It’s Good To Live In A Two-Daily (Nike)Town

Well, Mayor Tom Menino (D- Smallville) can add another notch to his belt: Niketown has folded like origami.

As previously noted, T-Shirt Tommy objected to a window display at the Newbury Street Niketown, accusing the retailer of promoting drug use. Originally NikeTown resisted, but today’s Boston Herald reports that there’s a new window display replacing the dopey t-shirts.

Mayoral Victory Lap:

“It’s good news that Nike has removed the display,” said Dot Joyce, a spokeswoman for Menino. “It’s inappropriate and we will continue to make sure that all displays in our city do not promote the use of drugs. It is unacceptable and we’re happy they agree.”

Except they don’t. They’re just afraid the place will be crawling with Menino’s Municipal Minions looking to bust them for dust-bunny violations or some such.

The Boston Globe, meanwhile, is one step behind – it’s still arguing in an editorial that Menino is irony-deficient and doesn’t get the real message of the t-shirts (overspend on a t-shirt?).

Plus ça change and etc.

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So Maybe It WASN’T The Ads That Nabbed Whitey Bulger (II)

Everybody’s FBI-ADdled about Whitey Bulger’s takedown, but now comes another skeptic (see also here) – Boston Globe columnist Kevin Cullen on the Charlie Rose Show:

More than meets the FBI, anyone?

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Whiteyrama: Threatened Journalists Edition

The hardcounting staff has been keeping an informal tally of journalists threatened with bodily harm by Whitey Bulger.

Here’s what we have so far:

• Boston Herald columnist and former WHDH reporter Howie Carr on ABC’s Good Morning America (video here, around 2:50)

• Former Boston Globe reporter Dick Lehr and current Globe columnist Kevin Cullen:

 

Rat Bastards author/former mobster/not really a journalist John “Red” Shea:

 

Of course, that’s likely just the tip of the iceberg.

So the hardworking staff has set the over-under on threatened journalists at 14 (also known as a Whitey’s Dozen).

Any other journos you can add to the list? Give us a holler or, better, a link.

Thank you for your support.

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This Is What The WSJ Does Better Than Any Other Newspaper

Despite Rupert Murdoch’s untender ministrations (and its Crazyhead editorial section), the Wall Street Journal is still one of Western Civilization’s great newspapers, especially in the Arts & Culture arena.

Exhibit Umpteen: This Friday Journal piece about the Barnes Foundation moving its art collection to a new home in Philadelphia:

The $25 Billion Art Move

Chances are, absolutely nothing will go wrong when the Barnes Foundation closes its doors on July 3 and begins the process of transporting its art collection to a new building down the street from the Philadelphia Museum of Art, next to the Rodin Museum. After all, the hard part is over, the near-decade of court filings seeking to enable, or prevent, the move of a collection estimated in some quarters to be worth as much as $25 billion. What’s left is a six-mile trip, normally a 20-minute drive from the Barnes’s quiet longtime home in suburban Merion, Pa., to the new location, slated to open next May.

That doesn’t mean it will be easy:

Combative chemist Albert Barnes accumulated perhaps the greatest Impressionist and post-Impressionist art collection in the world: 181 paintings by Pierre-Auguste Renoir, 69 by Paul Cézanne, 59 of Henri Matisse and more. The works to be moved include Cézanne’s “Bathers,” Georges Seurat’s “Models,” Vincent Van Gogh’s “Postman” and the spectacular mural “The Dance II,” which Dr. Barnes commissioned Matisse to create for the space being vacated. There are five versions of Cézanne’s much-revered “The Card Players” in the world; the one hanging at the Barnes is the biggest, and many think the best. About 4,200 works will be moved, at undisclosed departure times between July and next spring.

Along with its helpful review of the torturous legal path the Barnes traveled to make this move, the Journal provides two other features: a Great Art Thefts slideshow, and an Art Theft in the Movies review.

You can get all that from multiple sources, but from one?

Credit where credit’s due, yes?

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Whiteyrama: Front Page Photo Finish

Today’s Page One Bulger Bakeoff had some clear winners, even if they appeared in the fine print.

To review (compliments of the Newseum’s Today’s Front Pages):

Boston Globe: The full Bachrach of Bulger, but it comes via WBUR (via the Associated Press).

Boston Herald: One big product placement for WCVB. That shot produced a bonanza of exposure for ‘CVB. See also Metro BostonBrockton Enterprise, New York Times (below), and probably countless others.

New York Times: 1953 mugshots have a sharp, old-school look.

Big Town Bonus: Whitey gets a shoutout in the Post!

If you can make Page One there, you can make it anywhere, eh?

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White House Suppresses The Press – Again

The White House press corps is all lathered up over restricted access to Pres. Obama’s Afghanistan speech Wednesday night.

From Politico:

Another presidential speech, another fight over press access to it.

Some member of the White House press corps were annoyed that the White House treated last night’s speech on Afghanistan like a speech from the Oval Office, with all the limits that come with it, when it was actually given from the roomier East Room, the AP reports.

In past East Room speeches, reporters, photographers and other television cameras have been allowed in to cover the event, while Oval Office speeches typically bar print reporters and still photographers to minimize distractions. Last night, access was limited to just one print pooler and one still photographer.

But this is nothing new: the Obama administration has slowly choked off press access to White House activities and substituted its own coverage, as this ABC report (headlined “Obama’s Media Machine: State Run Media 2.0?”) noted recently:

As the 2012 presidential campaign kicks into gear, President Obama’s White House media operation is demonstrating an unprecedented ability to broadcast its message through social media and the Internet, at times doing an end-run around the traditional press.

The White House Press Office now not only produces a website, blog, YouTube channel, Flickr photo stream, and Facebook and Twitter profiles, but also a mix of daily video programming, including live coverage of the president’s appearances and news-like shows that highlight his accomplishments.

They include: Advise the Adviser: Your Direct Line to the White House; Open for Questions: The State of the Union and Health Care; and West Wing Week, a “magazine-style show featuring the president behind the scenes.”

And before you dismiss all that as just another federal government moneypit, consider this:

The White House has amassed 1.9 million followers on Twitter, 900,000 fans on Facebook and averages 250,000 visits to its YouTube channel per month. Its website received roughly 1.1 million unique visitors in January, according to ComScore

The White House isn’t just end-running the news media. It’s trying to replace it.

That should alarm every segment of the political spectrum. And every mainstream media outlet.

Except it isn’t.

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So Maybe It WASN’T The Ads That Nabbed Whitey Bulger

Earlier this week the hardworking staff dismissed the FBI’s ad campaign to ferret out Whitey Bulger’s whereabouts:

The hardworking staff believes the FBI might just as well set its money on fire in any attempt to catch Whitey, but hey – hope springs eternal.

Assorted splendid readers of Campaign Outsider commented that we were a stupidhead to say that.

But . . .

Here’s WBZ stalwart Jon Keller on the lingering questions about the Battle of the Bulger:

Question #2: Was the recent PSA campaign really all it took to track down our most elusive fugitive?

Veteran Boston attorney Harvey Silverglate is skeptical, writing in the Boston Phoenix Thursday that the PSA was a ruse to protect a sensitive informant, “perhaps a friend or family member of one of the two fugitives.”

(Silverglate piece here.)

So . . . maybe the hardworking staff does not stand corrected.

(The Boston Herald thinks otherwise.)

We’ll see.

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High (Court) On Drugs

The Supreme Court has endorsed the data-mining of physicians’ prescribing records for use in marketing pharmaceuticals.

From MedPageToday:

WASHINGTON — Data on which doctors are prescribing which drugs is speech that is protected by the First Amendment, and pharmaceutical companies have every right to buy that information and use it to target their marketing efforts, the Supreme Court has ruled.

At issue was a 2007 Vermont law that prohibited those data-mining practices in the interest of protecting physician privacy and reducing the cost of prescription drugs by scaling back marketing.

But by a 6-3 margin, the court struck down the Vermont ban, rejecting the state’s contention that selling the prescription-drug data is “conduct” and not “speech.”

The Court ruled that “The creation and dissemination of information are speech for First Amendment purposes.” (And are continuing for all practical purposes.)

More grist for the pill mill.

Originally posted in Sneak ADtack

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The Front Page The Boston Herald Doesn’t Want You To See

By popular demand (actually, at Michael Pahre’s suggestion), the hardworking staff hereby provides the Great Lost Herald Edition from this morning, which the feisty tabloid has erased from its website. (Lucky for the Herald, the Newseum’s invaluable Today’s Front Pages caught the later, Whiteyfied edition, thereby aiding and abetting the disappearing act.)

Without further ado (or is that adieu?):

 

(Photo credit: The Missus)

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The Dead-Tree Boston Herald Dead In The Water?

At 1 AM today, as the lateworking staff noted, the Boston Herald website featured this:

Police say Whitey Bulger arrested in Santa Monica

LOS ANGELES — James “Whitey” Bulger, a notorious Boston gangster on the FBI’s “Ten Most Wanted” list for his alleged role in 19 murders, has been captured near Los Angeles after living on the run for 16 years, authorities said Wednesday.

Santa Monica Police Sgt. Rudy Flores said his agency was informed of the arrest by the FBI.

But the front page of the Herald that arrived at the Global Worldwide Headquarters several hours later featured this:

Callahan Rips Meddling Menino on Nike Flap:

KEEP YOUR

SHIRT ON!

No mention anywhere in the paper of Heeeeeere’s . . . Whitey!

Later editions of the Herald had this on Page One:

Maybe this is why only seven and a half people have home-delivery subscriptions to the Herald: BECAUSE IT’S NOT EVEN PRINTED ON THE SAME DAY YOU GET IT!!!

I know, I know – keep my shirt on.

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