Friday, April 10, 2009

Will You "Go" With Me: Check Yes or No

I cooked up this love potion on my universal stove. *mwah*


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Thursday, April 9, 2009

AP on Mission to Become RIAA of News?

On Monday, The Associated Press Board of Directors announced the launch of an "industry initiative to protect news content from misappropriation online". AP Chairman Dean Singleton said the AP will "work with portals and other partners who properly license content – and would pursue legal and legislative actions against those who don‘t." In addition to reducing rates, revising package plans and offering a loyalty discount, the AP seem to be taking an ill-advised cue from the RIAA's "How to Sow Discontent Among Your Customer Base". To wit, a rural radio station and AP affiliate, WTNQ-FM 104.9 in Lafollete, Tennessee, was contacted by the AP with an e-mail "cease and desist" regarding AP YouTube videos embedded on the station's website. Frank Strovel, charged with maintaining WTNQ's site, chronicled the exchange on his blog, Left of the Dial.

Strovel writes: I called [our AP Regional Radio Representative]. I said, “How is it a violation of a license agreement if you are actively posting the video on YouTube — on a channel you specifically created to share content — with embed codes for people to post in their websites? Are you telling me that you put it there for people to use... but if they USE IT they’re violating your rights?”
The basic reply was, “Well, I’ll have to investigate that issue further but in the meantime you need to pull all of our videos off your site.”
I asked, “Is it because we’re a radio station? What if I posted one of your videos from YouTube on my personal blog? Would I be in violation of your rights?”
Again, no definite answer. The guy is stumped. But I must take down the videos I posted. And he told me that now he is noticing that other stations are doing the same thing and they’re “looking into that”.
So they singled us out? A small, rural station?
OK, so yesterday I pulled the videos. Today, we talked again. He still had no answer as to why they are posting content on YouTube for embedding when it’s apparently a crime to do so. I think I’ve set his office into a bit of a tizzy. He said he has talked to his superiors and still has no answers to my questions but they are “looking into the matter”.

After the episode attracted the attention of the blogosphere, the AP apologized to Strovel and informed him that WTNQ can embed AP vids.

The inherent absurdity of this episode is probably already obvious to y'all. First, this station is an AP affiliate; the AP is alienating their customer base with their ignorance of their own policies coupled with their ham-handed attempt at enforcement of said policies. Second, by creating a YouTube channel and leaving their embed codes enabled, the AP should be abiding by YouTube TOS; namely section 6-C, wherein the TOS states: "For clarity, you retain all of your ownership rights in your User Submissions. However, by submitting User Submissions to YouTube, ... you also hereby grant each user of the YouTube Website a non-exclusive license to access your User Submissions through the Website, and to use, reproduce, distribute, display and perform such User Submissions as permitted through the functionality of the Website and under these Terms of Service." Finally, if the AP wants to control and profit from the use of their video content, why don't they develop their own user-friendly content delivery network? Instead, the AP piggybacks off YouTube's CDN, fails to utilize tools to disable embedding, and then cries foul when one of its affiliates uses the service as it is offered.

Just, wow.

Tuesday, October 21, 2008

Smoke-Filled Room, v. 2


● A 57-year-old Obama campaign worker was allegedly assaulted in Caledonia, Wis. on Saturday afternoon. Chicago resident Nancy Takehara was working as a door-to-door canvasser, when she encountered a disgruntled male resident. In an interview with 12 News, Takehara said: "The next thing I know he’s telling us we’re not his people, we’re probably with ACORN, and he started screaming and raving. He grabbed me by the back of the neck. I thought he was going to rip my hair out of my head. He was pounding on my head and screaming. The man terrified me."
The Obama campaign reacted quickly to the incident. In fact, by the time Takehara returned home, a message from the campaign awaited her, asking her to call in and speak with Obama. Takehara said: "Senator Obama understood… it was wonderful. It made me feel wonderful. It made me feel connected to this government again." The campaign also issued a reasoned public statement Sunday: "Last night’s unfortunate incident in Caledonia was isolated and extremely rare, and we are grateful our volunteer is doing well,” said Phil Walczak, Wisconsin communications director for Obama For America. "Thousands of Wisconsinites welcome our canvassers at the doors each and every day and whether or not they support Barack Obama. There is an overwhelming desire across the state to have a dialogue about how to bring our country forward." I couldn't help but agree with HuffPo columnist Jeff Dorchen when he wrote yesterday: "It isn't hard to imagine what Sarah Palin's reaction would be to a McCain/Palin volunteer being assaulted. It would no doubt sound something like this: 'Some of these people just don't get democracy. They don't get that you have to be accepting of others' right to disagree. That's the American way. But they don't get it. So, like Bill Ayers, they lash out violently at what they don't understand.'" And it's strange how little coverage the liberal, elite MSM is giving to this tasty little sensationalist nugget.

● Yesterday, in Grand Junction, Colorado, Sarah Palin gave Barack Obama a new "Joes the Plumber"-style nickname: it's, get this, "Barack the Wealth Spender". I guess "Barack the Wealth Spreader" didn't have quite the same ring to it. CNN reports that, in addition to providing Obama with a shiny new nickname, the McCain/Palin campaign have located a new working class hero. This time it's "Tito the builder", or Tito Munoz, a Columbian immigrant and construction worker. Palin explained Tito the builder's beef to the outdoor crowd: "Tito is not pleased with how the Barack Obama campaign and some of the media friends there have been roughing up Joe the Plumber,” Palin said, after accusing the Obama campaign of 'investigating' Wurzelbacher’s background." As we've all read by now, thanks to the evil, liberal, elite media, Wurzelbacher inflated his income and was only speaking metaphorically about buying a business that's a) not for sale and b) generates less than $250,000, the profit margin at which further earnings would be taxed at a higher rate in Obama's proposal. So, it would seem that the McCain campaign's poster child for working-class-hero-whose-dreams-will-be-crushed-by-Obama would actually benefit from Obama's tax plan. And, unless they're making way more than the national average, the other heroes that Palin conjured at Monday's rally -- "Phil the bricklayer" and "Rose the teacher" -- probably stand to save money under Obama's plan, as well. My question is this: After the Joe-the-plumber media disaster, Team McCain's reaction is to attempt to force more hokey stereotypical and, more disturbingly, blatantly inaccurate working-class-hero rhetoric down our throats? Really? Is Palin so utterly removed from reality -- or in an "alternate universe", as suggested by Rachel Maddow re: Troopergate -- to think that "Rose the teacher", even if she has a fellow teacher as a domestic partner and their income is combined, is makin' over $250,000?! Ain't happenin', folks.

● In other news, it's been a hard weekend for the McCain/Palin camp. Colin Powell delivered a strongly worded endorsement of Obama that simultaneously served as a rejection of the GOP ticket. Palin flopped on SNL, amidst potty humor. And Obama is outspending McCain in advertising in an unprecedented manner. Congresswoman Michelle Bachmann channeled McCarthy. Man names baby Sarah McCain-Palin. And I've got a crush on Arianna.

Thursday, October 16, 2008

دام



Have you heard of Palestinian hip-hop group DAM? According to DAM members, their moniker is an acronym for 'Da Arabic MCs and means "blood" in Hebrew and "eternity" in Arabic. In 2001, the unsigned group released the single "Meen Erhabe?" ("Who's the Terrorist?") via their Web site; it was downloaded more than a million times.

In November 2006, DAM released their first album, Dedication. DAM's lyrical language is Arabic. But Dedication's single, "Born Here" was released in Hebrew, in the hope of spreading their message. Their music serves as a window into the Israeli-Palestinian conflict.

On the Web:
DAM's official Web site
DAM's MySpace

DAM - "Born Here" (with English subtitles)


DAM - "Meen Erhabe?" or "Who's the Terrorist?" (with English subtitles)

Saturday, October 11, 2008

Culture Vulture: 10/11/08

♥ Second virgin-birthed shark pup escapes cannibalism. [WTOP]

♥ Lithuanian designer Jonas Jurgaitis' furniture evokes anthropomorphic pom-pon creatures, Legos, and extraterrestrial life. JJ Design [via io9]

♥ Sexologist Destin Gerek encourages Obama supporters to come together for change. O's for Obama [via Fleshbot]

♥ Manic Pixie Dream Girl: Cinematic Scourge or Quintessential Muse? [NPR]

♥ Gmail unveils drunk-mailin' safety feature. [Gmail]

♥ Weird Al Yankovic satirizes economic downturn in parody of T.I.'s "Whatever You Like". [YouTube]

Tuesday, September 23, 2008

Love It: "True Blood"



Love It: Alan Ball's new black dramedy True Blood.

I'm enjoying the series so much, in fact, that I now want to read the books that inspired it. If author Charlaine Harris' Southern Vampire Series is as authentic, contemporary, Southern, sexy, and witty as True Blood, consider me a Harris fangirl.

I have a crush on at least half the cast already: Sookie Stackhouse (Anna Paquin); Bill Compton (Stephen Moyer); Tara Thornton (Rutina Wesley); and Diane (Aunjaneu Ellis), for starters. Like Ball's previous forays into film and television, American Beauty and Six Feet Under, it's character-driven, smartly written, and visually transfixing. I'm thirsty.

True Blood trailer:

Creator Alan Ball's True Blood POV:

On a semi-related note, I'm anxious to see Ball's new allegedly challenging, controversial, and wildly satirical new film, Towelhead. Apparently, it had a very limited U.S. release on Sept. 12 and another is scheduled for Sept. 26. Please, please, please come to Albuquerque, Towelhead.

Towelhead trailer: