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Monday, June 4, 2007

VIDEO: The Council on Foreign Relations Controls American Media

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What exactly is the Council on Foreign Relations (CFR)? Many Americans know almost nothing about this organization. Yet, this organization has dominated this country’s politics, the press, and the economy. Representative John R. Rarick once said, “The CFR, dedicated to one-world government, financed by a number of the largest tax-exempt foundations, and wielding such power and influence over our lives in the areas of finance, business, labor, military, education and mass communication media, should be familiar to every American concerned with good government and with preserving and defending the U.S. Constitution and our free-enterprise system.

Note:Video at the bottom of the article

Yet, the nation’s right to know machinery – the news media – usually so aggressive in exposures to inform our people, remain conspicuously silent when it comes to the CFR, its members and their activities… The CFR is the establishment. Not only does it have influence and power in key decision-making positions at the highest levels of government to apply pressure from above, but it also finances and uses individuals and groups to bring pressure from below, to justify the high-level decisions for converting the United States from a sovereign constitutional republic into a servile member of a one-world dictatorship.”

Of course, the people know almost nothing about the Council on Foreign Relations because many propagandists, I mean journalists, themselves are members of this elite organization. Some of the CFR propagandists include Barbara Walters, Dan Rather, Tom Brokaw, Jim Lehrer, Lesley Stahl, Katie Couric, Tony Snow, Morton Kondracke, Daniel Pipes, and Charles Krauthammer. In fact, the CFR owns and control the television stations, radio stations, and newspapers such as ABC, CBS, NBC, FOX, PBS, New York Times, Washington Post, Time, U.S. News & World Report, and Newsweek.

Sadly, some of the Internet newssites “remain conspicuously silent when it comes to the CFR, its members and their activities.” The John Birch Society, meanwhile, has exposed the Council on Foreign Relations for many years.

Since I knew very little about the CFR myself, I decided to do my own research. For almost a year, I spent some time researching and investigating the Council on Foreign Relations. I acquired a copy of past and present membership rosters, dug up some major dirt on many CFR members, acquired smoking-gun photographs of CFR members, and read Internet articles that discussed the CFR. In fact, I, along with my friend Beavis, managed to build a webpage condemning the Council on Foreign Relations. I have also spent some time reading None Dare Call It Conspiracy by Gary Allen, The Invisible Government by Dan Smoot, and Shadows of Power by James Perloff. I was interested in finding a “money trail” and I decided to look at the CFR from a business and financial perspective as well as the political perspective. After all, both politics and finances involve money and power.

In a book called Kissinger: A Biography, Walter Isaacson wrote (on p. 84): “Found in 1921 by members of Manhattan’s internationally minded business and legal elite, the Council on Foreign Relations is a private organization that serves as a discussion club for close to three thousand well-connected aficionados of foreign affairs. Beneath the chandeliers and stately portraits in its Park Avenue mansion, members attend lectures, dinners, and roundtable seminars featuring top officials and visiting world leaders.” Isaacson himself is a member of the Council on Foreign Relations and a Rhodes Scholar. Notice that Isaacson used the word elite to describe members of CFR.

Who exactly were “Manhattan’s internationally minded business and legal elite” back in 1921? Some of the “internationally minded business and legal elite” who founded the Council on Foreign Relations include Edward Mandell House, Paul Warburg, Otto Kahn, John W. Davis, Isaiah Bowman, Archibald Cary Coolidge, Paul D. Cravath, Norman H. Davis, Stephen P. Duggan, John H. Finley, Edwin F. Gay, David F. Houston, Frank L. Polk, William R. Shepherd, and George Wickersham.

Today, the “internationally minded business and legal elite” include David Rockefeller, Stanley Fischer, Zbigniew Brzezinski, Henry Kissinger, Alan Greenspan, Bill Clinton, Jimmy Carter, Gerald Ford, George Soros, Paul Wolfowitz, and Rupert Murdoch. The Council on Foreign Relations is not an ordinary private organization; the Council on Foreign Relations is an elite cabal. In fact, the CFR is an organization where the enemies of America and its “controlled opposition” get down and dirty at the Harold Pratt House.

The Council on Foreign Relations control and dominate major corporations, banks, law firms, foundations, social organizations, labor unions, universities, and the press as well as the federal government. Some of the CFR-affiliated corporations and organizations include the JP Morgan Chase, Lehman Brothers, Goldman Sachs, Citigroup, the Trilateral Commission, the Bretton Woods Committee, the CSIS, the Aspen Institute, Human Rights Watch, The Brookings Institution, Harvard University, Princeton, Johns Hopkins University, Georgetown, Ford Foundation, Carnegie Endowment for International Peace, the New York Times, the Washington Post, Fox News, ACLU, AFL-CIO, and the Federal Reserve.

For example, John J. Sweeney is the president of AFL-CIO, America’s largest labor union, and Sweeney himself is a member of the Council on Foreign Relations. On the other hand, Robert J. Stevens is the chairman and CEO of Lockheed Martin, and Stevens himself is a member of the Council on Foreign Relations. On paper, industrial companies and labor unions are supposed to hate each other. In reality, however, both Big Industry and Big Labor are in bed together. Whenever a worker pays his or her union dues, they are simply getting shafted by the CFR cabal.

Politics is another example. On paper, the Democratic Party and the Republican Party oppose each other. However, the truth is stranger than fiction. High-ranking members of the Democratic Party and the Republican Party are in bed together. Bill Clinton, Jimmy Carter, John Kerry, Joseph Lieberman, and Dianne Feinstein are members of the Democratic Party, and they are all members of the Council on Foreign Relations.

Henry Kissinger, John McCain, Newt Gingrich, Dick Cheney, Katherine Harris, and Bill Frist are members of the Republican Party, and they are members of the Council of Foreign Relations. The international bankers control and finance both the Democratic Party and the Republican Party. David Rockefeller is a Republican, and George Soros is a Democrat, but their membership into those political parties mean absolutely nothing to them. Thus, the so-called “Leftist-Rightist” political perspectives are nothing more than charades.

The CFR is one of the few organizations where capitalists and socialists work together in harmony. David Rockefeller himself has given aid and comfort to Nikita Khrushchev, Chou Enlai, and Fidel Castro. This explains why CFR members love the Chinese Communists and the Russian Bolsheviks so much. From the time America established diplomatic ties with the Soviet Union in 1933 until its collapse in 1991, the Soviet Embassy was located right across the street from the Harold Pratt House. Almost every ambassador to the Soviet Union were CFR members. In fact, every liaison officers and ambassadors to Red China is or has been members of the Council on Foreign Relations. By the way, Communist agent Alger Hiss was a member of CFR for a short time.

The CFR is truly an elite organization. Membership into this elite cabal is by invitation only. The Council on Foreign Relations is no different from the Chinese Communist Party, the Soviet Communist Party, and the Nazi Party of Germany. Dissent is not tolerated; any CFR member who fails to “toe the line” are expelled from the organization or in some cases killed in cold blood. Important CFR meetings are “off-the-record” and are never discussed in public. Those who leak any secrets will face consequences and repercussions on a massive scale.

According to the CFR’s own “Rule on Non-Attribution,” “[I]t would not be in compliance with the reformulated Rule, however, for any meeting participant (i) to publish a speaker’s statement in attributed form in a newspaper; (ii) to repeat it on television or radio, or on a speaker’s platform, or in a classroom; or (iii) to go beyond a memo of limited circulation, by distributing the attributed statement in a company or government agency newsletter.

The language of the Rule also goes out of its way to make it clear that a meeting participant is forbidden knowingly to transmit the attributed statement to a newspaper reporter or other such person who is likely to publish it in a public medium. The essence of the Rule as reformulated is simple enough: participants in Council meetings should not pass along an attributed statement in circumstances where there is substantial risk that it will promptly be widely circulated or published.” As CFR member David Gergen once said, “It’s none of your damn business.” In other words, just shut up and say nothing. This explains why CFR journalists will say or write absolutely nothing about the CFR’s evil, totalitarian agenda.

This elite cabal has a purpose; the Council on Foreign Relations wants to establish and exercise power and control over the American people and the entire world. Unfortunately, CFR members will do just about anything to achieve their lust for power and domination. Yes, CFR members will lie, cheat, covet, steal, and kill just to get what they want. They will engage in secrecy, treachery, and duplicity. They will even engage in a rebellion and an insurrection against our Constitution and our Declaration of Independence just to get what they want. We the people need to expose and eliminate the Council on Foreign Relations before the CFR destroys us. In the mean time, get a FREE copy of the 2005 CFR membership roster and my personal CFR charts and study them. On Election Day this year, I want you to go to the polls and vote, and I want you to expel the traitors and CFR members from office and elect patriotic Americans instead.

Old media by-lines aren’t worth the paper they’re written on

Outside of tech circles, online journalists are often looked upon as second-tier hacks, peculiar and idiosyncratic, or, as one experienced TV guy recently told me, “a bit strange”. Certainly, even in my supposedly tech-savvy journalism class in Ontario, Canada, many students scoffed at the online aspects of the course. I’m not sure why. Many journalists want their names on glossy spreads or on the front pages of daily newspapers and could care less about whether or not their stories get a ’second run’ on the internet. Not me.

I want to be an online journalist, and it doesn’t bother me if my stories never appear in print. At the moment, I’m in a weird reversal of that situation — I work for a magazine that covers the digital space but has no online presence. Try explaining that people from the tech industry — I do almost every day and a lot of people at first think I’m joking. (For the record, our site is getting built; it has just been slow in arriving.)

From a journalist’s perspective, the benefits of publishing online are manifold. For a start, you have a potentially global readership. Even if you’re writing for a relatively niche site such as, say, Asia Sentinel, there’s always a chance that a news aggregator such as Digg, Fark, or Google News will drive traffic to your story, or that it will benefit from a viral effect, being shared on blogs, social networks, and by email. A good scoop or a great investigative piece — provided it’s not behind a pay-wall — could have a readership in the millions, within hours.

The readership could also build to millions over years. The internet provides a platform to permanently archive your stories in the most incredibly easy-to-access way possible (by search). Again, even if you’re writing for a niche title, your stories will be part of the instantly-accessible body of knowledge right there alongside the New York Times for future readers and researchers to stumble upon.

There are, of course, many other benefits to online journalism, not the least of which is the interactivity inherent in online media, but I won’t bore you with a list. These reasons alone, however, are enough to convince me that if you don’t have online skills — some knowledge of content management, how to link, how to write for the web, how to make podcasts and, maybe, even write to pictures for online video — then there aren’t going to many journalism jobs available for you in five years’ time.

People who ‘don’t get’ online media often point to the gap between the ‘virtual world’ and the ‘physical world’, usually expressing a preference for being able to feel a product in their hands. I admit this is a charming quality of traditional media — I take special pleasure in disappearing into the bathroom with a copy of the New Yorker. But online reading habits and ever-evolving technology are fast closing that gap.

Two recently announced innovations are particularly exciting.

The Smartpen for a start could change the way we approach digital media. This Montblanc-size pen is actually a computer with ink. When you use it to write on special paper — ordinary paper printed with microdots — your scribblings are digitised and sound is recorded. The text and pictures can then be uploaded to your computer, or sent over the internet. Meanwhile, the noise going on while you’re writing is stored in the computer. When you use the pen to tap on a word or picture that you’ve just scribbled, it plays the audio recorded around the time that text or image was created.

Yeah, pretty damn cool. It’s technology that could streamline a journalist’s or a student’s work and open new possibilities for online publishing, including the ability to effectively and quickly present information straight-from-the-hand, which can then be linked to audio.

The pen, to go to market in the fourth quarter, is projected to cost less than US$200, and the paper will be comparable in price to regular paper. You can read more about the mobile computing platform here but I suggest clicking on that first link to see the demo video.

Another technology that got my quill quivering today is Microsoft’s Photosynth, “a monumental piece of software capable of assembling static photos into a synergy of zoomable, navigatable spaces”, according the bio of its architect, Blaise Aguera y Arcas. He’s also the mega-mind behind Seadragon, an in-development application that will allow readers to zoom in on images and text of any size in perfect resolution, and smoothly, regardless of bandwidth or amount of data. Seadragon does an infinitely better job at presenting an online replica of the newspaper-reading experience than any e-magazine or online reader out there today.

That all sounds very complicated, so see Blaise’s demo video to get a grasp of what it’s all about — and prepare to be gobsmacked in the process.

So, you see, with all the exciting movement in the digital space, rapidly increasing ad spend on digital platforms, and an online newspaper readership that is growing faster than general internet audience, I’m quite happy to let other journalists look at the .com guys as “a bit strange”. In the meantime, I’m going to keep honing my online skills to make sure I can thrive as a journalist in the future.

State Department awards UF first Study of U.S. program grant in journalism education

The State Department’s Study of the United States Branch recently awarded its first grant for international journalism and media faculty education to the College of Journalism and Communications.

The College is using the $275,000 grant to fund the newly created Study of the U.S. Institute on Journalism and Media, a six-week program beginning June 10 entitled “New Freedoms in Media: Teaching the Digital Journalism of Tomorrow.”

“The excitement and passion the University of Florida has shown in designing and planning this program is very evident,” said Adam Van Loon, a program officer in the State Department’s Study of the United States Branch. “We’re delighted to be working with the College of Journalism and Communications.”

Eighteen journalism educators from around the world will spend four weeks in Gainesville, a week in South Florida and a week in Washington, D.C., and New York. Among other topics, they’ll examine the media’s role in America, journalism’s potential in their countries and online communications’ influence on the international community.

The countries represented are the Democratic Republic of Congo, Argentina, China, Rwanda, Turkey, Russia, Czech Republic, the Ukraine, Macedonia, Zimbabwe, Vietnam, Cameroon, Pakistan, Egypt, India, Indonesia, Croatia and the Slovak Republic.

The participants – some of whom will be visiting the United States for the first time – bring a great deal of experience teaching and practicing journalism. Besides educating and training students, some of them have conducted research, edited publications, written books, created curricula and coordinated projects, among other professional endeavors.

The participants will benefit from the “skills and knowledge [they’ll] acquire and be able to disseminate,” said Prof. Sylvia Chan-Olmsted, principal investigator and associate dean for research. “The U.S. will also benefit, as better-informed audiences in the participants’ countries lead to more productive relationships.”

The institute goes beyond providing new tools. It aims to inspire such actions as the promotion of a global free press and engendering interaction among members of the media, said Prof. Emeritus Kurt Kent, the institute’s co-director.

The participants will produce news and multimedia blogs and take a close look at diversity in the United States. They will visit a Habitat for Humanity project and African-American, Haitian and Hispanic media operations.

To help them prepare for the program, the institute has set up a Web site.

They are among the 30,000 people who participate annually in State Department exchanges, which include the Fulbright program.

The experience is about more than exchanging knowledge and sharing viewpoints – it’s about establishing long-term, two-way relationships, Kent said. “Our faculty members will learn from them while they’re here, and afterwards.”

It’s also about the future, he said. The participants will have an impact on their countries’ next generations of journalists and media professionals.

June 4 Media Critique: "The Six Day War: Forty Years On"

Just looking at the events themselves really wouldn’t make HonestReportings case particulary well. And its case is nothing new, just the same old apologetics – nothing is Israels fault.


While June 5 marks the day that Israel initiated its military operation, it is important to note that the immediate Arab threats to wipe out Israel began in the preceding months. It is also critical to take the causes of the Six Day War into account before analyzing the resulting status of land taken as a result.

Initiated its military operation” is alternatively known as an 'invasion' or 'armed aggression', the supreme war crime. Who needs such details when you have “context”!


International Law makes a clear distinction between land "occupied" during a war of aggression and land taken as a result of a defensive war.

Really? HR accidentally fail to mention where “International law” makes this distinction, or to provide a relevant quote. Let me assist HR to locate where in International Law this exists – NO WHERE.

Well, that takes care of the first two sentences. I think we can see where this is going.

Here’s a few other resources for “context”. From MERIP , and IMEU .

And a general overview of the June ’67 war, and since HR mention it, a review of the “Syrian Shelling” that “Initiates War with Israel”, according to HR.


Israel had every legal and moral right to defend herself in 1967 and has legitimate rights within the territory that is under her control today. If you see a media report that misrepresents the events of 1967, use this primer and the following links to respond to media bias:

MTV Movie Awards cont’d

(click image for full view)

director Adam Shankman, Zac Efron, Elijah Kelley, John Travolta, Nikki Blonsky & Amanda Bynes, backstage at the 2007 MTV Movie Awards.

Nikki Blonsky and Adam Shankman spoke with WireImage about Hairspray and their anticipation for the evening’s ceremony.

WI: I cried when you got news that you got this part (in Hairspray.) How excited are you to be here today?

Nikki: Thank you! I cried too! I am so excited. I’ve watched the MTV Movie Awards ever year from home, so it’s just really exciting being here representing a movie that I am so thankful I’m a part of. It’s my dream come true, everything I’ve ever wanted and more.

WI: How was it working with John Travolta?

Nikki: Working with John Travolta is an amazing experience. He is such a talented, kind-hearted, loving man. Working with everybody else is incredible too. I mean, Mr. (Elijah) Kelley over here is one of the most incredible people I think I’ve ever met in my life and Adam Shankman gave me my dream, so everybody on the set was just amazing.

Reporter: But you also worked with people like Michelle Pfeiffer…

Nikki: mhmmm!

WI: Describe to me the experience of working in a film as this…

Nikki: You know what I think it’s indescribable. I think that is the one word to describe it. It’s this feeling of, “I can’t really be here,” I am watching myself have this experience. I feel like I am across the street watching this happen.

Adam: You know I think everybody when we did our first read through, that first day when everybody got all together and was sort of looking at each other face to face and suddenly realized, “wow, look at everyone who is in this room,” and on top of that “we’re doing a musical!?” and it was really, really crazy. During the read through all of the dancers, danced and everybody sang and it was like really crazy, and really kind of bizarrely emotional, and very personal experience so you can’t really explain it to people, but really, really like, “What the f’ is going on around here.”

WI: And is that how it is today? Is their anybody you are looking forward to seeing and are you routing for anybody in particular, any of the actors?

Nikki: I am looking forward to seeing everybody! I mean these are all the people I’ve seen on TV, so lets get it going, I want to see’m all!

Adam: Yeah, you have to remember a year ago she was working in a Coldstone’s.

Nikki: Yeah, a year ago I would have been watching this from home and these people would all still have been famous people that I would have never met. So I’m just excited to be on the same carpet as them, it’s a pleasure.

WI: What do you guys think about Sarah Silverman, the host?

Adam: Oh my God…

Nikki: I just saw her on Jimmy Kimmel…

Adam: This is like a fricken’ dream come true…

Nikki: So funny!

Adam: She’s gonna kill.

Nikki: Love it! Can’t Wait.

Adam: Her show is one of my favorite shows. It is the weirdest, greatest things.

Nikki: And I love the MAXIM cover! With the boots! I was like “You go Sarah Silverman, you be different!” I love it! I love different!

Adam: So do I. Obviously. It’s fantastic.

WI: Well good luck you guys.

Nikki: Thank you

WI: I can’t wait to see (Hairspray!)

Adam: Thank you.

Nikki: Thank you so much.

Adam: We worked hard so I hope you guys- please like it, please like it- and if you don’t, don’t tell me.

Wal-Mart a new example of “how not to”?

Wal-Mart’s Q2 results could fall short of expectations—quite a bit short of expectations. This on top of a Q1 where the Sam’s Club division had profit growth that outpaced sales growth (for the seventh straight quarter) and where, as MarketWatch put it, “problems at Wal-Mart’s namesake stores in the U.S. continued to dog the company.” What’s the matter? The director of communications at WakeUpWalMart.com has been quoted as saying, “Wal-Mart needs to realize that improving its public image and its business reputation demands they stop ignoring the fact that the American people care about values, not just value.” Hmmmm. Valuesvalue. Sounds like a good lesson in marketing! versus

Let’s assume the values Wal-Mart is charged with ignoring include equal opportunity; a fair day’s pay for a fair day’s work; and, honesty and integrity. Let’s assume that, because Wal-Mart has been slapped with a sex discrimination lawsuit filed on behalf of 1.6 million women employees; has long been accused of refusing to pay for overtime and of hiring primarily part-time employees so as to avoid the cost of full-time benefits; and, has had to fire some top execs, including former vice chairman Thomas M. Coughlin, for stealing company funds.

So, there’s the rub. Wal-Mart’s customers are working-class consumers (for the most part). Equal opportunity, a fair day’s pay for a fair day’s work, and honesty and integrity are very much part of their values, because they affect their lives on a very personal and daily basis. Many working-class Americans are all too familiar with being passed over on the job (or for a job) because of their color, ethnicity, religion, sexual orientation, gender, accent, you name it. Too many have had to work multiple part-time jobs just to barely keep food on the table; faced the county hospital’s emergency room as their only healthcare option because they have no insurance; lost an hour’s pay every time they had to meet with their child’s teacher. Too many have watched their loved ones do without even as Dennis Kozlowski billed Tyco for $1M of his wife’s 40th birthday party.

Maybe these working-class consumers shopped at Wal-Mart because it offered value. But, now that there is more choice in the marketplace, they can shop where they also see a reflection of their values. It makes sense and every small business would do well to learn from Wal-Mart’s lesson. As you craft and maintain your brand, remember who your customer’s are and what they value—which might include their values.

MTV Movie Awards: Running Diary

Let’s try something new. Tonight is MTV’s annual Movie Awards, the Oscars for the 18-25 year old demographic. The winners are usually laughable, but it’s normally good for 2-3 hours of comedy. It’s time for a running diary of the proceedings.

This is my first stab at a diary, so we’ll see how it goes. It may be a complete train wreck, but half the time the MTV Awards are as well. I’ll post it in two sections so if it’s completely awful – it won’t take up much space. So with the expectations high – let’s start it…

Pre-Show

6:33 Has Suchin Pak aged 50 years in the past few weeks? Are we sure she isn’t Connie Chung?

6:34: Why does that fire truck look like it has hydraulics? Where’s Xzibit and the Pimp My Ride crew? We need an Autobot with 24 LCD screens and 20 inch rims….don’t we?

6:35 – Transformers apparently had a bigger budget than the war in Iraq. Question though – if you were an alien – would you want to transform into a semi with flames on it? Answer: Absolutely.

**To save space – if you want to read the rest of the Diary – click on the comments below***


Click here to read all posts from Community Movie Critics

One Response to “MTV Movie Awards: Running Diary”

Pre-Show (continued)

6:36 – Mandy Moore looks like an evil bridesmaid. And John Krasinki has a shirt on from Baby Gap….from the girl’s section. And Jessica Alba…well. I’m watching this with my wife – so Alba looks like she has a great personality.

6:37 – According to MTV Lindsay Lohan is most known for her style. Somewhere drugs, flashing, and vodka are upset. Apparently doing cocaine, having multiple DUI’s, and being worthless – gets you a fashion montage at the VMA’s. Dustin “Screech Powers” Diamond needs a better agent – he fits the bill.

6:40 – Nice to know that according to Jay Z you need to have vintage jeans and a designer bag to be hot. This goes without saying, but no one would ever ask Tupac about fashion.

6:41 – I think that new reporter wants to get in the back seat of the muscle car with Shia LaBeouf. Only 11 minutes in and we’ve had an awkward moment.

6:43 – They just announced that the Human Giant crew is blogging live tonight. I look unoriginal already – that didn’t take long. Giant is inconsistent, but overall a show worthy of a TiVo season pass.

6:45 – Whitney, LC, and Audrina from The Hills – Do any of these girls have last names? Or real careers?

6:46 – More awkward Shia moments – whip cracking comments centering around being “Indiana Jones lover.” What is going on?

6:47 – Michael Bay movies have such gargantuan budgets and sets – that there’s no way he’s doing even 1/5 of the directing. He likely has 2nd and 3rd units doing all this work. It’s got to take at least 3-4 hours a day to keep his feathered bangs presentable.

6:50 – Paris Hilton is apparently “courageous” for attending the movie awards. What do we have to do to get footage of her in prison?

6:53 – Another Transformers cast member (Megan Fox) gets screen time. MTV better have gotten a huge check for all this publicity.

6:55 – The Transformer car has more personality than Josh Duhamel and Tyrese combined. They need to be paid not to do press for this film. They couldn’t sell Peppermint Schnapps to Lindsay Lohan. Per MTV, Tyrese is a man of many talents – apparently wearing diamonds is not only a talent – but talents. Are there any guys in Hollywood that you would ever want to hang out with personally?

6:59 – What we’ve learned from the pre-show is – commercial free isn’t always a good thing.

MTV Movie Awards

7:00 – Time for the “big show” – one prediction: Sarah Silverman is going to go from a niche to a huge star.. Her comedy can be offensive – but I have no problems with it. Her Comedy Central show (The Sarah Silverman Program) is vastly underrated. The best female comedian in years. Her Jesus as Magic movie has some old bits – but overall excellent – definitely worth Netflix-ing (which by the way – should be a recognized verb).

7:04 – Will Ferrell looks like he’s a few days away from showing up on Dateline NBC with Chris Hansen. He needs to shave before he ends up on a poster at the Post Office.

7:05 – Silverman’s intro is solid (great dig on Tobey Maguire that I can’t repeat – MTV can apparently get away with murder) – but it can’t compare to Chris Rock. Shots of Jack Nicholson slumming in the audience.

7:11 – Best Villain Award is the first of the night. We now know why Nicholson is in the crowd – I’m sure MTV gave him a heads up that he’d win if he showed.

7:12 – First and last time I’ll be right tonight – Jack wins and then sounds as if he gargled a broken beer bottle earlier tonight. He’s definitely had a few to drink.

7:15 – I’m convinced that within a decade we will be text messaging/voting via cell phone for the next president. Sanjya will be running on the wig ticket in 2020.

7:16 – MTV claims that if acceptance speeches run long tonight – they’ll have a huge man chase you off stage. A huge barely-clothed man with a fist for a belly button.

7:21 – The 322nd Old Navy Commercial of the night. I don’t know one person who shops at Old Navy and isn’t ashamed to admit it.

7:22 - Jessica Biel and Silverman just made every teenage boy’s night.

7:23 – Bruce Willis apparently shops out of Jimmy Buffett’s closet and is also drunk. Is everyone in attendance who’s over 40 years old three sheets to the wind?

7:25 – Best Fight is the next category – my vote is The Hills Have Eyes vs. good taste. Borat is nominated and we get an extended clip – just when I had finally blocked that scene from my memory. Back to the therapist I go. 300 takes the golden popcorn.

7:27 – Dane Cook takes the mic and he immediately mentions Nicholson’s intoxication. I immediately take back every bad thing I’ve said about Cook.

7:30 – First Movie Spoof of the night– Little Miss Squirt Gun. And it’s completely awful. There’s a reason why these people are still wanna-be filmmakers.

7:35 – Rihanna and Jay Z perform a song (Umbrella) that isn’t in any movie and has absolutely no connection to movies. Bonus points for not lip-synching, but absolutely no personality in the performance. Beyonce has nothing to worry about.

7:40 – Jessica Biel, Kevin James, and Adam Sandler are up to present the Best Kiss. Even though Sander has fallen off – he’s always comedy gold on MTV award shows.

7:42 – If there’s anything right in the world – Ferrell and Cohen will win for best kiss so we get them on the same stage at once. “Tough” competition though: Little Man, Stomp the Yard, and The Holiday.

7:43: Ferrell and Cohen win – and Youtube history is made.

7:46 – Dane Cook is apparently hosting tonight as he’s back on stage – this time to introduce a Texas Chainsaw Massacre Spoof. Well made.

7:47 – A Vitamin water commercial starring…50 Cent? Does Vitamin Water help heal bullet wounds? Is it like the Lost island is to John Locke?

7:48 - Every Human Giant piece has been better than the actual awards. Can we get them to host next year? Hilarious Scarred and Rob & Big segments so far.

7:53 – Nice segment as Silverman looks for a presenter, includes: Brad Pitt, Jennifer Hudson, the cast of 300, Will Smith, The Departed, and The Transformers. This is how awards shows are supposed to start.

7:57 – Breakthrough performance – Can we vote that no one win? I’m ashamed to admit it, but Justin Timberlake was good in Alpha Dog. Alas – the film was horrible. Jaden Smith wins.

8:00 – Time for another movie spoof – this time – United 98 meets 300. Possibly the most tasteless idea ever. What’s next: Adam Sandler’s List?

8:01 – The Dirtiest Mouth Award brought to you by Orbit gum. Clerks 2 and selling out wins.

8:06 –Best Comedic Performance is next up on the agenda. Emily Blunt is nominated and definitely needs to give her publicist a raise. Sacha Baron Cohen wins for Borat.

8:10 – More shots of Fergie in the crowd. She’s between Shia and Josh Duhamel. What are the odds she came with Shia: 1,000 to 1? A million to one?

8:15 – A spoof public service announcement for Borat-idis. Great take on the phenomemenon of people repeating every good comedy quote. Word of advice – do yourself a favor and watch Da Ali G Show on DVD – each episode has more comedy than the entire Borat film. Many less-staged segments.

8:17 – Cameron Diaz is out to present a lifetime achievement award for Mike Myers. My wife thinks Cameron Diaz is wearing a bath towel. I measure my response and safely say only “Yes.”

We need Sprockets to finally hit the big screen. I’m convinced Myers can still be funny on film – unlike Sandler. When Sandler got older and ridiculously wealthy he lost all ability to tap into his core slacker audience. Myers comedy is unique and I don’t see it changing. I wasn’t a big fan of Austin Powers – but in retrospect – I have to admit Dr. Evil is one of the best characters of the 90’s. Kudos to Myers for referring to the fans as his “boss.”

8:25 – Time for an Evan Almighty trailer – Apparently $200 million can’t buy you a good 90 seconds.

8:29 – Remember when Samuel L was the coolest man in the room? Times they are a changing. After The Man – I can’t take him seriously. He announces United 300 as the top spoof. They receive some well-deserved boos. The director has a shirt that looks like it came out of the Ted Nugent collection.

8:32 – Amy Winehouse performs “Rehab” – which should be the theme song for the night….for Hollywood in general. Comedy gold is left untapped. Can we get a video montage of celebrities in incriminating photographs? Tell me it wouldn’t kill with the audience. Nick Nolte’s mug shot, Lohan doing high kicks, any shot of Brendan Davis.

8:35 - I love how commercials for videos on cell phones show picture perfect quality. My phone loses service when my cat scratches himself– there’s no way it’s streaming quality video.

8:36 – A trailer for 1408 (based on a story by Stephen King) airs and it continues to look solid. John Cusack makes any film watchable. He single-handedly turned Identity from average to great.

8:39 – Seth Rogen & Eva Mendes take the stage and make comments that aren’t fit to print. They announce the nominees for the best summer movie you haven’t seen yet – Rush Hour 3, Hairspray, Transformers, Harry Potter, Chuck & Larry, Fantastic Four, Evan Almighty, and The Simpsons. Strange that the majority are in my Top 10 Movies to Avoid at All Costs.

8:44 –Hot Rod (Adam Sandberg from SNL as a cheesy stuntman) is soon to be on my Top 10 Most Anticipated Summer Movies List. Any movie with a star who has a Tom Selleck-esqe mustache is a winner in my book. If you’re under forty and didn’t lose a bet – why would you ever grow a mustache?

8:45 – More Old Navy! Which begs the question – why haven’t male Capri pants caught on yet? Tennis players wear them (sarcasm intended). Is it just me or are Capri pans a result of lazy fashion designers? I envision a meeting dragging on and no one had any good ideas so someone said “let’s make half pants/half shorts” – just so they could get home in time to watch Laguna Beach.

8:48 – The Transformers crew gets more stage time. This has quickly turned into a three hour infomercial.

8:49 – Best Performance is the award – Why isn’t Mel Gibson nominated for best (worst?) drunken beard? Why do they have serious nominees? We know this isn’t the Academy – so why half act like it? Johnny Depp wins for Pirates of the Caribbean and he’s still dressing like Eddie Veder circa 1990. I’m waiting for him to bust into “Jeremy.”

8:56 – Pirates continues its winning streak – taking the top prize of Best Movie. Michael Bay (producer) and Depp accept the award. Bay awkwardly forces Depp to thank the writers. Even in 30 seconds Depp can’t be interesting. Rewind to a few years back when Christian Bale won for Batman – he showed how to accept an award at a goofy award show.

*That does it for the 2007 MTV Movie Awards. All in all, it was a disappointing show – and my prediction about Silverman was completely off-base. Let’s conclude this marathon – if you made it through the entire diary you deserve a medal.

- Justin

Annals of Mendacious Punditry: When the Shill Enables the Kill

Jonah Goldberg is the living, breathing embodiment of virtually all that is pernicious in the malignant socioeconomic and political structures collectively known as the American Empire. Yet tragically, this scheming sycophant to the cynical, privileged criminals of the US plutocracy reaches countless millions through myriad corporate media conduits as he weaves his sophistic arguments supporting nearly every morally repulsive aspect of United States foreign policy.

Commentary :: ::

Rising to his position amongst the US mainstream punditry elite through vigorous and shameless self-promotion based on his mother's involvement in the Clinton-Lewinsky scandal, young Jonah quickly learned our culture's ferocious appetite for the sordid, the lurid, and all that validates our collective pathological narcissism euphemistically called the American Dream. To this day, he skillfully crafts malevolent agitprop to convince and reassure us here in the United States that it is our unconditional right to murder, exploit, invade, and oppress as we preserve and advance the "American Way."

To get a sense of the extent of his reach and his penchant for promoting himself, take a gander at the bio sketch he penned for himself. (This appears at National Review Online):

"Jonah Goldberg is editor-at-large of National Review Online for which he writes his thrice-weekly column "The Goldberg File" and a contributing editor to National Review. Goldberg also writes a nationally syndicated column distributed by Tribune Media Services, which appears often such newspapers as the Kansas City Star, the Philadelphia Inquirer, the Washington Times, the Orlando Sentinel, San Francisco Chronicle, the Manchester Union Leader, and others. He also writes a regular media criticism column for The American Enterprise magazine. Mr. Goldberg was a contributing editor and columnist for the now-defunct Brill's Content.

Mr. Goldberg is also a CNN contributor and regular panelist on Late Edition with Wolf Blitzer. He is an occasional guest-host on Crossfire and has appeared on numerous television and radio programs.

Since Mr. Goldberg became editor of National Review Online, it rapidly become one of the dominant players in web journalism, earning high praise from The Columbia Journalism Review, Vanity Fair, the New York Times, the Washington Post, and The Christian Science Monitor. The New York Press concluded that National Review Online is "by far the best political online operation going today."

Jonah Goldberg is a former television producer who has credits in a wide range of productions. He was the senior producer of Think Tank with Ben Wattenberg, the award-winning public-affairs program and he has written and produced two PBS documentaries. Prior to his work in television Mr. Goldberg was a researcher at the American Enterprise Institute in Washington DC. An award-winning journalist, his writing has appeared in The New Yorker, Worth, the Wall Street Journal, Commentary, The Public Interest, The Wilson Quarterly, The Weekly Standard, the New York Post, Reason, The Women's Quarterly, The New Criterion, Food and Wine, The Street.com, and Slate."

It is a tragic indictment of our so-called "Fourth Estate" that an enabler of egregious war crimes enjoys such a massive megaphone through which to shout his virulent lies.

Consider this assessment of Goldberg by Professor Juan Cole of the University of Michigan, a preeminent expert on the Middle East:

"Extremist rightwing hawks like Jonah Goldberg used their privileged position as pundits to terrify the US public that Iraq was a threat to the US. He repeatedly said in the buildup to the war that Iraq was a menace to the US, and he repeatedly brought up North Korea's nuclear weapons as a reason for a preemptive attack on Iraq.

Iraq never has had nuclear weapons. Iraq never has been as close as two decades from having nuclear weapons. Iraq dismantled all vestiges of its rudimentary and exploratory nuclear weapons research in 1991. Iraq did not have a nuclear weapons program in 1992, 1993 and all the way until 2002, when Jonah Goldberg assured us Americans that we absolutely had to invade Iraq to stop it from imminently becoming a nuclear power just like North Korea....

Jonah Goldberg is a fearmonger, a warmonger, and a demagogue. And besides, he was just plain wrong about one of the more important foreign policy issues to face the United States in the past half-century. It is shameful that he dares show his face in public, much less continuing to pontificate about his profound knowledge of just what Iraq is like and what needs to be done about Iraq and the significance of events in Iraq."(1)

*Now that we have some background on Jonah, let's subject some of his writings to critical scrutiny:

On 12/15/06, Goldberg opined in "Iraq Needs a Pinochet":

"I think all intelligent, patriotic and informed people can agree: It would be great if the U.S. could find an Iraqi Augusto Pinochet. In fact, an Iraqi Pinochet would be even better than an Iraqi Castro...

Now consider Chile. Gen. Pinochet seized a country coming apart at the seams. He too clamped down on civil liberties and the press. He too dispatched souls. Chile's official commission investigating his dictatorship found that Pinochet had 3,197 bodies in his column; 87 percent of them died in the two-week mini-civil war that attended his coup. Many more were tortured or forced to flee the country.

But on the plus side, Pinochet's abuses helped create a civil society. Once the initial bloodshed subsided, Chile was no prison. Pinochet built up democratic institutions and infrastructure. And by implementing free-market reforms, he lifted the Chilean people out of poverty. In 1988, he held a referendum and stepped down when the people voted him out. Yes, he feathered his nest from the treasury and took measures to protect himself from his enemies. His list of sins -- both venal and moral -- is long. But today Chile is a thriving, healthy democracy. Its economy is the envy of Latin America, and its literacy and infant mortality rates are impressive."

Here Mr. Goldberg crests the summit of the Everest of American hubris. Pinochet was the United States' instrument to advance the "noble" agenda of free market ideology. Under the guidance of Henry Kissinger (an unindicted war criminal), the CIA and ITT (a major US corporation with significant business interests in Chile) carefully orchestrated the coup (including the assasination of the popularly elected leftist, Salvador Allende) which brought Augusto Pinochet to power.

Interesting that Jonah boasts that Pinochet "built up democratic institutions" when Augusto himself once quipped, "Democracy is the breeding ground of communism."

Since communism is anathema to Goldberg and his ilk, Jonah would need to exhaust himself with mental gymnastics to overcome the gross inconsistency between Pinochet's alleged accomplishments on behalf of democracy and Augusto's belief that democracy bred communism.

Even if our master prevaricator managed to overcome such a hurdle, how could he hope to resolve the glaring contradictions created by attributing the proliferation of "democracy" to an autocrat installed by the CIA through assassinating a leader elected by the people of a sovereign nation?

To justify and rationalize the perpetual imperialism necessary to satisfy capitalism's insatiable demand for new markets, cheaper labor, and inexpensive raw materials, the United States needs adept professional liars like Jonah. His apologia for Pinochet, a tyrant who had been charged with over 300 crimes (including egregious human rights abuses and massive embezzlement) before he died in 2006, demonstrates Goldberg's unswerving allegiance to the cause of the moneyed elite.

Penned in October of 2001, Mr. Goldberg's "Time to Return to Colonialism?" offers a particularly revealing look at the nature of his character and his agenda:

"SUDDENLY, serious people are rethinking an old idea that's time has come again: colonialism.

For years, colonialism has been discredited. It was considered racist on the left to point out that many people lived better and more productive lives under, say, British rule than they have without it (Belgian rule is another story)....

.... But Americans may be willing to listen to a serious argument for American Empire. And now we have it. Max Boot, the features editor of The Wall Street Journal, has written a cogent and measured essay in the Oct. 15 issue of The Weekly Standard explaining that our problems abroad don't stem from too much American "imperialism," but too little.

Boot runs through the litany of American foreign policy failures in the last decade and, uniformly, he finds our mistakes stemmed not from an arrogance of power, but from a reluctance to use it."

Who are these "serious people" who are "rethinking an old idea that's time has come again?" They are obviously seriously deranged reactionaries if they truly desire a return to colonialism. Jonah's attempt to repackage and revitalize Kipling's "White Man's burden" is the height of arrogance and reeks of racism and totalitarianism.

Sorry Jonah, but the incredibly sorry state of affairs in much of post-colonial Africa, the murder of 600,000 Filipinos, the slaughter of 3 million Vietnamese, and the annihilation of 600,000 plus Iraqis are but a handful of many poignant examples which demonstrate the abject immorality of colonialism and reveal the fact that ultimately, human beings are willing to kill and die before sacrificing their sovereignty to a brutal oppressor.

Jonah, most of us are now living in the Twenty First Century. Join us.

Goldberg delivered a gem in December of 2006 when he sang the praises of a malefactor of monumental proportions in "Jerry Ford's Magic":

"And now we have dear, sweet Jerry Ford. Everybody, it seems, loves Ford. Ted Kennedy even gave him a Profile in Courage Award a few years ago. But there's an interesting difference. Ford was Tito Puente-ized early. His decision to pardon Richard Nixon -- the courageous act for which he later got his Profile award -- elicited enormous criticism and, some argue, cost him the election in 1976. But he quickly rebounded and was never hated the way Reagan, Goldwater or Nixon were...

....But Ford's legacy is more important than the maneuvering of ideological partisans. Politics is about moments. The American people in 1974 yearned for a respite from the ideological clamor of the previous decade. Ford, by the sheer force of his own character, turned the Oval Office into the calm eye of a storm the American people had grown all too weary of.

Daniel Patrick Moynihan said Ford was the most decent man in politics he'd ever met. Ford's `luminous affability,' in the words of the National Review, `enabled him to unite the country instantly, magically, in a way that would have been impossible for the (men) who had been lining up for the job. ... This accidental President was exactly -- for the moment -- the right man.'

Considering the ideological clamor of the current moment, it's tempting to ask who the right man, or woman, today might be."

"Dear, sweet Jerry Ford" pardoned a man who ordered secret, illegal bombing campaigns in Cambodia that liquidated 600,000 human beings. How about we give him a posthumous "Profile in Cowardly Participation in Mass Murder Award"?

Let's not forget that Ford and Kissinger also green-lighted and supported Suharto's invasion of East Timor, which resulted in the slaughter of 200,000 innocent people.

Jonah reveals his true agenda behind his sickening hosannas for Ford, an abject war criminal, when he asserts that "it's tempting to ask who the right man, or woman might be" to give us a "respite" from the "ideological clamor of the current moment." Who indeed, Mr. Goldberg, will rise up to provide cover for the current crop of malefactors in DC and prevent a mass revolt against your precious establishment, which has been rotten to its very core for years?

Jonah scribbled, "What Protestors Don't Get: Globalization=More Democracy," in February, 2002:

"For example, if multinational corporations threaten democracy, how come the number of democracies grew simultaneously with the rise of the multinational corporation? It's hard to pinpoint an exact date for when the "multinational corporation" or "globalization" began, but over the last 30 years we've been told that democracy is increasingly threatened by these diabolical forces. The funny thing is, the number of democracies has been rising, with occasional fluctuations, pretty much nonstop."

Obviously Mr. Goldberg has a unique vision of what democracy entails. Where are these democracies about which he raves? Would Chile under the Pinochet regime have qualified as one? We don't even have a democracy in the United States. In fact, there is very little left of the constitutional republic which existed before the evisceration of our Constitution.

Corporations, spawned by a rapacious economic system driven by selfishness and greed, are structured as tyrannies. Given the fact that oligarchic corporations wield such immense power in the United States, and throughout the world, it is lunacy to assert that "the number of democracies has been rising" in conjunction with the proliferation of corporate influence. Unfortunately for Jonah, a whole comprised of totalitarian parts cannot be a democracy. Unless of course one subscribes to Goldberg's nonsense and defines a plutocratic imperial power and its neo-colonies as democracies.

In August of 2001, Jonah graced us with "Americans Wouldn't Tolerate Terrorism at Home":

"In fact, it's worse than that because Israel never intends to kill innocents. When terrorists kill Israeli civilians, Israelis attack terrorist strongholds, military targets and bomb-making infrastructures.

Sometimes, they've even used rubber bullets. But even when the "payback" is unambiguously severe, it is always delivered to grown-up, declared combatants. Hence, when Palestinian innocents die it is virtually always an unfortunate byproduct of Israeli action. When Palestinians kill, innocents are the target."

The more one reads his work, the more apparent it becomes that Goldberg's objective is to vindicate as many ruthless oppressors as his seemingly infinite capacity to lie will allow.

According to information updated on May 31, 2007 at www.ifamericansknew.org, since September of 2000 Israel has killed 934 Palestinian children while Palestinians have killed 118 Israeli children. A total of 4,098 Palestinians and 1,021 Israelis have died in the conflict over the last seven years. Over 31,000 Palestinians have suffered injuries; only 7,600 Israelis have been wounded. The United States subsidizes Israel to the tune of over $7 million per day while giving the Palestinians nothing. Israel has been targeted by 65 UN resolutions (each of which, being the rogue state that it is, it has ignored). The Palestinians have not been censured by the UN once. Israel is holding over 10,000 Palestinian political prisoners and the Palestinians hold one Israeli captive. While Israel has demolished over 4,000 Palestinian homes, the Palestinians have razed zero Israeli houses.

"...Israel never intends to kill innocents." Do you think the family members of those innocents that Israel has killed at a 4:1 ratio give a dam about the intent of the IDF, Jonah?

Israelis pack a wallop with those "rubber bullets," don't they, Mr. Goldberg?

What Goldberg fails to reveal in his commentary is that the "Israeli action" which causes innocent Palestinians to die as an "unfortunate byproduct" represents the implementation of the ultimate Zionist objective, which is to eradicate Palestinians from Gaza and the West Bank through oppression, economic strangulation, and, when they can get away with it, direct military action.

As for the wounded and dead Israeli civilians, they are the tragic victims of retail terror carried out in response to the wholesale terror waged by their government and that of the United States.

"Wanted: An Iranian Saddam" from January of 2006 offers quite an impressive display of mental contortions and truth distortions, even for one as ethically limber as Jonah Goldberg:

"Conventional wisdom holds that there are really only two options for dealing with Iran: military strikes (by us or Israel) or the usual bundle of conferences, ineffective sanctions and windy UN speeches that lead to nothing....

But there is a third option that, alas, has become less and less likely in recent years: regime change from within. Pro-democracy -- or at least anti-mullah -- sentiment has been building in Iran for over a decade. In recent years there have been huge protests against the regime. Soccer stadiums full of Iranians have chanted "USA! USA!" In 2004, polls of various sorts indicated that anti-regime attitudes were held by up to nine out of 10 Iranians.

Iranians are a proud, nationalistic people and would probably rally around their government -- or any government -- were it threatened from without. That's one reason Ahmadinejad has been rattling his sabers so much lately: It's an attempt to bolster his unpopular regime.

A coup by sophisticated and serious members of the military would be great news. Even better would be a popular uprising. And best of all would be a combination of the two.

An Iran with an old-style military dictatorship charged with defending democratic institutions would be an enormous, epochal victory for the West and for the Middle East. That would go a long way toward guaranteeing success in Iraq and would neutralize the threat of the Iran's nuclear ambitions, even if they decided to pursue a bomb. After all, the argument about nuclear weapons is no different than the argument about guns. The threat is from the people who have them, not from the weapons themselves. Lots of countries have nukes; we only need to worry about the ones run by whack jobs."

Writing from an ahistorical perspective so typical of the corporate media in the US, as Jonah laments that the "third option" of "regime change" is becoming "less likely," he neglects to remind readers that the United States has been there and done that in Iran. In 1953 the CIA installed the Shah to replace Iran's prime minister, Mohammed Mossadegh. (Mossadegh, elected by the people to serve in parliament and by parliament to become prime minister, had exhibited the audacity to nationalize the oil industry to prevent US ally, Great Britain, from reaping nearly all the profits from Iran's petroleum.)

By 1976, the Shah's rule had evolved into such a brutal tyranny that Amnesty International declared that Iran had, "the highest rate of death penalties in the world, no valid system of civilian courts and a history of torture which is beyond belief. No country in the world has a worse record in human rights than Iran."

It was the blatant US violation of Iranian sovereignty that catalyzed the 1979 revolution, hostage crisis, and subsequent formation of an Islamic government, a government which remains understandably hostile to Western intervention in its affairs. "Regime change" worked so well the first time. Why not try again, eh Jonah?

"An Iran with an old-style military dictatorship charged with defending democratic institutions would be an enormous, epochal victory for the West and for the Middle East." Wow! Jonah veered way outside the parameters of rational thought with that bizarre conclusion. "Old style military dictatorships" and "democratic institutions" are components of antithetical political structures. His column on Pinochet and this piece seem to indicate that Mr. Goldberg suffers from the delusion that the two can somehow coexist. Or perhaps he simply regards the intellect of his readers with such contempt that he thinks they will swallow his nonsense.

As for his assertion that, "lots of countries have nukes; we only need to worry about the ones run by whack jobs," George Bush has the largest nuclear arsenal on the planet at his disposal. If Jonah's statement is true, we have tremendous cause for concern.

As nauseatingly opportunistic as his mother, Lucianne Goldberg, a woman who spied on George McGovern for Nixon in the 1972 presidential campaign and advised Linda Tripp to tape her conversations with Monica Lewinsky, Jonah has few peers in the punditocracy who can match his mendaciousness or the degree to which he has prostituted himself.

May his readers, listeners and viewers recognize that he is nothing more than a shill for exploitative imperialists who impose their will on the world through acts of economic extortion and wholesale terror.

Further, let us hope that one day he reaps the bitter harvest of the noxious seeds he so eagerly sows.

Notes:

* As Jonah has so proudly informed us, his agitprop appears in numerous media outlets, but the source for each of the excerpts in this analysis was the online version of the Jewish World Review.

WINNERS LIST: Pirates Rock MTV Awards

With Pirates of the Caribbean and Johnny Depp taking top prizes, it was arrrrrgh-uably the best MTV Movie Awards in history.

In a surprise appearance, Depp earned a standing ovation when he accepted his award for best performance.

Wearing a flannel shirt tied around his waist, grunge-style, he said, "I'm not very good at this kind of thing, but just to say thanks to all of you guys... I'm deeply touched.

Moments later, he was back onstage when Pirates of the Caribbean: Dead Man's Chest earned the best movie award.

"I want to thank [the producers] and Disney for not firing me first. We were teetering on that for a while," he said, then joked, referring to his statuette, "Want some popcorn?"

Still, the talk of the night wasn't a movie star at all — it was Paris Hilton, who turned up on the pink carpet at Universal Studios' Gibson Amphitheater as part of her high-profile countdown to prison.

Asked about her impending jail time, Hilton told reporters: "I'm definitely scared but I'm ready to face my sentence. My friends and family and my fans have supported me and it's been really helpful in this really scary time."

She added that she hopes doing time will improve her image. "I feel like the media portrays me in a way that I'm not and that's why I want to go to county and show that I can do it," she told E!'s Samantha Harris.

Once inside, Hilton was forced to put on a brave face when host Sarah Silverman made a bawdy joke about how she might feel more comfortable in prison. When the camera panned to Hilton in the audience, she appeared close to tears.

Later, comedian Dane Cook teased, "Apparently Paris Hilton was so offended by Sarah Silverman's opening remarks that she checked herself into jail early." The camera again panned to Hilton, who gave a wan smile.

But Hilton wasn't the only one who got laughs: Will Ferrell and Sacha Baron Cohen celebrated their win for best kiss in Talladega Nights: The Ballad of Ricky Bobby by falling to the floor in a passionate embrace.

And Cameron Diaz, presenting the MTV Generation Award to her Shrek the Third co-star Mike Myers, quipped: "Shall I shag him now? Or shall I shag him later?"

2007 MTV Movie Awards — Full Winners List

Best Movie
300
Blades of Glory
Borat: Cultural Learnings of America for Make Benefit Glorious Nation of Kazakhstan
Little Miss Sunshine
Pirates of the Caribbean: Dead Man's Chest — Winner

Best Performance
Gerard Butler — 300
Johnny Depp — Pirates of the Caribbean: Dead Man's Chest – Winner
Jennifer Hudson — Dreamgirls
Keira Knightley — Pirates of the Caribbean: Dead Man's Chest
Beyoncé Knowles — Dreamgirls
Will Smith — The Pursuit of Happyness

Breakthrough Performance
Emily Blunt — The Devil Wears Prada
Abigail Breslin — Little Miss Sunshine
Lena Headey — 300
Columbus Short — Stomp the Yard
Jaden Smith — The Pursuit of Happyness — Winner
Justin Timberlake — Alpha Dog

Best Comedic Performance
Emily Blunt — The Devil Wears Prada
Sacha Baron Cohen — Borat: Cultural Learnings of America for Make Benefit Glorious Nation of Kazakhstan — Winner
Will Ferrell — Blades of Glory
Adam Sandler — Click
Ben Stiller — Night at the Museum

Best Kiss
Cameron Diaz & Jude Law — The Holiday
Will Ferrell & Sacha Baron Cohen — Talladega Nights: The Ballad of Ricky Bobby — Winner
Columbus Short & Meagan Good — Stomp the Yard
Mark Wahlberg & Elizabeth Banks — Invincible
Marlon Wayans & Brittany Daniel — Little Man

Best Villain
Tobin Bell — Saw III
Jack Nicholson — The Departed — Winner
Bill Nighy — Pirates of the Caribbean: Dead Man's Chest
Rodrigo Santoro — 300
Meryl Streep — The Devil Wears Prada

Best Fight
Jack Black & Héctor Jiménez vs. Los Duendes (Wrestling Match) — Nacho Libre
Gerard Butler vs. "The Uber Immortal" (The Spartan/Persian Battle) — 300 — Winner
Sacha Baron Cohen vs. Ken Davitian (Naked Wrestle Fight) — Borat: Cultural Learnings of America for Make Benefit Glorious Nation of Kazakhstan
Will Ferrell vs. Jon Heder (Ice Rink Fight) — Blades of Glory
Uma Thurman vs. Anna Faris (Super Girl Fight) — My Super Ex-Girlfriend

Best Summer Movie You Haven't Seen Yet
Evan Almighty
Fantastic Four: Rise of the Silver Surfer
Hairspray
Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix
The Simpsons Movie
Rush Hour 3
Transformers — Winner
I Now Pronounce You Chuck and Larry

MTV Generation Award
Mike Myers

MTV Movie Spoof Award
United 300 by Andy Signore — Winner
Texas Chainsaw Musical by Zan Passante
Texas Chainsaw Massacre: The Rehab by Noah Harald
Casino Royale With Cheese by Bill Caco
Quentin Tarantino's Little Miss Squirtgun by Velcro Troupe

The Orbit Dirtiest Mouth Moment — Not Necessarily a Popcorn Award Category
Smokin' Aces
Clerks II — Winner
Jackass Number Two
Employee of the Month

Sarah Silverman, Opened the 2007 MThttp://www.blogger.com/img/gl.align.full.gifV Awards with a Bang of Laughs



Sarah Silverman grills Paris Hilton but first it was "Pirates of the Caribbean: Dead Man's Chest" that won the top prizes, winning the Best Movie trophy by beating out favorites like "300" and "Borat." Johnny Depp also won the "Best Performance" award, and surprised everyone by actually showing up to accept it, receiving a standing ovation in celebration of the majesty of Captain Jack Sparrow.

Now back to Sarah Silverman, she keeps on showing the audience how controversial she is by opening the show providing a risqué laughs and 'Oh snap!' moments for the Hollywood crowd along with an array of dancers and geriatric singers. She also took some swings at Spiderman star Tobey Maguire, disses Paris Hilton and rips Hollywood a new *@&#% and MTV itself!

Can you imagine she called Tobby Maguire as one of the four famous vagina in the audience? And she also said that she feels sad for the poor, sweet, prickled face little girl Lindsay Lohan, that she needs to have someone to tell her that she is a rude little pig and also said that Paris Hilton will go to jail in the couple of days and Paris looked notably perturbed, but she at least made an effort to take it in stride for the cameras.

List of winners:

Best Villain: Jack Nicholson (The Departed)
Best Fight: Gerard Butler vs the Uber Immortal (300)
Best Kiss: Will Ferrell and Sacha Baron Cohen (Talladega Nights)
Breakthrough Performance: Jayden Smith (Pursuit Of Happyness)
Best Comedic Performance: Sacha Baron Cohen (Borat)
MTV Generation Award: Mike Myers
Best User Generated Spoof: United 300
Best Summer Movie You Haven't Seen Yet: Transformers
Best Performance: Johnny Depp (Pirates of the Caribbean)
Best Movie: Pirates of the Caribbean

Archive for June, 2007

Invisible Inkling: 10 obvious things about the future of newspapers you need to get through your head.

My favorite line: “Stop whining.”

Media Literacy Lesson: TripAdvisor

Sunday, June 3rd, 2007

The Wall Street Journal does a service this weekend with “Deconstructing TripAdvisor,” a long article (unfortunately behind the newspaper’s pay-wall) that helps explain the popularity — and the flaws — of TripAdvisor, which for many people (including me)

has become a first stop for travel planning. Thanks in part to its prominence in Google searches, some 24 million visitors a month check out what other users have to say about where to stay, eat and play around the world. (In contrast, publisher Frommer’s sells 2.5 million guidebooks a year.) With more than 250,000 hotels, its sheer breadth of properties makes it more useful than other hotel Web sites. Its wide range of contributors — there are nearly 10 million reviews and opinions — make it more democratic.

“Democratic” doesn’t always mean that the crowd is perfectly wise, of course. While I find the reviews to be largely congruent with my own experiences, I keep a healthy skepticism about what I read.

The Journal reporter makes some key points, including the necessity to be wary of reviews that are either pure raves or utter slams. The latter can well be written by people who’ve had (maybe) rare bad experiences or by competitors, and the former can come from people affiliated with the property.

It’s a terrific article. It’s also a lesson in the evolving nature of media — and media literacy.

Benkler to Berkman, and the Role of a University

Friday, June 1st, 2007

Yochai Benkler, the brilliant thinker about how modern collaborative tools are changing the economy and our lives in general, is coming to Harvard Law School and the Berkman Center for Internet & Society, with which this center is affiliated (along with UC-Berkeley) and where I’m a research fellow. Benkler’s 2006 book, The Wealth of Networks, is probably the most important volume for understanding these changes.

I’m at Berkman today for the Internet & Society Conference 2007. The title this year is “University: Knowledge Beyond Authority,” and the theme is largely about how “open” — in all kinds of ways — the university (all universities, not just Harvard) should be in a Digital Age.

Palfrey and OgletreeOpenness is a multidirectional question, and includes the way intellectual property law interacts with the university and society as a whole.

Today’s event is public. Yesterday was a smaller gathering of representatives from various constituencies — including academics, nonprofits, the “content” industry and others — to find at least some common ground. Under the rules of the day, I can’t say who said what.

There were indications that some people in the entertainment industry realize how counter-productive their restrictive copyright policies have been in key respects. Scholars are persistently thwarted in their attempts to make what by all accounts should be “fair use” of videos and other materials that “content holder,” as they’re known, lock down so powerfully to thwart infringement.

One suggestion, that universities should participate actively in policing alleged copyright infringement, was not viewed with much favor, it seemed to me, by anyone but the representatives of the entertainment industry.

Rybak Exits Star Tribune

Media reporter Deborah Rybak has decided to take the buy-out and leave the Star Tribune. She joins the likes of Eric Black, Doug Grow, Stormi Greener, Sharon Schmickle and 40-plus more Star Tribune newsroom employees who have/had until 5 pm today to officially notify the paper of their intentions. The paper has decided to deep six the media reporting beat.

Every departure has its elements of skullduggery and drama and Rybak's certainly is no different. Working half time for the past six months as she dealt with family issues in California Rybak has been out of the newsroom maelstrom, but hardly immune to the effects of the tentacles of of misinformation, calculated or clueless, that have added to the anxiety dripping off the walls of the building these past few months -- really ever since the day after Christmas when McClatchy announced it was selling out to Avista Capital Partners.

Rybak had no intention of leaving as of even a week ago. In fact, she has a May 14 e-mail from managing editor Scott Gillespie assuring her that, "Our agreement is airtight," plainly meaning that he understood she intended to return to the media job and that he had agreed to that.

Still, to give you an idea of how screwy (and worse) these last couple weeks have been, Rybak, following the action from California, watched in a combination of puzzlement and horror as Gillespie nevertheless posted her job -- meaning it was technically available for other reporters to choose -- and then faded off into a veil of incommunicado-ness, sliding decision-making up and down the management pecking order. This left Rybak asking repeatedly, and long-distance, for clarification on what in the hell was going on -- as in how she could declare her intentions to keep the job, based on the paper asking her to declare that she wanted it, then watching them first post the beat to all-comers, before eventually dumping the job entirely.

UPDATE: Some of you have asked when the full, final and official list of buy-outs will be released. Guild officer Pam Miller explains that Strib management has some kind of a June 6 deadline, "But I expect they'll announce it before that."

Complicating the situation is the paper's stated (to the Guild) intention to get rid of "about" (says Miller) 10 of the 35 or so newsroom support staff, meaning news aides, librarians, etc. As Miller explains it the paper has said it will not accept more than 50 reporters, if it doesn't get the minimum number of support staff. That could have the effect of some people who chose to take the buy-out being told their request has not been accepted.

Or, put another way, the situation really is miserable.

Miller, who writes for the Strib's Faith and Valuyes section, described, "an eerily quiet scene" after today's 5 p.m. deadline passed. Many had gone home early, perhaps seeing no purpose in ruining a perfectly good spring weekend with an extra hour of the spirit-sapping vibe of the Star Tribune building.

"You know," says Miller, who by the way plans on staying, "I think of myself as a happy person. I've liked almost all the jobs I've ever had, and I like this one. I look forward to coming in in the morning. But I am very concerned about what this has done to this place. The way this has been handled has made everyone more suspicious of our managers, more suspicious of Par Ridder. It has become an unhealthy, toxic environment."

Based on Ridder's history and current ethical challenges I wonder if there is anyone who believes he and his current management team even have the skill set to restore their own credibility, much less a semblance of productive collegiality to the building?

Miller adds that it isn't as though she and her colleagues don't understand the profound problems of the newspaper business. Rather it's that they detect no vision at all for moving their paper into something better.


I mentioned a memo from LA Times publisher, David Hiller, that was picked up on LAObserved yesterday.


The LA Times is beset by at least as many problems as the Star Tribune, and may or may not be better off with the smoke and mirrors purchase by Chicago tycoon Sam Zell. But the Times at least understands, and constantly reminds its staff that it intends to survive the transition to all digital news, and at the very least it isn't going to go down without a fight.

Said Hiller, "We are adding technology and online product development resources. A little later today, we are announcing that Scott Sullivan has joined latimes.com as chief technology officer and will be building the teams to speed our development and rollout of new interactive products in the second half of 2007 and 2008. High on the priority list will be new local entertainment and listings products, building off the current calendarlive.com offering. We’ve also made initial investments in the camera and editing equipment necessary for our developing video strategy and continue to address our multimedia editorial training and staffing needs."

The Avista owned, Par-operated Strib maybe be giving lip-service to such ideas, but there isn't anyone in the Strib newsroom who thinks they're going to take any serious risks to achieve anything like what the Times is attempting. And THAT is demoralizing.

Hiller added, "The recent [reduction] program was a difficult but important part of how we are changing – reducing expenses in the core and investing for growth. As part of this, we are both eliminating some positions and adding back some positions. We eliminated approximately 170 positions, mostly through the voluntary buyouts; we are planning to hire back approximately 50 positions in the core paper to strengthen talent in multi-media, local coverage, marketing and sales. In addition, we will be adding likely more than 30 additional staff in interactive before the end of the year. We are a living, changing organization and this all part of how we adapt."

I've said it before, the current Avista "team", and I say that sardonically, betrays far more interest in "harvesting" than "investing" in the Star Tribune. Cornball chatter about, "leaner and meaner" is, frankly, an insult to the intelligence of the average reporter. Money talks, and what Avista's money is saying is, "Every man for himself."