NYT Mikhail Kalashnikov Obit Omits Most Important Fact

Mikhail Kalashnikov, father of the AK-47, is dead at the age of 94.

From the New York Times obituary by C. J. Chivers:

His role in the rifle’s creation, and the attention showered on him by the Kremlin’s propaganda machine, carried him from 24kalashnikov1-articleLargeconscription in the Red Army to senior positions in the Soviet arms-manufacturing bureaucracy and ultimately to six terms on the Supreme Soviet, the Soviet Union’s legislative body.

Tens of millions of Kalashnikov rifles have been manufactured. Their short barrels, steep front-sight posts and curved magazines made them a marker of conflict that has endured for decades. The weapons also became both Soviet and revolutionary symbols and widespread instruments of terrorism, child-soldiering and crime.

Actually, the obituary notes, an estimated 70 to 100 million Kalashnikovs have been produced.

What the Times obit does not note is that C.J. Chivers wrote the biography of the AK-47, The Gun.

Which makes his valedictory the most authoritative – and least attributed – obituary out there.

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Lousy Turnout For Midnight Mass At St. Mary’s In Brookline Village

churchThe hardworking staff, which is Jewish by attraction, has lived next door to St. Mary of the Assumption in Brookline Village for 25 years, during which we’ve observed – yes – 25 Christmas Eve Midnight Masses.

(For decades our mother, St. Agnes of 89th Street, would ask us, “Want to come to Midnight Mass with me, Johnny?” To which we eternally replied, “Happy to take you there, Mom.”)

But back to St. Mary’s: This year’s Midnight Mass seemed to be woefully under attended. We counted about 15 cars parked on the Linden Street/LindenPlace Triangle. Way less than previous counts.

So all those stories about Pope Francis’s rejuvenation of Cathaholics (tip o’ the pixel to brother Jim for that designation) – grain o’ salt, yeah?

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Native Advertising Isn’t All That Viral? No Matter – It’s Still Dangerous

Smart piece in Adweek about the virality of native advertising.

Native Advertising Wasn’t Really So Viral in 2013

New Sharethrough report shows how few sponsored stories popped 

Are we so sure that all this sponsored content is worth the anigif_enhanced-buzz-31485-1376581173-9trouble?

Native advertising distribution firm Sharethrough compiled a ranking of the biggest brand-produced sponsored stories from 2013. And what perhaps sticks out the most is that none of these stories seems to have really taken off on the social Web—which is the promise of the entire native ads movement.

As Adweek notes, “the top sponsored story on the list was from Harper Collins. It naturally ran on BuzzFeed: 17 Problems Only Book Lovers Will Understand. According to Sharethrough, the piece generated 715,267 social actions.”

But, Adweek also notes, “[it’s] pretty striking that not a single brand (at least among those tracked by Sharethrough) could crack a million shares or likes. Even more striking: the falloff is severe. In second place was a story by Blackberry on Cracked: 5 Real-Life Stories of Twins Creepier Than Any Horror Movie that generated 656,478 actions.”

It goes off a cliff from there – to 115,000 for the third-place story and etc . . .

Read the rest at Sneak Adtack.

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Did Michael Bloomberg Pay For A NYT Ad Praising Michael Bloomberg?

Saturday’s New York Times featured this full-page hagiographic ad about outgoing New York mayor Michael Bloomberg, courtesy of “Appreciative New Yorkers.”

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Turns out Appreciative New Yorkers don’t really exist, as the irrepressible Dr. Ads documented here.

So who paid for the ad?

Dr. Ads thinks it was Bloomberg himself.

The hardwondering staff, on the other hand, has contacted Times Public Editor Margaret Sullivan and Corporate Communications VP Eileen Murphy to clarify the situation.

We’ll keep you posted.

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Ask Dr. Ads: What’s Up with the ‘Appreciative New Yorkers’ Bloomberg Brownnose Ad?

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

Dear Dr. Ads,

Say, that’s some magnificent ad on the back page of Saturday’s New York Times A-section, yeah?

In case you missed it:

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Is that a beautiful record of accomplishments for a man to leave behind or what, Doc?

– Mickey B

Dear Mickey B,

Yeah, whatever.

First thing – all those boldface l‘s in the ad above? They’re not there in the print version.

Not to mention the ad overall is the worst piece of typesetting this side of Shakers, Glendale.

Representative sample . . .

Read the rest at Ask Dr. Ads.

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Ask Dr. Ads: What’s Up with the Pantene ‘Bossy’ Ad?

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

Dear Dr. Ads,

I was reading the New York Times the other day and stumbled upon this full-page ad.

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Good question, yeah?

– Shining Strong

Dear Shining Strong,

This has been going on forever, hasn’t it . . .

Read the rest at Ask Dr. Ads.

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Extra! The Globe Out-Heralds The Herald! (Deval Patrick’s Crack Cousin Edition)

This defies the natural order of things, but hey . . .

Friday’s Boston Globe, Page One:

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Friday’s Boston Herald, page 16 . . .

Read the rest at It’s Good to Live in a Two-Daily Town.

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Public Editor Brands NYT’s Branded Content a ‘Delicate Balance’

imagesAs the hardtracking staff previously noted, the New York Times has been preparing to jump into the native advertising pool along with the rest of the sink-or-swim set. According to Advertising Age, the recently installed Times executive VP of advertising, Meredith Kopit Levien, gave a speech last month in which she laid out the future of the paper as a marketing platform.

“Native is a table stakes for every marketer and every publisher,” she told an audience at Sharethrough‘s Native Advertising Summit in Chicago. Banner ads, she added, are a “huge and important business” at the Times, but they will become more automated and standardized over time. Many publishers hope native ads will help counter the downward pressure on ad rates that’s created by those trends.

Yesterday the Times Public Editor, Margaret Sullivan, weighed in on her blog and on Twitter.

The tweet:

The post, from the Public Editor’s Journal . . .

Read the rest at Sneak Adtack.

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It’s Good To Live In A Two-Town Daily (NY/Boston Outgoing Mayor Edition)

A tale of two cities with longtime mayors on the exit ramp.

Thursday’s Boston Herald Page One:

 

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The inside story on 20-year mayor Tom Menino heading for the door.

 

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Down the road in the Big Town, 12-year mayor Michael Bloomberg is doing much the same thing as he leaves the corner office.

From the New York Times:

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File under: Exit strategic.

Future benefits TBD.

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Somebody Get Kai Ryssdal A Wall Street Journal Subscription

APM’s Marketplace, which the hardworking staff once contributed to and has always respected, ran this piece yesterday about BP’s ongoing attempt to depict itself as the victim of the Gulf Oil Spill.

BP’s new recipe for settlement money: Shame a famous chef

British Petroleum was dealt another legal blow today, or at least one of its employees was. A federal jury convicted a former BP drilling engineer, Kurt Mix, of one charge of deepwatercleanupobstruction for deleting text messages related to the Deepwater Horizon oil spill. The conviction comes on the heels of BP’s latest public relations move, full-page ads in the New York Times that single out what BP says are frivolous claims by businesses affected by the spill.

The bold print headline of the Times ad reads, “Would you pay this claim?” It goes on to describe an anonymous celebrity chef, widely believed to be Emeril Lagasse, who was awarded more than $8 million dollars for what BP calls fictional losses. The ad claims they were fictional because the chef’s management company made more money the year of the spill than the two years prior.

The piece then proceeds to report this:

BP likely chose the New York Times because of its wide reach, and because of who reads it, says Roger Williams University law professor David Logan.

“They know the New York Times is the paper of record for lawyers, judges and law professors, and it must be viewed as a sound, strategic investment,” he says.

Except . . . the same ad (and all the others in BP’s pity-party campaign) also ran in the Wall Street Journal.

Which doesn’t mean Marketplace was wrong.

Just short-sighted.

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