Archive for June 8th, 2008


Sam Zell plan to make newspapers profitable

Turn them into spam. Have a 50-50 split between news and advertising. That’s what Zell envisions as the way to make money - getting rid of all that pesky news and those bothersome reporters and instead have more “maps, graphics, lists, ranking and stats”.

But why would advertisers want to advertise in newspapers with dumbed-down content filled with other advertisements? Sounds like he’s reinventing the throw-away neighborhood shopping “newspaper,” with content cut-and-pasted from press releses, and filled with ads.

But those are free. His newspapers aren’t.

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Golden Gate Bridge from Fort Mason

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Hartford hit and run video. People did try to help

More from Colin McEnroe, Hartford CT talk show host and Hartford Courant blogger, on the hit and run video and how the Hartford Chief of Police shot his mouth off without knowing the facts and that this made the media firestorm much worse.

I’m quoting extensively without comments because McEnroe says it all. He’s a real journalist, fun to read, often quite humorous, and totally unafraid to take on the biggies.

Before you judge the people on Park Street, try to imagine living in place where there’s gang violence, where a 71-year-old civic leader can be beaten within an inch of his life in broad daylight, where the incident you’ve just seen involved two cars in some kind of high-speed inter-criminal chase.

If you’re a good person, you’d still get into the street. And people did. But maybe you learn, as a matter of survival, the reflexive habit of waiting a couple of seconds to to make sure bullets aren’t already flying.

And this

Everybody now also “knows” about the case of Angel Arce Torres. A hit-and-run driver struck down the 78-year-old man on Park Street last Friday. And nobody did anything. Nobody even called 911. This story has aired on television screens all over the world now. “Jim from Baltimore” wrote a lengthy comment on my blog. Part of it said: “This whole situation is a problem caused by the citizens of Hartford. This hit-and-run made local news in Baltimore this morning and the first thing they pointed out was how nobody had even bothered to call 911 or help the man in the street.”

There were at least four phone calls to 911 in the first minute after the accident. The callers asked for medical help and described the hit-and-run car and the direction it was headed in. Sorry, Jim, but the people of Park Street handled that part as well as the people of [upscale, high income] Blue Back Square would have.

Where did Jim — and millions of others — get that wrong information? From Hartford Police Chief Daryl Roberts, who had a public temper tantrum on Wednesday. He lumped together the hit-and-run, the savage beating of former Deputy Mayor Nick Carbone on Monday and the Wednesday discovery of the dead (but apparently not murdered) body of a man in the basement of his family’s foreclosed home.

Roberts on Wednesday said he had no idea whether anyone called 911 about Torres. Predictably, that got translated into “no one called 911; no one did anything.” I was on an exercise machine at the Y and Contessa Brewer from MSNBC was talking about “the Hartford video.” She asked, “What is wrong with people?”

You could say that Roberts spoke “in the heat of the moment” without having a chance to find out about the four 911 calls, but the accident was on May 30. Roberts had his tantrum on June 4.

I live here. There are good people and bad people. I want the chief and the mayor and the governor to get out in the streets and hold community forums and lift the spirits of the good people and give them the courage to help the cops get the bad people.

Roberts seems to think that average people are more likely to cooperate with the police if he spits on them and denounces them. I don’t see how that’s going to work. Meanwhile, shooting his mouth off without all the facts, he turned us into the Kew Gardens of 2008.

Someone needs to give Colin McEnroe a journalism award. He deserves one.

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Amazing super thin wallet

Just bought the ALL-ETT Billfold Wallet after reading about it on Kevin Kelly’s Cool Tools (he’s a co-founder of Wired)

Cool tools really work. A cool tool can be any book, gadget, software, video, map, hardware, material, or website that is tried and true. All reviews on this site are written by readers who have actually used the tool and others like it. Items can be either old or new as long as they are wonderful.

The wallet is made of paper-thin ripstop fabric. There’s a shallow pocket for money, a deep one for papers, plus room to hold 20-30 cards. Even with all that, it’ll still be just 1/4″ thick or so and fit easily in a front pants pocket or shirt pocket. Quite amazing. Only $20.

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Hartford hit and run tape

Maybe the police surveillance camera tape (see below post) showing psychopaths racing down the wrong side of the street hitting and paralyzing a 78 year old man will result in them being caught and convicted. Let’s hope so. If that camera wasn’t there, there would probably be little chance of them being caught.

A surveillance tape is only useful if someone watches it, and only if something that needs to be watched occurs. Do we have too many cameras watching everything we do. Probably. But in this case, it’s a good thing the camera was there.

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Hartford CT, violence, and the suburbs


Angel Arce Torres got tossed in the air by a hit and run driver in Hartford CT and a video camera showed multiple cars and people driving and walking past his crumpled body in the street. A few days before a former deputy mayor got beaten senseless and faces brain surgery. The sickening PR response from Hartford PD got this fireball in reply from Colin McEnroe of the Hartford Courant.

Whose fault isn’t it? The police. The police never share any responsibility for anything bad that happens, although they are often to be thanked for certain statistical trends. And if you think I am unfairly ascribing these sentiments to [Hartford Chief of Police] Roberts, I give you his own words:

“There was a time they would have helped that man across the street. Now they mug and assault him,” he said. “That’s not a police problem. We no longer have a moral compass. Anything goes.”

Daryl Roberts has to be the only urban police chief in America who, when commenting on the savage beating of a 71-year-old civic leader, would say “That’s not a police problem.”

I grew up near Hartford and we moved back for 18 months before moving to San Francisco last month. The city has been circling the drain since the 60’s while the prosperous suburbs that surround it view it with contempt and refuse to do anything to help. It’s all about individual townships there. There are no county or regional governing agencies that can deal with problems on a wide basis. More than once I’d mention Hartford’s problems to someone in the suburbs and get “Hartford can rot for all I care” in return - a myopic, utterly selfish view to be sure, and one eventually certain to backfire on the suburbs.

But Hartford certainly needs no help screwing things up. McEnroe continues.

I remain disappointed in Roberts. As for Mayor Eddie Perez, he appears to have leaped from sociopathy into pure psychosis:

Sarah Barr, spokeswoman for Perez, said the mayor was unaware of Roberts’ comments, but added, “There are so many positive things that are happening in reference to moving forward and working together with the residents and fighting crime. I think it’s a sense of frustration on behalf of the chief.”

It’s those glass-half-full types who just wreck everything, isn’t it, Mr. Mayor? You know, the people who insist on focusing on the dead body lying on the sidewalk and completely ignoring the lovely peonies blooming in the nearby streetscape planter.

Some statistics. As of 2000, Hartford had the lowest per capita income and highest poverty rate of any town in Connecticut. One in six children has one or both parents in prison. They deserve better than they’re getting from their machine politics government and the do-nothing suburbs that surround them.

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The rich flee Tijuana for the US

“Tijuana’s elite flee to San Diego County to escape kidnappings and violence in Mexico,” says the LA Times.

People have arrived in south San Diego County with only the clothes on their back. Kidnapping victims released after lengthy captivities have shown up long-haired and disheveled, sometimes with fresh wounds.

Real estate agents tell of clients with fingers missing, sliced off by kidnappers who sent them to relatives as proof the victims were alive.

There will be many more refugees, both rich and poor. But the rich are taking take their businesses and wealth with them, causing serious economic impact upon those who remain.

How much longer until the violence itself spills across the border? And what will the political ramifications of that be?

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