Saturday, April 2, 2011

Settling the debate over Arianna Huffington. Just click it.

A hot issue for freelance writers who wish to market their talent. Arianna Huffington, who founded Huffington Post and now directs AOL's editorial programs, defends her no-pay policy at HuffPo as providing a platform for exposure for writers, and she certainly is proof that exposure establishes a valuable brand. The Newspaper Guild has called for a boycott by its 26,000 members. My solution: Ariana owns the ad revenue for eyeballs and writers get $1 for each clicked "like" button. Okay, 50 cents. Deal?

Wednesday, March 23, 2011

Hearst, Please Save the Seattle P-I Globe

I worked at the Seattle P-I, first as a reviewer who dashed from the theater and raced to the P-I building, then on Wall Street, as the first edition presses were rumbling. Anyone entering the building passed under the spinning P-I Globe, an Earth ball topped by a giant eagle aglow with neon and the spinning words, "It's in the P-I." Entering that place on deadline, I felt like Jimmy Olson about to see a guy in a cape fly skyward. The globe wasn't fine art but it was a visual treat, especially then when it faced the giant pink creature of the Elephant Car Wash.

When the P-I gave up its Sunday edition, then its building, and move to rented waterfront offices as part of a doomed marriage with the Seattle Times, the globe move too, placed atop the rental offices.

Today, the Times reports Hearst's lease at its offices is about to expire and the fate of the globe is uncertain. Three former city council members are moving to grant landmark status to the fixture so it remains on public view. I prefer the present location, though it could go to South Lake Union and the Museum of History and Industry, run by the capable Leonard Garfield.

In the pantheon of Seattle icons, the globe is not the Space Needle. It occupies a second rank. But it is a magnificent work of neon and always fun to see. It deserves an elevated location where it can be seen from afar, which is why the waterfront is my preferred spot, perfect at night as your ride a ferry into downtown Seattle.

You don't need to know its history or even read a newspaper to appreciate a fixture that gives a jolt of fun to a city's landscape.

Sunday, March 20, 2011

AT&T swallows T-Mobile. Again, getting big trumps all else in telecom


Eye-popping deal announced today in the telecom industry: AT&T says it's buying T-Mobile for $39 billion, as reported in Brier Dudley's Seattle Times blog.

Dudley correctly remarks this is a union of two companies who trace their roots to Seattle's own Craig McCaw, whose must-read (please!) biography, sadly, did not lead to a lucrative movie deal. (Memo to Harvey Wienstein: call me.)

So much of our media and public attention is captured by the dramatic stories in communications: the comeback of Steve Jobs and Apple, the stunning zero-to-goliath growth of Facebook, the emergence of Twitter and, lately, Groupon -- that we miss a continuing force in what deeply affects pricing, innovation and choice for consumers. For many of the players, the choice is to get bigger and swamp rivals who may have a better idea.

Underlying the AT&T-T-Mobile marriage of goliaths will be a host of details FCC approval, getting different technologies to work for customers, the nasty business of announcing that layoffs will be minimal before they become maximal. Now that Comcast has swallowed NBC Universal, we can reflect on the difficulties of getting real choice in the marketplace and the need for big players like Apple and others to serve shareholders by inducing customers to buy multiple products by limiting features in their individual product lines(iPhone tethering, iPad usb port to hard drive etc) so we have to buy more than we otherwise should. We can also ask successive presidents why our telecom choices are so limited and you can easily get much faster wireless systems in Asia and Europe when, never forget, the airwaves belong to the public and providers operate by license to use our air waves.

The final point is the sad apparent failure of Clearwire, yet another Craig McCaw brainchild, to succeed as a high speed wireless alternative for data and voice. Other remain who are pushing for wireless alternatives. Google has its plan for a giant test in some lucky city. But much as I admire Google's products and innovative culture, it's now another Goliath. My own preference would be for the FCC to put its thumb on the scale a bit so choice is favored and the U.S., inventor of cellular, moves to the edge of innovation. Yes, I want too much: lower prices and better service.

Thursday, February 10, 2011

Casey Corr: Egypt's Mubarak proves that dictators tend to want things their way

Pharaoh falls. Now what? Glad Rumsfeld not around to tell us democracy is messy.

UPDATE: If Mubarak had told people he in fact was leaving, he changed the script. Now what? Rumsfeld could say even dictatorships are messy.

Let's all raise a shoe for democracy and hope in Egypt.

Wednesday, February 9, 2011

Casey Corr: Arianna Huffington: genius or artful shapeshifter? The debate goes on

There's a palpable sense of envy around coverage of Ariana Huffington staggering payoff in AOL's purchase of Huffington Post. You detect it here in this Slate piece. 

So she doesn't pay her writers and now is rich. So she's been accused of writing best sellers lifted from other people's work. So she was a conservative before she became a liberal. So Huffpo was a literate platform for big thinking celebrities before it became a search-optimized Google gooser that boosted search hits that drew advertising cash? Let me try: Sarah Palin, Sarah Palin, Sarah Palin. Twitter, you can have this blog for $100 million.

She figured it out.

And to think AOL once was so powerful that it bought the world's greatest communications empire, Time Warner. Now the super blogger assumes command of AOL's future.

Thursday, December 30, 2010

Casey Corr: Jake Locker and the New York Times crush on all things Northwest

The New York Times, which has long had a high school crush on all things Seattle and the Pacific Northwest, goes for the goal posts with this piece on Jake Locker. You can almost hear the slap of an appreciative salmon on the waters of Lake Washington as it takes in the sight of a game at Husky Stadium. Thanks for the memories, Jake. Maybe the Seahawks will draft you. http://www.nytimes.com/2010/12/30/us/30locker.ht

Monday, August 16, 2010

Casey Corr: Facebook and privacy -- a view from the windshield of my car

I agree with those who say Facebook is threat to privacy. It's clearly a very private matter and certainly an issue of discussion if you need to have two toilets in a public place, and yet I posted this to my Facebook account. Content is king.