What Can the Koch Bros. Do for (Scott) Brown?

Americans for Prosperity, the big-bucks boyos bankrolled by billionaires David and Charles Koch, is in for a dollar already this election cycle.

The independent expenditure group, which spent over $36 million on federal elections in 2012, has just launched a seven-figure ad campaign targeting three Democratic U.S. Senate incumbents.

Press release via Politico’s Playbook:

“Americans for Prosperity, the nation’s largest grassroots champion for health care freedom, announced the launch of a multimillion dollar ad effort holding three US senators accountable for their support of the President’s health care law. TV ads will begin airing this week that put pressure on Senator Hagan in North Carolina, Senator Landrieu in Louisiana, and … Senator Shaheen in New Hampshire … The ads will run in major media markets for the next three weeks. … Last fall, AFP spent over $16 million on a series of TV ads holding politicians accountable for … ObamaCare, and thanking others who have stood against the law. 

Here’s the ad running in the Granite State:

 

 

Be honest, Scott Brown (R-Elsewhere): Are you loving this or what?

Also of note is this Politico piece about social conservatives “raising millions of dollars, coordinating their political spending and assiduously courting megadonors.”

Say it with us: Let the wild Whatever-Billion-Dollar rumpus begin!

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Rhonda Roland Shearer Responds

Yesterday the hardtracking staff at Sneak Adtack wrote this about some awards handed out by author and 2photoa_shearerpublisher Rhonda Roland Shearer’s current iMediaEthics.org website, and in the process mentioned her 2002 dustup with William Langewiesche, author ofAmerican Ground: Unbuilding the World Trade Center.

Here’s Ms. Shearer’s response:

4 points for the record since my “Media Ethics credibility” is presented as possibly at risk with only one-sided facts and an out of context paraphrase left for your readers to “decide.”:

1. The paraphrase you quote from the Observer article that is attributed to me (about my supposedly wanting to burn Langewiesche’s book etc) is not a quote attributed to me because I never said it. What I said is quoted in the Observer article. It was clear my views were separate from the group I was assisting (comprised of union leaders and as The Observer wrote, “New York City firemen, Port Authority and NYPD officers, construction workers and family members of the victims”).The Observer wrote:
“Ms. Shearer said. ‘The family members are thinking of how they could do a lawsuit,’ Ms. Shearer said. ‘Everybody hopes that this will just go away in retraction, apology and book-shredding.”

“What does Ms. Shearer hope will happen to Mr. Langewiesche? “I hope [the magazine] will deal with this internally,” she said. “Now that it’s all come out, that there is misconduct, that they’ll do the right thing.”

2. I was working solely as an artist and art historian in 2002. Workers at ground zero approached me about help getting correction. I said, “No problem” as I was completely naive thinking it would be easy. Documents that the group obtained proved many errors were made. Yet Atlantic Monthly only made a few of the numerous corrections required by the empirical record. It was the injustice of the harmful, un-fact checked charge, still often repeated– that 9/11 rescue workers on 9/11 were committing crimes, instead of helping victims –that mobilized me to study how journalism is supposed to be done and the ethical values that guide it. It was 2 years later that I decided to work as a journalist and eventually founded http://www.iMediaEthics.org .

3. Langewiesche himself admits in a press conference that his claim of firefighters stealing jeans on 9/11 was not factual but that he was
“writing about construction workers reactions, not what actually happened” See video clip.
http://www.wtclivinghistory.org/video01.htm
Moreover, Langewiesche states he is “entirely unsure” of any part of his now infamous claim that Ladder 4 firefighters stole GAP Jeans “before the towers fell.” See clip.
http://www.wtclivinghistory.org/video02.htm
More here http://www.wtclivinghistory.org/introduction.htm

4.  Many journalists supported me and the WTC Living History critiques of Langewiesche’s ‘facts,’ not just the ones you link to or cite. http://www.wtclivinghistory.org/letter_gary.htm
Gary Hill, then head of the SPJ ethics committee, wrote to AJR –
“William Langewiesche and the Atlantic Monthly reported: ‘It was hard to avoid the conclusion that the looting had begun even before the first tower fell, and that while hundreds of doomed firemen had climbed through the wounded buildings, this particular crew had been engaged in something else entirely, without the slightest suspicion the South Tower was about to hammer down. ‘

“These ‘facts’ were picked up and reported by other media. Mr. Langewiesche now appears to say he doesn’t know if any of this actually true, only that this story illustrated the divisions between construction workers and firefighters. The Atlantic Monthly says its fact checkers were not trying to determine if the facts were true. Instead they were trying to determine ‘that this story was circulating.’ With all due respect, what kind of a standard is that? It resembles the standard employed by gossip columnists. This standard allowed a set of apparently false allegations about the fallen firefighters to be repeated across the country.”

Thanks for writing, Ms. Shearer.

William Langewiesche: Anything to add?

Originally posted at Sneak Adtack.

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Ask Dr. Ads: What’s Up with the E-Cig Emails?

DrAdsforProfileWell the Doc opened up the old mailbag today and here’s what poured out.

Dear Dr. Ads,

I checked my email yesterday and discovered this:

Hello friend

Merry christmas to you in advance. Thanks for your time.201311271940261518252

Do you know e-pipe K1000? It is very hot now. Our company have NEW Product e-pipe K1000 kit in stock, You can find it is more beautiful and very cool. Do you like it? And we can offer you my best price with high quality . . .

What the e-heck is going on here, Doc?

– Johnny Smoke

Dear Johnny Smoke,

First thing you should know: Electronic cigarettes are a hot product and an even hotter political/policy issue.

The current default position? Ban them . . .

Read the rest at Ask. Dr. Ads.

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Apparently ‘Ethical Native Advertising’ Is Not an Oxymoron

The hardtracking staff at Sneak Adtack rarely has anything good to say about native advertising, those ads in sheep’s clothing that trick out marketing material as editorial content.

But here’s the exception that proves the rule.

From FishbowlNY:

Daily News Secretary Earns Kudos for Handling of Newspaper’s Advertorials

Rhonda Roland Shearer, publisher and editor-in-chief of iMediaEthics.org, has announced the inaugural winners of the iMediaEthicsRibbon2site’s Ethical Acts in Journalism Awards. The goal, this year and beyond, is to highlight worthy behind-the-scenes actions by editors and administrative employees.

All six 2013 winners are impressive, but the one that caught FishbowlNY’s eye is New York Daily News confidential secretary Miranda Walker. iMediaEthics went to her after they got no response from the paper’s advertising department about the lack of proper labeling of advertorial content . . .

But they did get a response from Walker . . .

Read the rest at Sneak Adtack.

POSTSCRIPT: You may remember Rhonda Roland Shearer from her 2002 rumpus with Atlantic magazine writer/author William Langewiesche over his book American Ground: Unbuilding the World Trade Center. As Joe Hagan wrote in the New York Observer at the time, “Ms. Shearer, a 48-year-old artist and the widow of the Harvard paleontologist Stephen Jay Gould, is on a personal crusade to debunk Mr. Langewiesche’s reportage, derail his Pulitzer hopes, and see the book recalled and destroyed.”

Whether that dustup enhances or erodes Shearer’s Media Ethics credibility we’ll leave for you to decide.

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Ambrose Bierce and Gerard Manley Hopkins: Writers Famous for Not Being Famous

You can argue with the politics of The Weekly Standard all you want, but the magazine’s Books, Arts & Society section is almost uniformly superb.

Two recent examples are reviews of writers who failed to achieve fame in their lifetimes – or ours.

Start with Ambrose Bierce, profiled by the always-readable Andrew Ferguson in the latest edition of the Standard.

Cynic’s Progress

The brave life and mysterious death of Ambrose Bierce.

One golden autumn morning 100 years ago, a few blocks from where I’m writing these words in northwest Washington, D.C., BOB.v19-16.Dec30.Ferg_.TheHuntingtonLibraryAmbrose Bierce said goodbye to his secretary, turned the key in the door to his apartment on Logan Circle, and went off to God knows where.

I’m not speaking figuratively: God and nobody else knows where Ambrose Bierce ended up—or when, how, or why.

That was fitting for a man “whose fame was not general, even at its most robust,” as Ferguson notes.

“We have produced but one genuine wit,” H. L. Mencken wrote, in a survey of American letters: “Ambrose Bierce. And save to a small circle he is unknown today.” Mencken was writing decades after Bierce had gone off to Mexico, by which time his life was best remembered for the way he had left it. And the circle of those who read him is even smaller now, needless to say. When the Library of America finally got around to issuing a canonical selection of his writing, in 2011, the single volume (Philip Roth got nine!) was relatively slender; it was the 219th in the library’s series of great American writers.

Bierce suffered the unfortunate fate of being a “writer’s writer” – remarkably prolific, superbly epigrammatic, supremely ironic.

But mostly remembered – if at all – for his short story An Occurrence at Owl Creek Bridge and his iconic The Devil’s Dictionary.

Then again, Ferguson says,

[H]e earned the right to be read and remembered for more than his cleverness, sharp as it was—especially now, on the 100th anniversary of his curious exit and in the middle of the 150th anniversary of the Civil War. He served in the war with great distinction, and, in the decades that followed, he came closer than any other American to turning the great national cataclysm into art.

Reduced to contemporary terms, Bierce has earned the right to be read and remembered at least in Ferguson’s piece.

Next up: Jesuit priest and poet supreme Gerard Manley Hopkins, who suffered the fate of being a “poet’s poet.”

From Edward Short’s Weekly Standard piece on The Collected Works of Gerard Manley Hopkins:

His bold, innovative syntax and his celebration of “the roll, the rise, the carol” of creation are like nothing in English poetry:

As kingfishers catch fire, dragonflies draw flame;

As tumbled over rim in roundy wells

Stones ring; like each tucked string tells, each hung bell’s

Bow swung finds tongue to fling out broad its name;

Each mortal thing does one thing and the same:

Deals out that being indoors each one dwells;

Selves—goes itself; myself it speaks and spells,

Crying What I do is me: for that I came. 

Truly, Hopkins’ poetry is like nothing you’ve ever experienced. We defy you to read The Windhover and not get shivers.

But, like Ambrose Bierce, Hopkins was unfamous in his own time. From Short’s piece:

When it came to his own verse, Hopkins was human enough to miss fame . . . [But these] letters correct the view that Hopkins Unknownresented the religious order that forbade the publication of his verse: “When a man has given himself to God’s service,” he wrote to the poet Richard Watson Dixon in 1881, “when he has denied himself and followed Christ, he has fitted himself to receive and does receive from God a special guidance, a more particular providence.”

Now if you value what I write, if I do myself, much more does our Lord. And if he chooses to avail himself of what I leave at his disposal he can do so with a felicity and with a success which I could never command. And if he does not, then two things follow; one that the reward I shall nevertheless receive from him will be all the greater; the other that then I shall know how much a thing contrary to his will and even to my own best interests I should have done if I had taken things into my own hands and forced on publication.

Contrary to the Lord’s decision (and at ridicule-risk), we’ll publish our favorite Hopkins poem here (via the Poetry Foundation).

That Nature is a Heraclitean Fire and of the comfort of the Resurrection

BY GERARD MANLEY HOPKINS

Cloud-puffball, torn tufts, tossed pillows | flaunt forth, then chevy on an air-
Built thoroughfare: heaven-roysterers, in gay-gangs | they throng; they glitter in marches.
Down roughcast, down dazzling whitewash, | wherever an elm arches,
Shivelights and shadowtackle ín long | lashes lace, lance, and pair.
Delightfully the bright wind boisterous | ropes, wrestles, beats earth bare
Of yestertempest’s creases; | in pool and rut peel parches
Squandering ooze to squeezed | dough, crust, dust; stanches, starches
Squadroned masks and manmarks | treadmire toil there
Footfretted in it. Million-fuelèd, | nature’s bonfire burns on.
But quench her bonniest, dearest | to her, her clearest-selvèd spark
Man, how fast his firedint, | his mark on mind, is gone!
Both are in an unfathomable, all is in an enormous dark
Drowned. O pity and indig | nation! Manshape, that shone
Sheer off, disseveral, a star, | death blots black out; nor mark
                            Is any of him at all so stark
But vastness blurs and time | beats level. Enough! the Resurrection,
A heart’s-clarion! Away grief’s gasping, | joyless days, dejection.
                            Across my foundering deck shone
A beacon, an eternal beam. | Flesh fade, and mortal trash
Fall to the residuary worm; | world’s wildfire, leave but ash:
                            In a flash, at a trumpet crash,
I am all at once what Christ is, | since he was what I am, and
This Jack, joke, poor potsherd, | patch, matchwood, immortal diamond,
                            Is immortal diamond.

 

Immortal, yes? And we’re not even religious.

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Sign o’ the Time: Everything for Sale at Newsweekly

The Boston Sunday Globe featured this full-page ad on A12 yesterday.

Screen Shot 2013-12-30 at 12.57.41 AM

Two things, for starters:

1) The whole Time Dealer of the Year Awards looks suspiciously like a pay-for-play scheme.

2) There is no this:

Screen Shot 2013-12-30 at 12.58.59 AM

At least not outside the Time-industrial-marketing complex. Once, the vanity covers were largely restricted to dealership showrooms, not splashed all over legitimate media. But Time has changed.

According to today’s New York Times, the venerable/vulnerable newsweekly is pretty much a swap meet now – in every aspect of the publication.

Within the next six months . . . the media conglomerate Time Warner, hopes to spin off Time Inc. into a separate public company. But if the plan succeeds, Time Inc. will become independent at a difficult moment. Not only do the magazine industry’s fortunes continue to sag, but Time Inc. has also shown signs of instability. It has churned through three chief executives in the last three years, and lost a star editor, its former editor in chief Martha Nelson.

To combat these negative forces, Time Inc. will abandon the traditional separation between its newsroom and business sides, a move that has caused angst among its journalists. Now, the newsroom staffs at Time Inc.’s magazines will report to the business executives.

Time Inc. defends the setup – “once verboten at journalistic institutions” –  as essential for generating new revenue to offset shrinking advertising and circulation dollars.

(The hardtracking staff at Sneak Adtack had this story, via Times columnist Joe Nocera, two months ago.)

So look for more pay-for-placement schemes to involve Time (not to mention People, Sports Illustrated, and Fortune). Hey, maybe Ray Ciccolo could guest-edit one of the magazines for a week.

Look also for a shuffle in the bottom third of this Gallup poll:

Picture 1

When car salespeople vault past journalists, you’ll know Time Inc. has been successful in its new venture.

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Sergey Ponomarev Wins NYT ‘Year In Pictures’ Bakeoff

Yesterday’s New York Times Year in Pictures featured the usual array of fabulous photos from the pst year. And Sergey Ponomarev took honors as the shooter with the most submissions (in the print edition) – four.

Among them:

Screen Shot 2013-12-30 at 12.28.53 AM

 

Caption: “A girl read in front of her class at Mir Ali Ahmad Girls School.”

 

Screen Shot 2013-12-30 at 12.30.01 AM

 

Caption: “The Third Brigade Combat Team of the 101st Airborne Division, known as the Rakkasans, climbed down from the mountains.”

 

Screen Shot 2013-12-30 at 12.32.55 AM

 

Caption: “After Typhoon Haiyan, people found refuge at Saint Michael the Archangel Church in Basey.”

Other notables: Tyler Hicks, Doug Mills, Hamid Khatib, Goran Tomasevic, and many more.

Be it resolved: The NYT photographers are superb at what they do, year in and year out.

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Did Michael Bloomberg Run Another NYT Ad Praising Michael Bloomberg?

The hardworking staff – and Dr. Ads – have been on this question like Brown on Williamson:

Who are the Appreciative New Yorkers who’ve run this ad in the New York Times – twice?

screen-shot-2013-12-21-at-1-47-36-pm

Since we first asked, those Appreciative New Yorkers have failed to respond to our inquiries. (Not to mention they’ve failed to pop up on the Googletron – except for these search results, which mostly link to us.)

So we tried again.

Again, we’ll keep you posted.

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Hack Attack! Salon’s Brutal Takedown of Bigfoot Journalists

Salon’s Alex Pareene has assembled a Top Ten Hackorama of Political Journalists and it’s a corker (tip o’ the pixel to AlterNet).

Pareene blowtorches some of the most notable members of the chinstrokerati, “[channeling] each media figure’s ‘unique’ voice — and [letting] them ‘write’ their own entries.”

Call the roll:

#10: The New Yorker’s Malcolm Gladwell (“What if, sometimes, a bad writer is better than a good writer? Could writing bad books be better than writing good ones?”)

#9: The New York Times’s Thomas Friedman (“When I was in Singapore, I talked to hundreds of Asian college students, business people and diplomats, and while none of them said this to me, exactly, it’s basically my thesis and so I’m going to put it in quotation marks as a sort of ‘distillation’ of things I probably was told by people . . .” )

#8: The Wall Street Journal’s Peggy Noonan (“There’s a woman on a porch in eastern Ohio, and she has a dog, and diabetes, and a family, and seven grandchildren. The part of Ohio she lives in is vague, like so much of America . . .”)

#7: Business Insider’s Henry Blodget (“The article was about how a man named Henry Blodget flew on an airplane. He wrote, ‘I got a free pillow.’ And then, under that, he posted a picture of the pillow.”)

#6: RedState’s Erick Erickson (“With his soft physique and his inexplicable belief that ‘blogger’ is an appropriate job for a man who has a family to feed and protect, Erickson represents the epitome of the modern beta male.“)

#5: The Washington Post’s Richard Cohen (“I’m afraid I can’t deny reality. It’s time to grow up, and admit that not letting black people go to stores is just a sadly necessary response to the real, and important, fears of white people.”)

#4: NYT Columnist David Brooks (“The president immediately takes to the Columnist. They bond over their shared habit of mentioning having read Edmund Burke.”)

#3: BuzzFeed’s Benny Johnson (“In July 2013, Johnson ‘wrote’ a Buzzfeed post headlined ‘The Story of Egypt’s Revolution in “Jurassic Park” Gifs.’ And that’s exactly what it was.”)

#2: Authors Mark Halperin and John Heilemann (“President Barack Obama had won reelection (Good, Obama thought), beating gaffe-prone former Massachusetts governor Mitt Romney (That’s a real shame, thought Romney), and now the ‘Game Change’ boys would have to write a book about it.”)

#1: Politico’s Mike Allen (“PAYOLA-BOOK: No professional blowback for sponsor-fluffing Mike Allen — LEIBO on ALLEN: ‘enabler’ — Business lobby agenda pushed daily — “Beyond parody” — Something about JOE SCARBOROUGH for some reason.”

Some of the parodies are very sharp, some merely dyspeptic, but all are generally on target. Notably absent: Paul Krugman, Maureen Dowd, Bob Woodward, George Will, and etc.

There’s always next year.

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Ask Dr. Ads: Got A Top Ten For 2013?

DrAdsforProfileWell the Doc opened up the old mailbag today and here’s what poured out.

Dear Dr. Ads,

I’ve noticed that a lot of media outlets have picked their Top Whatever Ads of 2013 in recent days.

There’s Adweek’s Mostapalooza featuring The Ten Most Sexist Ads of 2013The 10 Most Epic TV Promos of 2013The Ten Most-Viral Ads of 2013, and The Ten Most Watched Ads on YouTube in 2013.

Then there’s USA Today’s Top 5 ads of 2013.

Among many others.

Any way you can sort this out for us, Doc?

– H.D. Dromedary

Dear H.D. Dromedary,

We’re guessing you’d be most interested in Adweek’s 10 Best Ads of 2013, which slots this spot at #4 . . .

Read the rest at Ask Dr. Ads.

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