Showing posts with label you tube. Show all posts
Showing posts with label you tube. Show all posts

Saturday, April 04, 2009

THE JOB SHOW: Jobless make TV ads pitching themselves for work

Unemployment rate highest since 1983 Play Video AP  – Unemployment rate highest since 1983

Producer/director Kristyn Silk tracks the monitors inside the control room on AP – Producer/director Kristyn Silk tracks the monitors inside the control room on the set of 'The Job Show' …

CHELMSFORD, Mass. – Jayna Dinsmore dressed in a sharp pink blouse and black slacks and made the pitch she hoped would end her five months of unemployment: Experienced marketing manager and analyst. Diverse background. Trade show experience.

Only she wasn't talking to an interviewer. She was talking to a TV camera.

After sending resumes, attending networking events and blogging about her search for employment, Dinsmore joined a small but growing number of unemployed people who have made television commercials about themselves to try to get directly into prospective employers' living rooms.

"I figure any exposure I can get is a great thing," said Dinsmore, a 33-year-old married mother with a newly minted master's degree in marketing from Bentley University.

"The New England Job Show," a new public cable access production, allows hungry job seekers to record 30-second commercials in a studio at a middle school in Chelmsford, near the New Hampshire state line. Volunteers — all also unemployed — then put the commercials into a half-hour episode that includes discussions on dressing professionally, personal finances and health care options.

About a dozen job seekers have taped commercials, and none has landed a job yet. But the first commercials just started airing last week.

The job show airs on at least five area public access stations. Comcast spokesman Jim Hughes said the cable company, which operates in many of the Massachusetts towns, didn't have viewership numbers.

Creator and executive producer Ken Masson said the show's uniqueness will catch eyes. "Everyone talks about being cutting edge. Well, this is cutting edge," said Masson, himself an unemployed community banker.

The commercials are different from personalized online videos that have exploded on YouTube because employers don't have to actually search for these.

But the commercials cast a wide net: There's no guarantee that hiring managers in the jobseekers' industries will see them. Those taping the spots said they were hoping to get lucky with the TV ad while also pursuing more targeted and traditional job search methods.

Other cable access stations have job programs: For two decades the state of Michigan has produced its own cable access job show featuring experts talking about employment trends, personal finance and career tips; and KSAR-15 TV, the public access station in Saratoga, Calif., airs a show on job hunting for California's Bay-area viewers.

But the personal pitches from job seekers appear to be a new twist, said Robert Thompson, a professor of television and popular culture at Syracuse University's S.I. Newhouse School of Public Communications.

"So many Americans are now comfortable with making a short video. It seems like a natural progression," Thompson said. "And TV, in spite of all the technology, is still the dominant medium."

Masson said he and friends from a networking group launched the show with $100 and the help of a local rotary club.

Kristyn Silk, who was laid off from Fidelity Investments in November, immediately volunteered to direct.

"Basically, this is a project and we all have some project management experience," said Silk, of Merrimack, N.H. "Our goal is to get people jobs."

The show's host, Ajita Perera of Shrewsbury, is a recently laid off market manager who worked as a reporter for CNN in Sri Lanka in the 1980s.

"It feels like coming home," Perera said.

So far, the group has recorded four episodes. The first show aired March 23 and will rerun on participating stations for two weeks. Stations will get two new shows every month, Masson said.

Thompson compared the 30-second commercials to speed-dating lunches. But like speed dating, it's unclear if lasting matches can be made.

That doesn't bother Libby Dilling, 42, of Stow, who has been looking for a nonprofit job for eight months. During a recent taping, Dilling recorded her pitch, but spoke too long and slightly fumbled over her words.

After some coaching, the group decided her third take was what she needed to land a job in the nonprofit world.

"I've never done something like this before," Dilling said. "We'll see what happens."

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Wednesday, September 10, 2008

Sunday, August 10, 2008

Mainstream media sinks hooks into story. Rielle Hunter says NO to DNA of baby. Edwards' deux will kiss a- - and careers good-bye!

Edwards's Ex-Lover Rejects Idea Of DNA Test
Hunter Requests Privacy For Herself, Her Child
By Lois Romano and Howard Kurtz
Washington Post Staff WritersSunday, August 10, 2008; A06

Rielle Hunter, the former presidential campaign aide who had an affair with John Edwards, said yesterday that she will not pursue DNA testing to establish the paternity of her 5-month-old daughter, despite the former senator's offer to participate in such a test.

In a statement provided to The Washington Post, Hunter said through her attorney that she will not be party to such a test "now or in the future."

The attorney, Robert Gordon, called Hunter a "private" person who is "not running for public office" and would not comment further.

"She wishes to maintain her privacy and her daughter's privacy," he said in the statement. "Furthermore, Rielle will not participate in DNA testing or any other invasion of her or her daughter's privacy now or in the future."

If Hunter sticks to that position, it will ease the pressure on Edwards, who on Friday dropped his earlier denials and admitted to having an affair with Hunter in 2006 but denied being the father of the child.

Edwards, a Democrat who represented North Carolina, maintained in a statement that the affair ended too soon for him to have fathered her baby, Frances Quinn Hunter, who was born Feb. 27. Hunter and a former Edwards fundraiser, Andrew Young, have maintained that Young is the father.

"I would welcome participating in a paternity test," Edwards told ABC's Bob Woodruff on Friday. "Be happy to participate in one. I know that it's not possible that this child could be mine because of the timing of events. . . . Happy to take a paternity test and would love to see it happen."

ABC News reported on its Web site yesterday that Hunter's younger sister Melissa said that Edwards should immediately follow through on his pledge to take a paternity test. "I would challenge him to do so," the sister said. The network did not use a last name for Melissa.

"Somebody must stand up and defend my sister," she said. "I wish that those involved would refrain from bad-mouthing my sister."

Hunter's sister said Rielle was being falsely portrayed as a "promiscuous person" and was not involved in "setting up" Edwards last month at a Beverly Hills hotel, where he was confronted by reporters from the National Enquirer.

"She is a good and honest person, the sweetest and most caring woman one could ever hope to meet," Melissa said. "Do you think it's easy for us to just sit back and let everyone rip her to shreds and not defend her honor?"

Meanwhile, the editor of the Enquirer, which broke the story of the affair and Hunter's pregnancy, took issue with Edwards's statement distancing himself from photos purporting to be him holding Hunter's baby. Edwards admitted to ABC that he met secretly with Hunter at the Beverly Hilton to try to "keep this from becoming public."

Last week, the Enquirer published a blurry photo of a man who looks like Edwards holding a baby. The tabloid said the photo was taken at the hotel.

"I don't know if that picture is me," Edwards said. "It could well be. It looks like me. I don't know who that baby is. I have no idea what the picture is."

When pressed by Woodruff, Edwards continued: "I mean, do you know how many pictures have been taken of me holding children in the last three years? I mean, it happens all the time."

David Perel, the Enquirer's editor in chief, insisted the photo is authentic.

"I think it's amazing, even as the man's coming clean, that he's continuing to lie," he said of Edwards. "Just as I've been saying for 10 months that he had an affair with Rielle Hunter, we know for a fact that is Rielle Hunter's baby and that is him holding the baby in the Beverly Hilton. He's not only hiding things from the public, he's hiding things from his wife."

Perel said the Enquirer has confirmed that Edwards has stayed in regular touch with Hunter and that he met her in the same hotel a month earlier. Referring to last month's late-night meeting, Perel said that "we couldn't have been there at 3 in the morning if we didn't have a good pipeline into the whole situation."

Fred Baron, a friend of Edwards and a campaign fundraiser, acknowledged yesterday that he had helped Hunter financially so that she could move to what ABC described as a $3 million home in Santa Barbara.

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Thursday, August 07, 2008

Mr. T. stopped there!


Mr. T. was on 'brother bill" O'Reilly's show. He is fabulous! Tried to run over a swishing --swooshing--power walker in cute yellow shorts in a TANK, pelleting the guy with snickers bars! (THE COMMERCIAL was pulled in Great Britian when deemed gay-offensive - please! Jews used to laugh when they made fun of their own levy's rye!)

Mr. T. defended himself as NOT HOMOphobic with a handwritten letter (in longhand on a yellow legal pad!) on the O'Reilly + FACTOR. Very cool. Now O'Reilly will take another P O L L. Good news!
This is interesting:

Mr T Snickers ad pulled for being offensive to gay people Media ...
Jul 28, 2008 ... Mars has pulled a Snickers UK TV ad featuring Mr T harassing a speed walker after US complaints (((( who, AAMERICABLOG?))))) that it was offensive to gay people. www.guardian.co.uk/media/2008/jul/28/advertising1 - 92k - Cached - Similar pages - Note this




"FOOL! Get some nuts! CHOMP!"
http://www.getsomenuts.tv/



(((Damn, I am gettin' hungry!--I don't eat processed crap, T. sorry! )))




BUT Mr. T. is relevent, has been since 1980 -- WATCH this!


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Tuesday, July 08, 2008

Part 2: Media, Social Media and MORE uncertainty --with a certain film clip

Why should one embrace "social-(ized )- media"?

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Hm7UiSObOlQ&feature=related
In a sound-bite, YOU HOO TUBE, face - book - link me in, minute news drenched-society, where we are all going A.D.D. or reading books-newspapers-periodicals from tape--> truncated to computer, nothing brings me more joy than the film clip of Cleavon Little riding his horse in the desert with Basie acc. (from Blazing Saddles, (1974)).

Let the film + clip + the sound + bite AD NAUSEUM live on -- all I need to do is point click and laugh my troubles far away



----------------------------


is our social media going to give advertisers their big payoff? Is this where the lemmings are going to swim ashore at?

Hmmmmmm....whatever happened to reading...a....book?

AP - Uncertainty aplenty as Web, media leaders convene
Monday July 7, 6:01 pm ET
By Jeremy Herron, AP Business Writer

Media, Internet moguls meet at Idaho luxury retreat, most seeking more online revenue

When media and technology tycoons convene Tuesday in idyllic southern Idaho for five days of dealmaking and outdoor recreation, the mountain air will carry more than a whiff of uncertainty as most arrive with their businesses in various states of disarray.

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Powerful moguls come to Allen & Co. investment bank's annual retreat in Sun Valley seeking new acquisitions and alliances and -- increasingly in recent years -- the opportunity to retool their businesses.

But this year both media and online leaders are grappling with the Internet's increasing fragmentation. And they're all looking for more advertising revenue online, where media companies have recouped only a small fraction of what they lost in print and where Web companies want to maximize their investments.

Even the top Internet companies -- save maybe Google Inc. -- are seeing revenue growth slowing as online audiences fragment. And they worry that, without steady access to high-quality content, they won't be able to attract enough viewers to keep growing fast.

At the same time, the barons of old-line newspapers and broadcast TV seem to have realized it's pointless to keep fighting the shift online, but they're still unsure how to embrace it. And they're struggling to attract new online users just to survive.

The flagging economy, slowing consumer spending and costlier capital on Wall Street will only add to any gloom and may prevent the summit, hosted for 25 years by investment banker Herb Allen, from living up to its reputation as an incubator for big deals.

"This could be the least headline-making Allen & Co. event in the past 10 years," said Porter Bibb, managing partner at Mediatech Capital Partners, a financier of media businesses. "Most companies have real problems and they don't necessarily know where to turn for help."

Microsoft co-founder Bill Gates, a perennial at the Allen conference, won't be joined by CEO Steve Ballmer. But he is bringing the company's top dealmaker, Henry Vigil, Microsoft's senior vice president for strategy and partnership.

The world's largest software maker, still desperate to catch up in Internet search and grab more of the ad revenue it generates, is reportedly trying to enlist Time Warner Inc. and News Corp.
for a joint bid to split up Yahoo Inc. for parts. For years, Yahoo has lost ground to Google in the race for Internet ad sales. And its embattled CEO and co-founder, Jerry Yang, who faces attacks on several fronts after Microsoft Corp. withdrew a $47.5 billion takeover bid, will be on hand.

Will Gates and Vigil seek out Time Warner CEO Jeff Bewkes or News Corp. Chairman Rupert Murdoch? Will Yang seek cover again with Google founders Larry Page and Sergey Brin, who inked a deal in June with Yahoo on shared ad sales? Investor Carl Icahn, among those most actively pushing Yang to sell or make another deal with Microsoft, will not be in Sun Valley, according to a copy of the guest list obtained by The Associated Press.

These delicate dances among the Internet titans -- unlikely before power began diffusing in the Internet and media worlds -- underscore how tenuous a hold on power the top firms have. Even Google appears at a crossroads in the content vs. distribution dilemma as it dabbles in setting up its own newsgathering capabilities.

Time Warner's Bewkes appears to have decided the future is in producing content that can attract large audiences, not in controlling the means of distributing it: He is divesting Time Warner of both its cable property and the faltering AOL online access service. But what to do next isn't clear.

"These companies' identities and the way forward may not be as clear as in years past," said Peter Kreisky, of Kreisky Media Consulting, who predicted this year's conference will be "much more amorphous."

Indeed, what will these guys -- and, aside from Yahoo President Susan Decker, the media and Internet worlds are still decidedly run by men -- be talking about?

"How do you build or buy an industry leader in the digital world?" Kreisky suggested. "The business model to generate money online is still emerging."

What to do about user-generated content -- which attracts a large audience but raises editorial control issues and has yet to generate significant revenue -- and how to capitalize on intensely popular social networks will still be important debates this week.

At Sun Valley two years ago, it is widely believed that YouTube founder Chad Hurley laid the groundwork for his company's sale to Google three months later. Media companies saw YouTube as having solved the problem of attracting users and figured they could soon hitch their own content to its wagon.

Last year, Facebook founder Mark Zuckerberg enjoyed most-favored status at Sun Valley because participants saw his social-networking site's 70 million registered users as a ready-made advertising audience. He'll likely be in demand again, and Murdoch -- hailed for snapping up MySpace in 2005 -- will not be lonely either.

But no one so far has turned social networking into a rainmaker, though that may not take attention away from LinkedIn Chairman Reid Hoffman. His networking site's audience of professionals is seen as an optimal vehicle for attracting deep-pocketed advertisers, and it's fresh off an equity investment that valued it at $1 billion.

Deals may be rare as the biggest players retrench. Viacom Inc. Chairman Sumner Redstone -- an old-school mogul of legendary power and a Sun Valley regular -- is reportedly even skipping this year's conference. Investors have soured on Viacom's split from CBS Corp. two years ago, which Redstone thought would position them both to tackle the Internet more successfully. Viacom CEO Philippe Dauman and CBS boss Leslie Moonves will represent the feuding siblings in Idaho.

Even Murdoch has been relatively quiet in the months since News Corp. closed its deal for Dow Jones & Co., parent of The Wall Street Journal.

And newspaper companies finished last quarter with a flourish of staff cuts amid cost increases and falling ad revenue. Two weeks ago, half a dozen newspapers said they would slash payrolls by a combined 900 jobs and Tribune Co., one of the biggest newspaper publishers in the country, said it might sell its iconic headquarters tower in Chicago to raise money. Last week, three more papers announced more than 400 more job cuts, including 250 at Tribune's Los Angeles Times.

Tribune boss Sam Zell is not coming to Sun Valley. But Washington Post Co. head Donald Graham, E.W. Scripps Co. CEO Kenneth Lowe and Thomson Reuters CEO Thomas Glocer are all scheduled to be there.

"The heads of the traditional media companies are likely to be despondent," said John Morton, a newspaper industry analyst at Morton Research Inc. "They are realizing that newspapers focused on bigger markets may be losing advertising forever, and they have no answers for that."

Fret not for the kingpins, though, as they will have plenty of opportunity to find solace in the surrounding beauty. The closed-door meetings -- schedules and even event names are closely guarded -- typically break up in late morning.

That leaves the afternoons free for outdoor pursuits from horseback riding to mountain biking to golf. And conference participants typically spend their evenings at invitation-only dinner parties, where they'll be able to debate the NBA draft with basketball commissioner David Stern, or the Chicago Cubs' unexpected dominance with Major League Baseball Commissioner Bud Selig.

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Sunday, September 16, 2007

NYT is dead-wrong! Fred Thompson can campaign any way he damn well pleases -- let the other Romneys stomp Iowa six times a day




NYT- SPARSE SCHEDULE FOR THOMPSON ON TOUR: http://www.nytimes.com/2007/09/16/us/politics/16thompson.html?ei=5065&en=06396b6588b0d702&ex=1190520000&partner=MYWAY&pagewanted=print


Okeydoke. Bus trip. That was the way that it was done. The tour bus off to Iowa, New Hampshire, Virginia, Tennessee, Iowa, Texas, California, put the West Wing Vol 6 in the DVD player, sit back and enjoy the ride. Don't forget New Jersey! Not this year. Not if you read DRUDGE, NYT, Reuters, Yahoo!, Salon, YOU TUBES RANTS, Newt Gingrich's doom + gloom forecast (80% democrat, Mr. Speaker?), the cal thomas' cavalcade, and the best part, " rudy vs hilary and the battle of ny"right in Battery Park!....no, sir. No need today.

The way that it is done in 2008 is simple, new-fangled MEDIA, PROMOTION and CHUTZPAH. YOU TUBE and the swinging 24 hour media are only part of it because the news NEVER shuts down!

Remedy is immediate: Just get out the message and pass it along. No tour bus needed.

Yes, like the message, clean up the war, pro-life, federalist values. Yes, now even Greenspan says http://canadianpress.google.com/article/ALeqM5i684kQul6CZHqjTLwK5ECHUpnUMQ that Bush got us into war but to save our oil. Why couldn't he just come out and say that TO THE AMERICAN PEOPLE to stop Saddam in the first place? What's done is done. Now someone has to be depended upon to clean up the mess, and damnit, have the US come clean.
But I ask you, does it really matter where you hear this, and learn how it will unfold?

(after all, you are reading this, aren't you? Do you really care where I am? And who am I talking about?

F R E D i D. IT H O M P S O N, now broadcasting from MCLEAN, VIRGINIA.

you got it!)
---abbebuck, apr

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