Salt Too (Much) Negotiations

The Great Salt War is officially movin’ and shakerin’, as witness reports in these two reputably liberal media outlets.

1) Hysterical

The current issue of The New Republic features a piece with this headline:

The Other White Powder

Is salt so different from crack?

Look for “salting galleries” in a low-sodium neighborhood near you soon.

2) Historical

Sunday’s New York Times presented the long view in a piece headlined, “The Hard Sell on Salt.” (Nice play on the French word for salt, sel.)

Lede:

With salt under attack for its ill effects on the nation’s health, the food giant Cargill kicked off a campaign last November to spread its own message.

“Salt is a pretty amazing compound,” Alton Brown, a Food Network star, gushes in a Cargill video called Salt 101. “So make sure you have plenty of salt in your kitchen at all times.”

The campaign by Cargill, which both produces and uses salt, promotes salt as “life enhancing” and suggests sprinkling it on foods as varied as chocolate cookies, fresh fruit, ice cream and even coffee. “You might be surprised,” Mr. Brown says, “by what foods are enhanced by its briny kiss.”

By all appearances, this is a moment of reckoning for salt.High blood pressure is rising among adults and children. Government health experts estimate that deep cuts in salt consumption could save 150,000 lives a year.

Since processed foods account for most of the salt in the American diet, national health officials, Mayor Michael R. Bloomberg of New York and Michelle Obama are urging food companies to greatly reduce their use of salt. Last month, the Institute of Medicine went further, urging the government to force companies to do so.

But the industry is working overtly and behind the scenes to fend off these attacks, using a shifting set of tactics that have defeated similar efforts for 30 years, records and interviews show. Industry insiders call the strategy “delay and divert” and say companies have a powerful incentive to fight back: they crave salt as a low-cost way to create tastes and textures. Doing without it risks losing customers, and replacing it with more expensive ingredients risks losing profits.

When health advocates first petitioned the federal government to regulate salt in 1978, food companies sponsored research aimed at casting doubt on the link between salt and hypertension. Two decades later, when federal officials tried to cut the salt in products labeled “healthy,” companies argued that foods already low in sugar and fat would not sell with less salt.

We’ll see if that angle sels this time around.

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Campaign Outsider Sports Trifecta™

On those rare occasions that the hardworking staff has three sports-related posts, we play the Campaign Outsider Trifecta (pat. pending).

To wit:

Prophetic Headline o’ the Day®

Tuesday’s New York Times:

Sweden’s Soderling Is a Force to Be Reckoned With

Money quote:

“Soderling epitomizes many of the things I dislike in modern tennis,” the retired Australian player Pat Cash wrote a year ago for The Times of London. “He is Swedish but is no Bjorn Borg, Mats Wilander or Stefan Edberg. There is no grace to his game, no guile, not a glimmer of personality.”

Wednesday’s New York Times:

Soderling Ends Federer’s Streak

Money quote:

A year and a day after becoming the first player to beat [Rafael] Nadal at the French Open, Soderling overpowered Federer, the world’s No. 1 player and the defending champion, in the quarterfinals at Roland Garros. As in the win over Nadal, Soderling prevailed in four sets, 3-6, 6-3, 7-5, 6-4.

Our money is on Nadal if he meets Soderling (as we fervently hope he does) in this weekend’s French Open final.

“Paul Pierce as Mickey Rourke”

From Jason Gay’s Wall Street Journal The Couch column on Tuesday:

Is Paul Pierce the World’s Greatest Actor?

Mr. Pierce, the star of such films as “That Tap Foul Nearly Ended My Career” and “I Think I Have To Go to the Hospital With This Bruised Eyelash,” is from Los Angeles, so he appreciates some good Stanislavski immersion. But he is also the soul of the Celtics, a team that many have already forgotten was a complete Superfund disaster just a few years ago.

Seriously, it’s bizarre how the current Lakers-Celtics buildup dwells on “storied history,” legends and double-digit ring counts and ignores the long stretches in which a has-been Boston could get neither its phone calls returned by ICM nor a table at Dan Tana’s. But Mr. Pierce remembers. If he’s an actor, he’s not Zac Efron. He’s Mickey Rourke

Your predictable outrage goes here.

“The Keyser Soze Celts”

Gerry Callahan’s column in Tuesday’s Boston Herald adds this to the mix:

For the Celtics, this isn’t about winning a ring. This is about denying the Lakers a ring. This is about stopping Kobe Bryant and Phil Jackson, the same way they stopped LeBron and all the rest.

You want to know what’s pushing this angry band of agitators to another level of intensity and aggression? Just this: The insatiable desire to rip the heart out of another golden boy and stomp on it at center court.

These bad mothers from Boston will do it again, one more time. In LA, of course. In six.

Your predictable agreement goes here.

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Free Books!

Good news! The hardworking staff at Campaign Outsider just discovered (D’oh!) archive.org, “a non-profit digital library offering free universal access to books, movies & music, as well as 150 billion archived web pages,” not to mention a stash of 1.8 million free e-books.

So we just freely downloaded to our Kindle (a nice little machine, especially in poorly lit hotel rooms) the following:

1) Adventures of Huckleberry Finn (Tom Sawyer’s comrade), by Mark Twain

2) My four weeks in France, by Ring Lardner – a volume the hardworking staff had never come across during three decades of dedicated Lardnering.

On the downside, the free downloads are a bit of a mess visually.

Then again, never look a gift e-book in the mouth.

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Jammin’ the Blues

From our Late to the Party bureau:

A week or so ago the Wall Street Journal ran a review of the new six-DVD set, “Warner Bros. Big Band, Jazz & Swing Short Subject Collection.”

Headline:

What Swing-Era Audiences Saw and Heard

An essential DVD package of 64 music one-reelers from 1930 to 1947

Will Friedwald’s lede:

Some people cry at the end of “Gone With the Wind.” Others lose it when Bambi’s mother buys the farm. Me, I’m always moved to tears by the first two minutes of “Jammin’ the Blues.” This remarkable 10-minute film from 1944 is quite easily the most amazing visual representation of the jazz aesthetic that I’ve ever seen—whether through painting, dance, film or whatever.

Even the main titles of “Jammin’ the Blues” (a collaboration between producer and concert impresario Norman Granz and director-photographer Gjon Mili) capture the spirit of jazz: We see what looks like the abstract image of two concentric circles, which tilt upward and are revealed to be the top of the porkpie hat worn by tenor-saxophone pioneer Lester Young. That’s one of the things jazz is all about right there—turning the abstract into the concrete and then back again. Young then puts the horn to his lips and plays a single chorus of the most exquisite blues you ever heard: so cool, so effortless, his fingers barely move across the pads. He even continues to hold a lit cigarette (I hope it’s tobacco) in his left hand. His solo is incredibly restrained but so full of passion and feeling, the whole of the human condition in a mere 12 bars, that I find my cheeks are wet long before the director cuts to trumpeter Harry “Sweets” Edison for the next solo.

The video (which the hardworking staff finally got around to watching):

Really, click on it.

A total knockout.

(Special bonus: Marie Bryant’s visually and vocally captivating rendition of “On the Sunny Side of the Street.”)

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Memorial Day For My Father

Jack Carroll (1920-1987), a Flying Boxcar navigator in the U.S. Army during World War II, rarely spoke about his wartime experience, except for two set pieces:

1) He dropped toilet paper over the Burma Road, making him much loved in the Pacific theater by the infantry dogfaces (as the great Bill Mauldin characterized them).

2) He delivered a gold Cadillac to Chiang Kai-shek. Upon landing, the crew opened the Flying Boxcar’s nose. Chinese workers swarmed the Cadillac, started it up, and drove it off the aircraft.

Before the ramp had been lowered.

Result? Cadillac smashed to smithereens.

Believe it or not.

I choose to, out of respect for Jack.

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New York Times Neutered Web Headlines

Two standout pieces from Saturday’s New York Times, which for some reason declawed the web versions:

C.J. Chivers, As In Shivers

Another chilling Afghanistan report from the inestimable Chivers.

Headline:

When Afghans Seek Medical Aid, Tough Choice for U.S.

The dead-tree edition headline, though, was much better:

A Viper’s Strike, a Dying Boy and a Choice for the Marines

Regardless, the story’s lede stayed the same:

KHAN NESHIN, Afghanistan — Five-year-old Sadiq was not a casualty of war. He was simply unlucky. The boy had opened a sack of grain at his home early on Wednesday morning, and a pit viper coiled inside lashed up and bit him above the lip.

His father, Kashmir, knew his son was sure to die. With no hospital anywhere nearby, he rushed the boy to an American outpost to plead for help. By midafternoon, Sadiq’s breathing was labored. Respiratory failure was not long off.

The events that followed unfolded like a tabletop counterinsurgency exercise at a military school. On one hand, the United States military’s medical capacity, implanted across Afghanistan to care for those wounded in the war, could not be used as primary care for the nation’s 29 million people. On the other hand, would the officer who upheld this policy be willing to watch a 5-year-old die?

As “Maj. Jason S. Davis, a pilot and the commanding officer of Company C, Sixth Battalion, 101st Aviation Regiment, which provides a detachment of Black Hawks to fly medical missions in central and southern Helmand Province” said:

“We can’t be Afghanistan’s E.M.S.,” he said. “But right now we are.”

And so – Spoiler Alert! – the result was this:

Stung by a venomous snake in a primitive and isolated corner of a war, helped by a persistent father and a chain of people who heard him, Sadiq had reversed Afghanistan’s cruelest math.

Leave it to Chivers to reveal Afghanistan’s cruelest math.

South Korean Couple Video-Games Daughter’s Life Away

As the pull-quote of the story says, “A recreational activity became addicting, with dire consequences.”

Web headline:

South Korea Expands Aid for Internet Addiction

Dead-tree headline:

In South Korea, Parents’ Internet Game-Playing Cost Baby’s Life

Lede:

SUWON, South Korea — Neither had a job. They were shy and had never dated anyone until they met through an online chat site in 2008. They married, but they knew so little about childbearing that the 25-year-old woman did not know when her baby was due until her water broke.

But in the fantasy world of Internet gaming, they were masters of all they encountered, swashbuckling adventurers exploring mythical lands and slaying monsters. Every evening, the couple, Kim Yun-jeong and her husband, Kim Jae-beom, 41, left their one-room apartment for an all-night Internet cafe where they role-played, often until dawn. Each one raised a virtual daughter, who followed them everywhere, and was fed, dressed and cuddled — all with a few clicks of the mouse.

On the morning of Sept. 24 last year, they returned home after a 12-hour game session to find their actual daughter, a 3-month-old named Sa-rang — love in Korean — dead, shriveled with malnutrition.

Heart-rending.

So why does the Times make it less so on the web?

UPDATE: Smart comment by Ted M, and a relevant link from the encyclopedic Dan Kennedy of Media Nation.

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Campaign Outsider Update Event™

Whenever the hardworking staff at Campaign Outsider is faced with three posts to update, we promptly issue an official Update Alert© and host an official Update Event (pat. pending).

To wit:

Mark Zuckerberg’s Facetime Farce, Revisited

When we posted about Facebook honcho Mark Zuckerberg’s No Apologies Tour, the hardworking staff was unable to access the transcript of his NPR “All Things Considered” interview. So our documentation of Zuckerberg’s “totally obfuscating” responses was incomplete.

Well, we still can’t access the transcript.

But listen here for listener reaction to the interview and Zuckerberg’s most obfuscating answer.

In other words: In your face, Facebook users.

Boston Globe Anti-Israel, Part Two

The other day we noted Marty Peretz’s post at tnr.com sandblasting the Boston Globe for its persistent hostility to Israel – in this case illustrated by a deeply unrepresentative report about last Sunday’s Brandeis University commencement.

Friday’s Globe Letters to the Editor backed Peretz up.

Representative sample, from a letter headlined “Israel-bashing, to a fault:”

“Your paper continues to attack Israel and Israelis whenever you’re given an opportunity and even when you have to create one.”

Sounds like the Globe has created one big headache.

BP Still Stands For Bogus Promises

BP’s damage-control ad campaign  – which the hardworking staff detailed here and here – has now entered a new phase.

Wall Street Journal full-page ad headline:

We Will Make This Right

Lots of people think that’s wrong.

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Mark Zuckerberg, CEO Of Facetime

For the past few days, Mark (“I’m CEO . . . bitch“) Zuckerberg has launched an all-out media blitz to tell Facebook users that he’s tightening up the social networking site’s privacy controls, while insisting that’s not what they really want.

Call it the Yeah, But Tour.

Wednesday it was a press conference, which drew mixed reviews.

New York Times headline:

Facebook Bows to Pressure Over Privacy

Wall Street Journal headline:

Facebook’s Settings Don’t Quell Critics

Then there was Zuckerman’s totally obfuscating interview on NPR’s All Things Considered.

Excerpts:

“There’s this false rumor that’s been going around which says that we’re sharing private information with applications and it’s just not true. The way it works, is … if you choose to share some information with everyone on the site, that means that any person can go look up that information and any application can go look up that information as well. … But applications have to ask for permission for anything that you’ve set to be private.”

“Advertisers never get access to your information. We never sell anyone’s information and we have no plans to ever do that in the future. Now, in order to run a service like this that serves more than 400 million users, it does cost money … so we do have to make money and the way we do that is through …  advertising. Advertisers come to us and they say what they want to advertise and we show advertisements to people who we think are going to be most interested. … But at no part in that process is any of your information shared with advertisers.”

Mark Zuckerberg: Two steps forward, one step back.

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BP Spin Patrol Update

After inexplicably sitting out Wednesday, BP’s full-page (read: expensive) damage control ads reappeared in the New York Times and Wall Street Journal on Thursday.

BP’s elaborate spinsite is here. Have a blast.

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Ads ‘n’ Ends (BP Edition)

Fun Fact to Know and Tell

From George Will’s latest column (hat tip Politico’s Playbook):

From 2000 through 2008, sales of “Atlas Shrugged,” which was published in 1957, averaged a remarkable 166,000 a year. Since Barack Obama took office, more than 600,000 copies have been sold.

Now that’s the muscular marketplace at its best.

Ad No The Day

From Wednesday’s New York Times:

BP’s Ties to Agency Are Long and Complex

Lede:

Three years ago, the national laboratory then headed by Steven Chu received the bulk of a $500 million grant from the British oil giant BP to develop alternative energy sources through a new Energy Biosciences Institute.

Dr. Chu received the grant from BP’s chief scientist at the time, Steven E. Koonin, a fellow theoretical physicist whom Dr. Chu jocularly described as “my twin brother.” Dr. Koonin had selected the Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory at theUniversity of California, Berkeley, over other universities in the United States and Britain in part because of Dr. Chu’s pioneering work in alternative fuels.

Today, Dr. Chu is President Obama’s energy secretary, and he spent Tuesday in Houston working with BP officials to try to find a way to stop the unabated flow of oil from a ruptured well a mile beneath the Gulf of Mexico.

Dr. Koonin, who followed Dr. Chu to the Energy Department and now serves as under secretary of energy for science, is recused from all matters relating to the disaster because of his past ties to BP, said Stephanie Mueller, an Energy Department spokeswoman.

Dr. Chu, she said, “has never had a financial interest in BP.”

What – $500 million isn’t real money anymore?

Beyond that, consider this Campaign Outsider headline:

New York Times Ties to BP Are Lucrative and Complex

For the past three or four days, the Times has been running this full-page BP damage-control ad (via ThinkProgress):

In an amazing coincidence, BP did not run the ad in Wednesday’s Times.

But BP has run at least half-a-million-dollars worth of advertising in the Good Grey Lady during the past week.

What’s the relationship? We’ll never know.

Fat Chances for Journalists

Former Globie Michael Prager has just self-published Fat Boy Thin Man, which comes hard on the heels of Marc Ambinder’s biggest loser piece – “Beating Obesity” – in The Atlantic.

Apparently, fat is the new news.

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