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Must Reads: August 10, 2000

Alright, maybe calling these must reads is a little presumptuous. But I found all this stuff to be at least a little bit interesting. Looks like it's going to be a hot one as the Sioux Empire Fair rolls around. Try to stay cool.

Ronald, patron saint of ethnography(This Blog Sits at ...): Why do people at McDonald’s order a smaller Coke in the drive thru than they do in the restaurant? An anthropologist whose blog has a real long name spends a few hours in a parking lot searching for the answer. (I’m guessing it has to do with peeing.)

Search Engine Leader Snubs Tech News Outlet (CNET): What happens when the head of Google gets Googled? He gets really, really mad.
Touched by an Angel: (Cleveland Scene) Remember the famous Farrah Fawcett poster that you bought at 7-11 for $3? OK, well, I've never forgotten it. Changed my life. The Cleveland Scene has a fascinating story about the guys who conceived of the idea and made Farrah a temporary star.
Guilty of Being Ugly: (South Dakota Magazine): Bernie Hunhoff pointed readers to this comment at the South Dakota Magazine blog, but it's worth mentioning again. Doug Lund, KELO-Land anchor, posted a fascinating comment about the station's long-running battle with the vultures who camp out on the station's tower.
Half of NYTimes.com users are influentials (P.R. Newswire): The New York Times web site conducted a poll showing that 48 percent of its readers are active in their community. The rest of us sit on the couch and read silly poll results on the Internet.
How Awful is Wolf Blitzer's New Show (Rant-a-Bit): Scott Hudson reports on the failure of the over-hyped "Situation Room," Wolf Blitzer's new show. I don't want to spoil Scott's kicker, but he wraps it all up nicely with a single line.

To do list:
Check out the Sturgis Bike Rally web cam at the Rapid City Journal site. One of the most popular activities at this year's rally seems to be standing in front of the camera then calling a friend back home and telling them, "Look, I'm on your computer." Genius marketing idea and strangely addictive voyueristic activity for those of us at home.

Go to the Holabird Advocate and scroll way to the bottom of the page to participate in the current poll. This week's question: Which is the most delicious Dead Animal? I voted for pig but cow has taken an early lead.

Posted on Tuesday, August 9, 2005 by Registered CommenterSDBWM in | Comments2 Comments

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Reader Comments (2)

As i was awakened by the phone ringing this morning, on the other line was a marine recruiter looking for my son, I a vietnam era veteran told him politely that we are not interested. As i am not interested in a sending a son to fight in a war that over the long haul looks like another mini vietnam. Also due to the fact we have a republican administration afraid of giving health care to veterans who were promised it, if we had senators
who continually supported veterans i am sure partiotism would be more than the 57 percent of people who dissaprove of the war now.so heres to you johnny who only votes once in a while for veterans.
August 10, 2005 | Unregistered Commentercommander jr
I found this on Eric Alterman's blog (http://msnbc.msn.com/Default.aspx?id=3449870&p1=0)

Paul McLeary Chimes in

In July, 2004, “FOX News Live” featured a segment in which a "suburban stay-at-home mom"
appeared supporting president Bush over John Kerry in the upcoming November election. The woman, who was identified simply as a former lobbyist who had "started a nonprofit organization for moms" smiled and shilled for the camera, saying that she felt that Bush he would be better able to keep her children safe than John Kerry.

This same woman appeared on FOX again the next month to support the president and bash Teresa Heinz Kerry, and was again identified merely as a "stay-at-home mom.”

Nowhere in either segment was it mentioned that Penny Nance -- this concerned citizen and everymom -- was in fact a long-time conservative operative with ties to several prominent Christian activist organizations. At that time of last summer’s FOX segments, Nance, in addition to being a mom, was also the president of Kids First Coalition, a conservative group for which she was still a registered lobbyist, and a board member of the conservative Christian women's
organization Concerned Women for America. Somehow, both FOX and Nance also forgot to mention that she was president of Nance and Associates, a public policy and media consulting firm.

And of course, this woman who in effect lied about who she was – twice – on national television has been hired by the Federal Communications Commission as a “special advisor” to help develop agency policy. And which policy would that be? Specifically, she will help develop the agency’s stance on fining alleged instances of “indecent” content on broadcast and possible cable television.

As Eric pointed out in this space yesterday, (and I wrote about at CJRDaily) the long, peaceful slumber of FCC boss Kevin Martin may be about to end. As opposed to those wild and wholly days when his former boss at the agency Michael Powell was handing out fines for alleged “indecent” broadcast content like he was being paid by the profanity, Martin has taken a pretty low-key approach since succeeding to throne in March of this year – so far neglecting to issue ANY fines up to this point. Powell, on the other hand, partially spurred on by a
Republican-controlled Congress ready to knock some Hollywood heads, dished out a whopping $8 million in fines during 2004 – up from the measly $48,000 handed down the year before he took over at the FCC in 2001.

And it looks like those bad old days may be coming back for an encore performance. Martin has long been on record as wanting to enforce stricter indecency fines than Powell had. And Nance is poised to bring her own Biblically-enhanced view to help the cause. The Concerned Women for America, for whom Nance served as a board member until recently, helpfully describes its mission as “helping…to bring Biblical principles into all levels of public policy.” Another cookie-cutter religious right group called The Center for Reclaiming America, for whom Nance also worked as a lobbyist, points out that it sees its mission as one to “defend and implement the Biblical principles on which our country was founded.”

Sounds like just what a secular democracy needs in someone who will have a say in what is able to be broadcast over the nation’s airwaves, doesn’t it?
August 10, 2005 | Unregistered CommenterScott

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