonade stand, a weather report and a limited budget with which to buy cups, lemons sugar and ice.How much to buy, and how much to charge. Addictive. (When I should have been packing, I was selling lemonade.) Hint: You won't make more money by lowering your price or quality.

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by Sheila Lennon
features & interactive producer of projo.com

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