Howie Ya Like Me Now?

Yesterday Boston Herald columnist Howie Carr whacked Barney (Not So) Frank around for “[going] to the mat in obtaining a six-figure hack job for his then-boyfriend, Herbie Moses, at, of all places, Fannie Mae” in 1991. After trotting out the usual litany of Frank’s past peccadillos (Paging Mr. Bottom, paging Mr. Hot Bottom), Carr went after another favorite target:

One last question: When do you think El Globo will report this story?

Answer: Today, on page 2, above the fold, in a lot more detail than the Herald (which, by the bye, the Globe piece credits for having the story first).

Can’t imagine any of that satisfied Howie. But he’ll be pleased to know the Globe buried the story on its website.

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Boston Herald Says Boston Globe’s Definitely For Sale. Maybe. Or Not.

Today’s Boston Herald has the scoop on a possible Boston Globe sale:

Analysts say: Don’t be fooled, Globe’s for sale

The New York Times [NYT] Co. would definitely unload The Boston Globe — for the right price — according to media analysts, despite CEO Janet Robinson’s insistence that the broadsheet isn’t for sale.

Really?

“I’m sure the Globe’s for sale,” said James Boyce, founder of Common Sense New Media Strategies, a Boston-based consulting firm. “The problem is, if the buyer pays a fair market price, I doubt the seller is going to want to sell it for that. It’s a matter of, is there someone who is going to overpay for it, or is the New York Times Co. going to sell the Globe for what it’s actually probably worth?”

So that’s an actually probably definite maybe, yes?

Then again . . .

Edward Atorino, a media analyst at the Benchmark Co., said he doesn’t believe Times publisher Arthur Sulzberger Jr. will sell the paper.

“His father bought it and the family likes the newspaper business,” Atorino said. “The Times doesn’t need the money.”

So the Times will possibly sell the Globe for an inflated price.

Except it won’t.

Stop the presses.

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The Price of Privacy Loss and the Cost of Privacy Protection

It’s the Data Do-Gooders vs. the Gossip No-Goodniks.

Public disclosure of private information was hot in Sunday’s papers, with both the New York Times and kissin’ cousin Boston Globe featuring big takeouts on the topic.

The Times piece chronicles the gossip industry’s increasing access to celebrities’ confidential health and legal records (and the ensuing professional/personal havoc the disclosure wreaks).

The Globe piece examines the social value we could get if people allowed their personal information to be analyzed in order to further the public good.

From the Times:

The Gossip Machine, Churning Out Cash

[Lots of Lindsay Lohan, (Dad) Michael Lohan, Arnold Schwarzenegger, family housekeeper, illegitimate child and assorted other trashpress examples go here]

This new secrets exchange has its own set of bankable stars and one-hit wonders, high-rolling power brokers and low-level scammers, many of whom follow a fluid set of rules that do not always comport with those of state and federal law, let alone those of family or friendship.

Now there is a growing effort to stop the flow of private information. In the past few years, a federal Department of Justice team in Los Angeles has conducted a wide-ranging investigation into illegal leaks of celebrity health records and other confidential files, according to officials involved. Working in secret, they have plumbed cases involving Tiger Woods, Britney Spears and Farrah Fawcett, among others.

Raise your hand if you think that will stem the tide of leaked documents from hospitals, coroners’ offices, or Police Departments.

Us neither.

On the flipside is the Globe Ideas piece, which lays out The Problem:

Taken together, the information that millions of us are generating about ourselves amounts to a data set of unimaginable size and growing complexity: a vast, swirling cloud of information about all of us and none of us at once, covering everything from the kind of car we drive to the movies we’ve rented on Netflix to the prescription drugs we take.

Who owns the data in that cloud has been the subject of ferocious debate. It’s not all stored in one place, of course — our lives are tracked and documented by a diffuse assortment of entities that includes private companies like Google and Visa, as well as governmental agencies like the IRS, the Department of Education, and the Census Bureau. Up to now, the public conversation on this kind of data has taken the form of an argument about privacy rights, with legal scholars, computer scientists, and others arguing for tighter restrictions on how our data is used by companies and the government, and consumer advocates instructing us on how to prevent our information from being collected and misused.

And an Ideal Solution:

But a small group of thinkers is suggesting an entirely new way of understanding our relationship with the data we generate. Instead of arguing about ownership and the right to privacy, they say, we should be imagining data as a public resource: a bountiful trove of information about our society which, if properly managed and cared for, can help us set better policy, more effectively run our institutions, promote public health, and generally give us a more accurate understanding of who we are. This growing pool of data should be public and anonymous, they say — and each of us should feel a civic responsibility to contribute to it.

That’s “the concept of a ‘data commons’ — a sort of public garden where everyone brings their data to be anonymized and made available to researchers working in the public interest.”

And there you have it – private interest (Hands Off My Data) vs. public interest (Hand Over My Data).

No-Goodniks vs. Do-Gooders.

Raise your hand if you think the former will win.

Us too.

(Via Sneak ADtack)

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GOP: Grand Oy! Party

The bigger the Republican presidential pool gets, the smaller it looks.

Here are the latest entries from the Great Mentioner:

1) Via Politico Playbook:

–TEXAS GOV. RICK PERRY: @gretawire: i think Gov Perry will run….he did not say that but did admit he was / is tempted

2) Via The Daily Caller:

George Pataki says he’s open to 2012 bid

Bad enough Rudy Giuliani has been murmuring about a run. But Perry? Pataki??

Does this barrel even have a bottom to scrape?

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Obit o’ the Week (pat. pending)

This one’s a corker (via the New York Times):

Huguette Clark, Reclusive Heiress, Dies at 104

She was almost certainly the last link to New York’s Gilded Age, reared in Beaux-Arts splendor in a 121-room Fifth Avenue mansion awash in Rembrandt, Donatello, Rubens and Degas. Her father, a copper baron who once bought himself a United States Senate seat as casually as another man might buy a pair of shoes, had been born before the Mexican War. Her six siblings died long before her, one in the 19th century.

Though she herself lived into the 21st century, Huguette Clark managed through determination and great wealth to spin out her golden childhood to the end of her long, strange, solitary life. Mrs. Clark died on Tuesday, at 104, at Beth Israel Medical Center, the Manhattan hospital where she had chosen to live in recent years, said Michael McKeon, a spokesman for Mrs. Clark’s lawyer, Wallace Bock.

That would be Wallace Bock who’s currently under investigation for his handling of Mrs. Clark’s financial affairs.

Last August, the Manhattan district attorney’s office began an investigation into the handling of Mrs. Clark’s finances, which were managed by Mr. Bock and [her accountant Irving H.] Kamsler for more than a decade. The investigation is continuing; no charges have been filed.

Stay tuned.

Meanwhile, the hardworking staff is looking forward to stopping by (as in, on the outside looking in) at “Clark’s Folly,” the mansion Mrs. Clark’s father built at Fifth Avenue and 77th Street around 1910.

Its 121 rooms included 31 bathrooms, 4 art galleries and a theater; there was also a swimming pool and a thundering pipe organ. It was there, interspersed with stays in California and France, that Huguette grew up.

Then there’s the 42-room apartment at Fifth Avenue and 72nd Street that was her longtime residence until she went hospital. We’re looking forward to standing outside that place too.

UPDATE: From MSNBC (via The Daily Beast):

Family excluded from Huguette Clark burial

No funeral Mass, no priest, no mourners at tomb of 104-year-old daughter of copper tycoon and senator

The attorney did it.

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You SNUS, You Lose (No, Wait – You Win)

New York mayor Michael Bloomberg’s draconian smoking ban (Not here! Not now! Not never!) became operative this week, and one secondhand smoking effect was this ad campaign for Camel SNUS pouches (via CSP magazine):

Text of the lefthand ad:

NYC SMOKERS ENJOY FREEDOM WITHOUT THE FLAME

Smokers, switch to smoke-free Camel SNUS and reclaim the world’s greatest city. No matter where you go or what you do, Camel SNUS is the perfect tobacco pleasure to enjoy virtually anywhere. Camel SNUS – the pleasure’s all yours.

The ad also included this:

Share your support for tobacco freedom at CamelSNUS.com/solution*

*WEBSITE RESTRICTED TO AGE 21+ TOBACCO CONSUMERS

So the Campaign Outsider Investigative Unit dutifully tried to sign up. Twice. Both times we received this response:

Unfortunately, we were unable to complete your registration online – sometimes these things require the human touch.
Here are three different ways to finish.

  1. Call us at 1-877-CML-1913 and we´ll help you through the process.
  2. Scan a copy of your Driver´s License / State ID and send it to us with Email to RJRSIGNUP@RJRT.COM
  3. Send us your registration form by U.S. Mail. CLICK HERE to download a pre-filled form, print it, and drop it in the mail.

Yeah, we’re sending them our driver’s license the way Arnold Schwarzenegger is giving Mother Jones an exclusive interview.

Our first guess as to why we were rejected: We didn’t choose any (Camel parent company) R.J. Reynolds products in response to “What is your regular cigarette brand?”

But then we noticed this on the registration site:

Welcome to CamelSnus.com, a members-only community of tobacco consumers who are 21 years of age or older. Because tobacco is an age-related product, we require third party age verification. So please take extra care filling out the various fields here. There’s a whole world of great content inside and we want to make sure you can get to it.

Please enter your first and last name and your address as they appear on your driver’s license or other forms of official identification.

Huh. Third-party age verification. They should live so long.

Regardless, next time we go to the Big Town, we’ll remember that SNUS could help us reclaim the world’s greatest city.

Tempting, no?

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Stanley Cup Haiku

Lightning: great power

play; Bruins: er, not so much.

See you Friday night.

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Tyler Hicks’ BU COMmencement Address

New York Times photographer, Boston University alum (’92), and recent Libyan kidnapee Tyler Hicks delivered the commencement address Sunday to BU College of Communication grads, and it was the cosmic opposite of Katie Couric’s pert and perky performance at the university-wide commencement.

Hicks was serious as gum surgery as he detailed his career (photographer Chris Hondros – killed last month on assignment in Libya – was his first newspaper boss, although only for a day), his recent violent detention by Muammar el-Qaddafi’s forces in Ajdabiya, and his enduring passion for what he does.

(Slideshow of his photographs here, via BU Today.)

Hicks told the grads this is a terrible time to be in the communications business, but that “the need to know, spread knowledge, and witness has never been greater.” He advised that they “go where no one else wants to be, stick it out, and see where it takes you.”

And he concluded with a call for them to “be brave and make a difference.”

No question Tyler Hicks has done both.

Here’s the entire address. Highly recommended viewing.

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An Embarrassment Of Riches (Newt Gingrich Edition)

Today’s New York Times features a Political Memo that puts the accent on Newt Gingrich:

All That Glitters May Redefine Run by Gingrich

WASHINGTON — To the long list of rich-guy foibles that turned into defining campaign moments — John Edwards’s $400 haircut, John Kerry’s kite-surfing, John McCain’s inability to remember how many homes he owns — let us now add Newt Gingrich’s $500,000 revolving line of credit at the luxury jeweler Tiffany & Company.

Worthy examples all. But let’s not forget Dominique Strauss-Kahn’s $3000-a-night suite at New York’s Sofitel hotel, the posh venue of his alleged sexual assault on a maid.

That’s one helluva a rich-guy foible.

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Q: Hey, What’s This? A: The Stanley Cup Finals

As almost always happens in these situations, a lucky bounce settled the score.

The Vancouver Canucks (a name the Three Stooges would have especially loved) won Game 5 of the Western Conference Finals in double overtime on a play that had the Versus broadcasters scratching their heads right up to the ceremonial handshake.

But first . . .

The San Jose Sharks, who submitted a much tougher than expected (at least by the hardworking staff) effort, were 13 seconds away from winning the game in regulation when the Canuck-Canuck-Canucks tied the score 2-2 on a tossed-off shot from the point.

From USA Today:

Vancouver was down 2-1 after [goalie Roberto] Luongo’s gamble left Devin Setoguchi (FSY) with an empty net 24 seconds into the third period. But [Ryan] Kesler, who left briefly in the second period with an apparent injury to his left leg, deflected Henrik Sedin’s (FSY) shot through [Sharks goalie Antti] Niemi after a questionable icing call against San Jose. Replays appeared to show that the puck hit Daniel Sedin (FSY), but icing was called anyway to set up an offensive zone faceoff for Vancouver.

(Campaign Outsider aside: All those FSYs? USA Today is way too into Fantasy Sports.)

The first overtime was a barnburner, but the second OT proved to be a Sharkburner:

Exactly 17 years day after they earned their previous trip to play for the Cup, the Canucks rode 54 saves from Luongo and a lucky bounce to [Kevin] Bieksa to advance to the finals for the third time in the team’s 40-year history.

The puck caromed awkwardly off the glass on the sideboards and out to Bieksa just inside the blue line. His quick shot beat Antti Niemi (FSY) inside the right post before the goalie — or mostly everyone else on the ice — knew where the puck was.

But we know where the Canucks are: In the Stanley Cup Finals.

The celebratory – if indecipherable – video:

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