Harry Potter Goes To Haiti

Photo: Jon Lascher

A terrific story is currently unfolding below the media radar in Boston.

Today the Harry Potter Alliance – in conjunction with Partners in Health – sends its fourth planeload of relief supplies to Haiti since the January earthquake. (Livestream here.)

The first three flights were named Harry, Hermione, and Ron, respectively. Today’s is DFTBA – “Don’t Forget to Be Awesome.” (Take it up with these guys about the name.)

A fifth flight, Dumbledore, is scheduled for mid-May.

The Harry Potter Alliance is “dedicated to using the examples of Harry Potter and Albus Dumbledore to spread love and fight the Dark Arts in the real world.”

HPA co-founder and executive director Andrew Slack said in a phone interview that the idea for the group came out of the fifth Harry Potter book, in which Dumbledore’s Army wakes the world up to injustice.  Slack wanted to bring that mission to the online fan community, to explore “the power of organizing around a story and applying it to real lives and the real world.”

As Slack describes it, HPA “harnesses the power of new media and cutting-edge social networking platforms to communicate with more than 100,000 people, including 60 HPA chapters across the U.S. and the world.”

After January’s earthquake devastated Haiti, HPA joined with about 20 other like-minded social-media groups and launched a fundraising campaign called Helping Haiti Heal. They also looked for an organization they could support among the many relief efforts, and chose Partners in Health.

PIH is a non-profit organization that “works to bring modern medical care to poor communities in 12 countries around the world,” and that has been providing “comprehensive healthcare to the poorest of the poor in Haiti for over 20 years,” regional outreach manager Samantha Ender said in a phone interview.

“HPA was looking for a relief organization to support,” Ender recalled. “Andrew came to us and said, ‘I think we can raise $5000.’”

In the course of two weeks, Helping Haiti Heal raised $123,754.41.

And that will raise five cargo planes, starting with Harry and Hermione in mid-March, continuing with Ron last week.

Photo: Jon Lascher

Photo: Tim Farrell

Representative cargo list:

1 pallet gauze pads, medical masks
1 pallet 4″ elastic bandage
1 pallet cleaning supplies, pads, hand sanitizer
1 pallet boxes of medical supplies + headlamps
1 pallet solar lights, solar suitcases
1 pallet sealed batteries for solar
1 pallet solar lights
1 pallet solar batteries, sealed
1 pallet 20 cases CIRCUIT, 1L BAG PED 60″ (30/CS);
4 CATH TRAY, CVC TRPL LUM 7FR
4 CATH TRAY, CNTRL VENOUS M7.5FR
64 cases DRAIN, HUBLESS RND END PERF 15
40 cases DRAIN, HUBLESS RND END PERF 19
1 pallet rolled gauze, rubbing alcohol
1 pallet 1 box surgical supplies, wound VAC canisters, Xerox 3300MFP printer
1 pallet art supplies
1 pallet gauze pads, rolled gauze, masks
1 pallet blankets
1 pallet sheets
1 pallet sheets
1 pallet sheets
1 pallet rolled gauze, blood pressure machines
1 pallet paper tape, elastic bandages
1 pallet rolled gauze, gauze pads
1 pallet 8 boxes  generators, 10 oxygen regulators (50psi), 20 oxygen hoses (10ft), physical therapy supplies
1 pallet 8 boxes generators, spectrum MM
1 pallet physical therapy supplies
1 pallet physical therapy supplies
1 pallet physical therapy supplies
1 cooler 500 I-sat Cartridges : 250 EG6 cartriges, 150 Crea cartridges

Slack estimates that the HPA/PIH collaboration has sent “100,000 pounds of lifesaving medical supplies” to Haiti.

And more to come.

“They’ve done an amazing job,” Ender said. “It goes to show what online communities can do, and it’s a feather in the cap of social media.”

Albus Dumbledore, no doubt, would be awfully proud.

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Is The New York Times A Papal Tiger?

Okay, so this past Sunday the New York Times Public Editor, Clark Hoyt, penned this lede under the headline, “Questioning the Pope:”

A TOP Vatican official said The Times “lacks fairness in its coverage of Pope Benedict.” The archbishop of Brooklyn urged parishioners to “besiege” the paper and send a message that the Catholic Church will no longer be its “personal punching bag.” Writers in The Wall Street Journal and other publications have assailed the paper.

The issue was 1) Pope Benedict XVI’s track record on pedophile priests, and 2) the Times’s coverage of his actions.

Which was, well, critical.

Flash-forward to Tuesday’s Times headline, “Future Pope’s Complex Role In Abuse Case In Austria.”

Lede:

As Pope Benedict XVI has come under scrutiny for his handling of sexual abuse cases, both his supporters and his critics have paid fresh attention to the way he responded to a sexual abuse scandal in Austria in the 1990s, one of the most damaging to confront the church in Europe.

Defenders of Benedict cite his role in dealing with Cardinal Hans Hermann Groër of Vienna as evidence that he moved assertively, if quietly, against abusers. They point to the fact that Cardinal Groër left office six months after accusations against him of molesting boys first appeared in the Austrian news media in 1995. The future pope, they say, favored a full canonical investigation, only to be blocked by other ranking officials in the Vatican.

A detailed look at the rise and fall of the clergyman, who died in 2003, and the involvement of Benedict, a Bavarian theologian with many connections to German-speaking Austria, paints a more complex picture.

Coincidence?

You be the judge.

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WBZ’s (Head)Spin-O-Meter

On WBZ Tuesday night, Jon Keller’s vaunted Spin-O-Meter went all Linda Blair when the TV spot Keller had just ad-watched ran right after his segment.

Here’s what Keller reported.

And then that very spot from the Republican Governors Association ran:

Oddly enough, just the other day I came across a radio commentary I wrote over a decade ago that featured this lede:

Newscasts used to be the DMZ of political ads. The Whatever O’Clock News was the place where, in theory anyway, the candidates’ messages appeared in some larger context. Newscasts were supposed to deliver the whole story about half-truths and round partial facts up to the nearest reality.

Jon Keller kept up his end of the deal. But WBZ’s running the spot right afterward kind of canceled out the value of his ad watch.

Don’t get me wrong. This is no darkside conspiracy. This is the news hand not knowing what the ad hand is doing – as it should be.

Which is all the more reason to go back to the time when newscasts were the DMZ of political ads.

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Why The New York Times Is The Best Newspaper Ever

Because no other paper in the universe would produce this piece:

Stop by Stop, Subway’s Decline and Growth

in 2009

Every year, New York City Transit releases a station-by-station breakdown of ridership in the biggest subway system in the nation. Shake-ups are rare; the usual suspects — Times Square, Grand Central Station — routinely top the list, and last year was no exception. [Excellent graphics here.]

And this piece is no exception: The New York Times is the Eternal Assignment Desk for the journalism world at large.

A small sampling:

The Brooklyn Daily Eagle pecked at the Times piece, the Newark Star-Ledger toted it up, and a Village Voice blog gave it a full-throated shoutout. (See the whole xerox journalism set here.)

The New York Times: All the News That’s Fit to Print (Elsewhere)

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Are You Mr. Low T?

Red-blooded men of America, gird your loins! Erectile dysfunction has a new rival!

Low T.

Definition:

Also known as low testosterone or hypogonadism, which means the body doesn’t make enough testosterone; Low T may affect mood, muscle mass, bone mineral density, and sexual function.

This new dead-male office comes compliments of the website Is It [LowT], which is sponsored by Androgel testosterone gel.

Beyond that, Low T is the latest in a series of constructive discontents created by advertisers. As James Twitchell noted in his book, Twenty Ads That Shook the World:

To be sure, this is nothing but a protection racket, as the company selling you the relief is also the one creating the deficiency.

There’s a proud marketing history behind Low T, starting with Listerine’s coining the term “halitosis,” which Listerine of course eliminated.

Other examples:

Gillette created five o’clock shadow

Alberto VO5 created split ends

Absorbine Jr. created athlete’s foot

Lifebuoy created body odor

Xanax created panic attacks

Ropinrole created Restless Leg Syndrome

As Twitchell puts it, marketers are “able to manufacture the horns of a dilemma, and then sell the horn-removal equipment.”

Which makes marketers downright horny.

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Clip Du Jour©

From our Late To The Party desk:

The Boston Herald has been spouting off about the WRKO/Tom Finneran/Click On The Jumping Whale kerfuffle for several days now.

The back story:

Finneran, co-host Todd Feinburg and producer Bill Cooksey were yakking about nail clippings Friday when the on-air exchange went below the belt, according to audio obtained by the Herald.

“The Kowloon’s crunchy today. Nancy! Nancy! What’s with all the toenails?” said Cooksey, referring to Carr and his producer, who goes by the alias Sandy on the air but whose real first name is Nancy.

“You mean Sandy his producer?” Feinburg asked.

“Or whoever. Whatever she calls herself today,” Cooksey said.

“Click on the jumping whale,” said Finneran.

(“The jumping whale reference,” the Herald reported, “comes from a radio spot touting an Alaskan cruise with Feinburg. At the end of the commercial, Feinburg tells WRKO listeners to click on the jumping whale on the station’s Web site for more details.”)

Since then, the Herald has been on this story like blubber on Moby-Dick.

Saturday’s headline:

Tom Finneran: No regrets over whale clip

Lede:

WRKO radio host Tom Finneran said he has no second thoughts about the disparaging on-air crack he made regarding Howie Carr’s female producer when confronted outside the station’s Brighton studios yesterday.

When asked whether he regretted making the “whale” comment, Finneran told the Herald, “There’s nothing to regret. I’m not making any comment.” The former House speaker also said he had no comment when asked whether station management has talked to him about his remark.

Okay. Rewind to the original sin:

Finneran and his minions were yakking about nail clippings?

Seriously? That’s what morning-drive talk radio has come to?

No wonder the hardworking staff at Campaign Outsider routinely sleeps in.

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Manny Running? Manny?

From our Never Thought I’d Live To See That bureau:

The Dodgers placed Manny Ramirez on the 15-day disabled list with a strained right calf and recalled outfielder Xavier Paul from Triple A Albuquerque. Ramirez, hitting .415 with two homers and 12 RBIs, was injured running out a single Thursday at Cincinnati  [Saturday’s Boston Globe Sports Log]

Manny Ramirez? Injured running out a single? Really?

Could we see the videotape, please?

(Over/under on how many others have written essentially the same thing: 8953. I’m taking the over.)

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Rash Limbaugh

Mr. Excellence in Broadcasting had an op-ed headlined “Liberals and the Violence Card” in Friday’s Wall Street Journal.

Notable excerpts (with translations for the Limbaugh-impaired):

From the halls of the Ivy League to the halls of Congress, from the antiwar protests during the Vietnam War and the war in Iraq to the anticapitalist protests during International Monetary Fund and World Bank meetings, we’re used to seeing leftist malcontents take to the streets. Sometimes they’re violent, breaking shop windows with bricks and throwing rocks at police. Sometimes there are arrests. Not all leftists are violent, of course. But most are angry. It’s in their DNA.

(As opposed to the Grand Old Tea Party set, described here by The New Republic’s Michelle Cottle: “Among Obama-era conservatives, rage is all the rage.”)

Back to Rush:

In just 16 months they’ve added more than $2 trillion to the national debt, essentially nationalized the health-care system . . .

(Right – the Obama administration stands accused of adding 31 million people to the private insurance industry pool. Some socialist.)

And here’s Rushamon in super-high dudgeon:

I reject the notion that America is in a well-deserved decline, that she and her citizens are unexceptional. I do not believe America is the problem in the world. I believe America is the solution to the world’s problems. I reject a foreign policy that treats our allies like our enemies and our enemies like our allies. I condemn the president traveling the world apologizing for America’s great contributions to mankind. And I condemn his soft-pedaling the dangers we face from terrorism.

(That whole American exceptionalism  mantra is a neo-con dodge. Manifest Destiny went out with James Madison. As for “soft-pedaling the dangers we face from terrorism,” Barack Obama has largely adhered to the anti-terrorism tactics established by his predecessor, George W. Bush. Misunderestimate that.)

‘Nuf ced.

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Red $ox Nation (Adjusted For Inflation)

Is it just me, or was anyone else surprised to learn that the Olde Towne Team’s value appreciated less than 10% over the past eight years?

Lede from Friday’s dead-tree edition of the Boston Herald:

A regulatory filing yesterday by the New York Times Co. shed light on the value of the Red Sox by noting that venture capitalist Henry McCance paid $9 million earlier this month for his 1.18 percent stake in the team’s parent company.

That could put the value of New England Sports Ventures – owner of the Sox, Fenway Park, 80 percent of sports network NESN and half of Roush Fenway Racing – at roughly $763 million . . .

Principal owner John Henry, Tom Werner and others paid $700 million for the Sox in 2002.

But wait . . .  inflation apparently set in between the Herald’s print piece and its website report.

Here’s the same lede from the dead-pixel edition of Friday’s Herald:

A regulatory filing yesterday by the New York Times [NYT] Co. shed light on the value of the Red Sox [team stats] by noting that venture capitalist Henry McCance paid $14 million earlier this month for his 1.18 percent stake in the team’s parent company.

That could put the value of New England Sports Ventures – owner of the Sox,Fenway Park [map], 80 percent of sports network NESN and half of Roush Fenway Racing – at roughly $1.2 billion.

Okay, so now venture capitalist Henry McCance paid $14 million (not $9 million) which makes the Sox worth $1.2 billion (not  $763 million).

Did the market move that much on Friday?

Or is the Herald engaged in revisionist cyber-history without acknowledging it?

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Ad ‘No’ the Day™

Apparently, NBC and Fox think this Lane Bryant spot is too hot to air:

But this is okay to air:

Discuss among yourselves.

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