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* stephen hawking's univers
* tiger woods * jim fur
Barack Obama, China, Hu Jintao,
Melinda Hackett, manhattan
Moshe Katsav, bbc news
new zealand miners, louise heal
Vikram Pandit, bbc news, ft
Wilma Mankiller,
9/11, september 11, emily strato
Abdel Kareem Nabil Soliman, bbc
afghanistan, bbc news, the econo
Ahmed Khalfan Ghailani, bbc news
Ai Weiwei, bbc news
aids virus, aids, * hiv
Airbus A330, suzanne gould, bbc
airline security, bbc news
airport security, bbc news, biod
al-qaeda, natalie duval, yemen,
al-qaeda, new york city, suzanne
algeria, bbc news
amanda knox, bbc news, italy mur
american airlines, natalie de va
ancient rome, bbc news
arab spring, bbc news
arizona immigration law, bbc new
arms control, bbc news
arms flow to terrorists, bbc new
Arnold Schwarzenegger, bbc news
aung song suu kyi, myanmar, bbc
australia floods, bbc news
australia, cookbooks
australian shipwreck, bbc news
baltimore shooting, bbc news
ban aid, bob geldof, bbc world s
bangladesh clashes, bbc news
bat global markets, bbc news
bbc 2, biodun iginla
bbc news
bbc news, biodun iginla, david c
bbc news, biodun iginla, south k
bbc news, biodun iginla, the eco
bbc news, google
bbc strike, biodun iginla
bbc world service, biodun iginla
bcva, bbc news
belarus, bbc news, maria ogryzlo
Ben Bernanke, federal reserve
Benazir Bhutto, sunita kureishi,
benin, tokun lawal, bbc
Benjamin Netanyahu, bbc news
berlusconi, bbc news, italy
bill clinton ,emanuel, bbc news
bill clinton, Earth day, biodun
black friday, bbc news
black-listed nations, bbc news
blackwater, Gary Jackson, suzann
blogging in china, bbc news
bradley manning, bbc news
brazil floods, bbc news
brazil, biodun iginla, bbc news,
british elections, bbc news, bio
broadband, bbc news, the economi
Bruce Beresford-Redman. Monica
BSkyB bid, bbc news
budget deficit, bbc news,
bulgaria, natalie de vallieres,
business travel, bbc news
camilla parker-bowles, bbc news
canada, bbc news, biodun iginla
carleton college, bbc news, biod
casey anthony, bbc news
catholic church sex scandal, suz
cdc, e coli, suzanne gould, bbc
charlie rangel, bbc news
chicago mayorial race, bbc news,
chile miners, bbc news
chile prison fire, bbc news
chile, enrique krause, bbc news,
china, judith stein, bbc news, u
china, xian wan, bbc news, biodu
chinese dipolomat, houston polic
chinese media, bbc news
chirac, france, bbc news
cholera in haiti, biodun iginla
christina green, bbc news
Christine Lagarde, bbc news
Christine O'Donnell, tea party
chronical of higher education, b
citibank, bbc news
climate change, un, bbc news, bi
coal mines, west virginia, bbc n
common dreams
common dreams, bbc news, biodun
commonwealth games, bbc news
condi rice, obama
condoms, suzanne gould
congo, bbc news
congress, taxes, bbc news
contagion, islam, bbc news
continental airlines, bbc news
Continental Express flight, suza
corrupt nations, bbc news
Countrywide Financial Corporatio
cross-dressing, bbc news, emily
ctheory, bbc news, annalee newit
cuba, enrique krause, bbc news,
Cuba, Raúl Castro, Michael Voss
dealbook, bbc news, nytimes
digital life, bbc news
dorit cypis, bbc news, community
dow jones, judith stein, bbc new
egypt, nasra ismail, bbc news, M
elizabeth edwards, bbc news
elizabeth smart, bbc news
embassy bombs in rome, bbc news
emily's list, bbc news
entertainment, movies, biodun ig
equador, biodun iginla, bbc news
eu summit, bbc news, russia
eu, arab democracy, bbc news
europe travel delays, bbc news
europe travel, biodun iginla, bb
europe travel, france24, bbc new
eurozone crisis, bbc news
eurozone, ireland, bbc news
fair, media, bbc news
fake deaths, bbc news
FASHION - PARIS - PHOTOGRAPHY
fbi, bbc news
fcc, neutral internel, liz rose,
Federal Reserve, interest rates,
federal workers pay freeze, bbc
fedex, racism, bbc news
feedblitz, bbc news, biodun igin
ferraro, bbc news
fifa, soccer, bbc news
financial times, bbc news
firedoglake, jane hamsher, biodu
flashing, sex crimes, bbc news
fox, cable, new york, bbc
france, labor, biodun iginla
france24, bbc news, biodun iginl
french hostages, bbc news
french muslims, natalie de valli
FT briefing, bbc news, biodun ig
g20, obama, bbc news
gabrielle giffords, bbc news
gambia, iran, bbcnews
gay-lesbian issues, emily strato
george bush, blair, bbc news
germans held in Nigeria, tokun l
germany, natalie de vallieres, b
global economy, bbc news
goldman sachs, judith stein, bbc
google news, bbc news, biodun ig
google, gianni maestro, bbc news
google, groupon, bbc news
gop, bbc news
Gov. Jan Brewer, bbc news, immig
greece bailout, bbc news, biodun
guantanamo, bbc news
gulf oil spill, suzanne gould, b
Hackers, MasterCard, Security, W
haiti aid, enrique krause, bbc n
haiti, michelle obama, bbc news
heart disease, bbc news
Heather Locklear, suzanne gould,
Henry Kissinger, emily straton,
Henry Okah, nigeria, tokun lawal
hillary clinton, bbc news
hillary clinton, cuba, enrique k
hugo chavez, bbc news
hungary, maria ogryzlo
hurricane katrina, bbc news
Ibrahim Babangida, nigeria, toku
india, susan kumar
indonesia, bbc news, obama admin
inside edition, bbc news, biodun
insider weekly, bbc news
insider-trading, bbc news
International Space Station , na
iran, latin america, bbc news
iran, lebanon, Ahmadinejad ,
iran, nuclear weapons, bbc news
iran, wikileaks, bbc news
iraq, al-qaeda, sunita kureishi,
iraq, nasras ismail, bbc news, b
ireland, bbc news, eu
islam, bbc news, biodun iginla
israeli-palestinian conflict, na
italy, eurozone crisis
ivory coast, bbc news
James MacArthur, hawaii five-O
Jamie Paulin-Ramirez, biodun igi
jane hansher, biodun iginla
japan, bbc news, the economist
jerry brown, bbc news
Jerry Brown, suzanne gould, bbc
jill clayburgh, bbc news
Jody Weis, chicago police, bbc n
John Paul Stevens, scotus,
juan williams, npr, biodun iginl
judith stein, bbc news
Justice John Paul Stevens, patri
K.P. Bath, bbc news, suzanne gou
keith olbermann, msnbc, bbc news
kelly clarkson, indonesia, smoki
kenya, bbc news, police
Khodorkovsky, bbc news
Kyrgyz, maria ogryzlo, bbc news,
le monde, bbc nerws
le monde, bbc news, biodun iginl
lebanon, nasra ismail, biodun ig
Lech Kaczynski
libya, gaddafi, bbc news,
london ftse, bbc news
los alamos fire, bbc news
los angeles, bbc news, suzanne g
los angeles, suzanne gould, bbc
LulzSec, tech news, bbc news
madoff, bbc news, suicide
marijuana, weed, bbc news, suzan
Martin Dempsey, bbc news
maryland, bbc news
media, FAIR, bbc news
media, free press, fcc, net neut
media, media matters for america
media, mediabistro, bbc news
melissa gruz, bbc news, obama ad
mexican drug cartels, enrique kr
mexican gas explosion, bbc news
mexican's execution, bbc news
Michael Skakel, emily straton, b
Michelle Obama, bbc news
michigan militia, suzanne gould,
middle-class jobs, bbc news
midwest snowstorm, bbc news
Mikhail Khodorkovsky, bbc news
minnesota public radio
moveon, bbc news, biodun iginla
msnbc, david shuster, bbc news
mumbai attacks, bbc news
myanmar, burma, bbc news
nancy pelosi, us congress, bbc n
nasra ismail, israeli-palestinia
Natalia Lavrova, olympic games,
Nathaniel Fons, child abandonmen
nato, afghanistan, bbc news
nato, pakistan, sunita kureishi,
nelson mandela, bbc news
nestor kirchner, bbc news
net neutrality, bbc news
new life-forms, bbc news
new year, 2011, bbc news
new york city, homelessness, chi
new york snowstorm, bbc news
new zealand miners, bbc news
News Corporation, bbc news
news of the world, bbc news
nick clegg, uk politics, tories
nicolas sarkozy, islam, natalie
nigeria, Goodluck Jonathan, toku
nobel peace prize
nobel peace prize, bbc news, bio
noreiga, panama, biodun iginla,
north korea, bbc news, nuclear p
npr, bbc news, gop
npr, media, bbc news
ntenyahu, obama, bbc news
nuclear proliferation, melissa g
Nuri al-Maliki, iraq, biodun igi
nytimes dealbook, bbc news
obama, bill clinton, bbc news
obama, biodun iginla, bbc news
oil spills, bbc news, the econom
olbermann, msnbc, bbc news
Omar Khadr, bbc news
Online Media, bbc news, the econ
pakistan, sunita kureishi, bbc n
paris airport, bbc news
Pedro Espada, suzanne gould, bbc
phone-hack scandal, bbc news
poland, maria ogryzlo, lech Kac
police brutality, john mckenna,
police fatalities, bbc news
Pope Benedict XVI, natalie de va
pope benedict, natalie de vallie
popular culture, us politics
portugal, bbc news
Potash Corporation, bbc news
prince charles, bbc news
prince william, katemiddleton, b
pulitzer prizes, bbc news, biodu
qantas, airline security, bbc ne
racism, religious profiling, isl
randy quaid, asylum, canada
Ratko Mladic, bbc news
Rebekah Brooks, bbc news, the ec
republicans, bbc news
richard holbrooke, bbc news
Rick Santorum , biodun iginla, b
robert gates, lapd, suzanne goul
rod Blagojevich, suzanne gould,
roger clemens, bbc news
russia, imf, bbc news, the econo
russia, maria ogrylo, Lech Kaczy
san francisco crime lab, Deborah
sandra bullock, jess james, holl
SARAH EL DEEB, bbc news, biodun
sarah palin, biodun iginla, bbc
sarkosy, bbc news
saudi arabia, indonesian maid, b
saudi arabia, nasra ismail, bbc
Schwarzenegger, bbc news, biodun
science and technology, bbc news
scott brown, tufts university, e
scotus, gays in the military
scotus, iraq war, bbc news, biod
sec, judith stein, us banks, bbc
Senate Democrats, bbc news, biod
senegal, chad, bbc news
seward deli, biodun iginla
shanghai fire, bbc news
Sidney Thomas, melissa gruz, bbc
silvio berlusconi, bbc news
single currency, bbc news, the e
snowstorm, bbc news
social security, bbc news, biodu
somali pirates, bbc news
somalia, al-shabab, biodun iginl
south korea, north korea, bbc ne
south sudan, bbc news
spain air strikes, bbc news
spain, standard and poor, bbc ne
state of the union, bbc news
steve jobs, bbc news
steven ratner, andrew cuomo, bbc
Strauss-Kahn, bbc news, biodun i
sudan, nasra ismail, bbc news, b
suicide websites, bbc news
supreme court, obama, melissa gr
sweden bomb attack, bbc news
syria, bbc news
taliban, bbc news, biodun iginla
Taoufik Ben Brik, bbc news, biod
tariq aziz, natalie de vallieres
tariq azziz, jalal talbani, bbc
tea party, us politics
tech news, bbc, biodun iginla
technology, internet, economics
thailand, xian wan, bbc news, bi
the economist, biodun iginla, bb
the economsit, bbc news, biodun
the insider, bbc news
tiger woods. augusta
timothy dolan, bbc news
Timothy Geithner, greece, eu, bi
tornadoes, mississippi, suzanne
travel, bbc news
tsa (travel security administrat
tsumami in Indonesia, bbc news,
tunisia, bbc news, biodun iginla
turkey, israel, gaza strip. biod
Turkey, the eu, natalie de valli
twincities daily planet, bbc new
twincities.com, twin cities dail
twitter, media, death threats, b
Tyler Clementi, hate crimes, bio
uk elections, gordon brown, raci
uk phone-hack, Milly Dowler
uk tuition increase, bbc news
un wire, un, bbc news, biodun ig
un, united nations, biodun iginl
unwed mothers, blacks, bbc news
upi, bbc news, iginla
us billionaires, bbc news
us economic downturn, melissa gr
us economy, us senate, us congre
us empire, bbc news, biodun igin
us housing market, bbc news
us jobs, labor, bbc news
us media, bbc news, biodun iginl
us media, media matters for amer
us midterm elections, bbc news
us midterm elections, melissa gr
us military, gay/lesbian issues
us politics, bbc news, the econo
us recession, judith stein, bbc
us stimulus, bbc news
us taxes, bbc news, the economis
us, third-world, bbc news
vatican, natalie de vallieres
venezuela, bbc news
verizon, biodun iginla, bbc news
volcanic ash, iceland, natalie d
volcanis ash, bbc news, biodun i
wal-mat, sexism, bbc news
wall street reform, obama, chris
wall street regulations, banking
warren buffett, us economic down
weather in minneapolis, bbc news
white supremacist, Richard Barre
wikileaks, bbc news, biodun igin
wvirginia coal mine, biodun igin
wvirginia mines, biodun iginal,
xian wan, china , nobel prize
xian wan, japan
yahoo News, biodun iginla, bbc n
yahoo, online media, new media,
yemen, al-qaeda, nasra ismail, b
zimbabwe, mugabe, biodun iginla


Biodun@bbcnews.com
Thursday, 11 November 2010
MediaBistro News Feed by Biodun Iginla, BBC News and MediaBistro
Topic: media, mediabistro, bbc news

Morning Media Newsfeed

Thursday, November 11, 2010

What does it take to get a job in advertising? A stellar portfolio. Join our free portfolio review webcast at 2 pm ET today to find out what will get you in the door.

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How To Pitch: Upscale AvantGuild
This women's mag about 'living the affluent lifestyle' seeks freelancers to pen inspiring stories that go beyond standard female fare.

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Learn how to produce fantastic parties and promotions from the director of event marketing at Teen Vogue. learn more


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lou_dobbs_11.11.jpgLou Dobbs Joins Fox Business Network(TVNewser) 
One year after a surprising, midweek departure from CNN, Lou Dobbs has landed a new on-air role, at Fox Business Network. Beginning early next year, Dobbs will host his own daily program at a time that has not yet been determined. Said Dobbs in a statement, "I'm excited and feel privileged to join the great team that Rupert Murdoch, Roger Ailes, and Neil Cavuto have created, and I can't wait to make whatever contribution I can to Fox Business." LA Times:Dobbs is the latest high-profile hire for FBN, which launched a little over three years ago and is in 57 million homes. Although that is far fewer homes than its chief rival, CNBC, Fox Business last week managed to beat CNBC on election night, both in viewers and the key adults 25-54 demographic.

The New York Observer's New Disclosure Problems (Village Voice / Runnin' Scared) 
The Observer's new media writer, Nick Summers, has his first big feature on how Slate has lost its way at the hands of Jacob Weisberg, supported by internal numbers. The piece merited at least two unsupplied disclosures: Summers' last byline for Newsweek was less than one month ago; it was only in August that it was purchased from The Washington Post Co. Summers worked for The Washington Post Co. -- owners of Slate -- for five years before joining the Observer. Summers also founded IvyGate with Chris Beam, a politics writer for Slate.

DealBook Relaunch Triggered NY Times Blog Shutdown (Yahoo / The Upshot) 
On Tuesday night, all 58 of The New York Times' blogs went dark. "We're working hard to get our blogs back up and running," it Tweeted. Then, around 7 a.m. Wednesday, another Tweet: "To our followers: We are still wrestling with the technology that powers NYT blogs. Sorry for the hassle, but we're working on it." Long story short: DealBook, the Times' business and finance blog that relaunched Tuesday morning with a significantly overhauled design, crashed the servers.

 

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Google Reportedly Fires Raise Leaker (AllThingsD) 
Some corporate memos are confidential. And some memos are "confidential" -- meaning there's no real expectation that they'll stay within the family. You'd assume that Eric Schmidt's memo to "Googlers" announcing big raises falls in the latter category. But Google thinks otherwise. The company has fired an engineer who passed the information along to Business Insider.

 

Tribune Judge OKs More Than $40M In Bonuses (CBB) 
The judge in Tribune Co.'s bankruptcy case approved more than $40 million in 2010 incentive bonuses for 635 operating managers and executives Wednesday. But based on the company's projected performance through the end of the year, the payout will likely be closer to $30 million. Reacting to objections to the plan, the company also agreed to withhold payments for five top executives identified as potential defendants in legal claims related to Tribune's 2007 leveraged buyout.

Math Error Skews Nation Ad Numbers In Monday's New York Times Profile (The Nation) 
The Nation was profiled in Monday's New York Times. The article stated that, as of Nov. 8, the magazine's ad pages were down 30 percent compared with last year's. But the numbers provided to the Times by Media Industry Newsletter were wrong, the result of a botched spreadsheet that added extra pages sold to the 2009 numbers and made it look like ad sales this year were dramatically worse than they are.

 

mediabistro.com featured jobs

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New York Times Will Rank eBook Best-Sellers (NYT) 
The New York Times announced yesterday that it would publish eBook best-seller lists in fiction and nonfiction beginning early next year. The lists will be compiled from weekly data from publishers, chain bookstores, independent booksellers, and online retailers, among other sources. Janet Elder, the editor of news surveys and election analysis for The Times, said the newspaper had spent two years creating a system that tracks and verifies eBook sales.

Telegraph To Recruit Multimedia Staff Following Site Redesign (Journalism.uk) 
The Telegraph is looking to recruit more multimedia staff following the redesign of its Web site, digital editor Edward Roussel said today. The new site, launched today and rebranded as simply "The Telegraph," offers a wider range of multimedia and is more closely aligned with its newspaper brand. Roussel said The Telegraph is reviewing several areas, including the need for "tactical hiring" within multimedia.

Fox.com Now Blocking Google TV Devices (GTVHub.com) 
Another one bites the dust. A couple of weeks ago, Fox.com was atop the list of Web sites that could still be accessed on Google TV to stream full episodes of content. Well, you can go ahead and cross Fox off that list, as it is now blocking Google TV devices. The list of networks allowing Google TV devices to access their online content appears to be dwindling.

 

student news

 

Mediabistro graduate Colleen Mescall found a new career and a passion for blogging after she took our intro to magazine writing class. Congratulations, Colleen! read her story

 


Time Inc.'s Powers Moves To Yahoo! (minOnline) 
Yahoo! may be shedding veteran executives left and right, but the troubled portal is not past poaching legacy media talent. Wayne Powers, president of Time Inc. Media Group, has jumped into the big purple machine as senior vice president of advertising sales for North America. He will be reporting directly to Yahoo!'s recently hired executive VP for North America, Ross Levinsohn. Powers was tapped for his experience in working with premium brands on custom and creative campaigns.

 

NY Times Editor On The 'Beauty' Of Readers' Ignorance (Forbes) 
The New York Times cultivates an image as the preferred read of the intellectual elite, but at least one of the paper's higher-ups seems to think its customers aren't all that bright. During a panel discussion at the Digital Hollywood New York conference, Gerald Marzorati explained why the paper's print business is still robust: "We have north of 800,000 subscribers paying north of $700 a year for home delivery," Marzorati said. "Of course, they don't seem to know that."

Joel Klein On His Record As Schools Chancellor, Rupert Murdoch, And Cathleen Black (NY Mag / Daily Intel) 
Says outgoing New York City schools chancellor Joel Klein of his successor, Hearst chairwoman Cathie Black: "[T]he issues that will face her -- issues with the budget, teacher evaluation, dealing with how you move those agendas at the same time as dealing with budget cuts from the city and federal government -- I think she has the skills to deal with. Those skills are not uniquely found in an education system."

 

mediabistro.com event

 

Semantic Web Summit - Nov. 16-17 in BostonSEMANTIC WEB SUMMIT
November 16-17, 2010 | Boston, MA
Brought to you by SemanticWeb.com

Explore how companies are using semantic web technologies today, and should be using them tomorrow, for significant bottom line impact in marketing, publishing, corporate information management, customer service, and personal productivity. Speakers include Stephen Wolfram (Wolfram Research), Mike Dunn (Hearst Interactive Media), Dennis Wisnosky (Department of Defense), Rachel Lovinger (Razorfish), Jay Myers (Best Buy), and more. Register today!

 


Blogging Makes Joan Didion Uncomfortable (Guest Of A Guest) 
At the 21 Club's luncheon for The King's Speech, writer Joan Didion had a few words about blogging. "Well, I don't really understand blogging," she said. "It seems like writing, except quicker. I mean, I'm not actually looking for that instant feedback." She views the lack of literary preponderance in blogging as the result of a tendency toward an instant-gratification teleology. "It makes me uncomfortable," she said. "It's an entirely different impulse, I guess. It's like talking."

 

Exclusive: A New Class For College Media (TMM) 
While college students spend plenty of money, there isn't much college-specific media out there. David Rich aims to change that. His company, Off the Quad, just launched nine college-oriented email newsletters. Now all he has to do is convince advertisers to buy in.

Keith Olbermann Responds To Pat Sajak Criticism (TVNewser) 
TV personality Pat Sajak has taken credit -- or was rather apologizing for -- introducing Keith Olbermann to America via his short-lived late-night talk show. Last night, Olbermann responded to and corrected Sajak's account: "I think if he needs to apologize for anything, it needs to be that talk show. When he was canceled, he was replaced by a crime-and-skin series called Silk Stalkings, for God's sake. Obviously we guests must've really stunk."

student news

 

Mediabistro graduate Kara Richardson Whitely published her book, Fat Woman on the Mountain: How I Lost Half Myself and Gained Happiness, after taking personal essay and nonfiction book proposal courses. Congratulations, Kara! read her story

 


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Posted by biginla at 3:08 PM GMT
Pessimism pervades as G20 leaders show sharp split
Topic: g20, obama, bbc news


BY XIAN WAN, SOUTHEST ASIA BUREAU FOR THE BBC's BIODUN IGINLA


1 hour, 19 minutes ago

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Barack Obama  David Cameron Dmitry Medvedev Stephen HarperU.S. President Barack Obama, second left, smiles with other leaders, Britain's Prime Minister David Cameron, third left, Russia's President Dmitry Medvedev, second right, and Canada's Prime Minister Stephen Harper, right, at the G-20 working dinner at the National Museum of Korea in Seoul South Korea, Thursday, Nov. 11, 2010. (AP Photo/Yonhap News Agency)View more photos

 

SEOUL, South Korea — A strong sense of pessimism shrouded the start of an economic summit of rich and emerging economies Thursday, with President Barack Obama and fellow world leaders arriving in Seoul sharply divided over currency and trade policies.

The Group of 20 summit, held for the first time in Asia, has become the centerpiece of international efforts to revive the global economy and prevent future financial meltdowns.

Hopes had been high that the Group of 20 -- encompassing rich nations such as Germany and the U.S. as well as growing giants such as China and Brazil -- could be the world forum for hashing out an economic way forward from financial crisis.

But agreement appeared elusive as the summit began, divided between those such as United States that want to get China to allow its currency rise and those irate over U.S. Federal Reserve plans to pump $600 billion of new money into the sluggish American economy, effectively devaluing the dollar.

Obama told fellow leaders that the U.S. cannot remain a profligate consumer using borrowed money and needs other countries to pull their weight to fix the world economy.

"The most important thing that the United States can do for the world economy is to grow, because we continue to be the world's largest market and a huge engine for all other countries to grow," Obama said at a news conference.

Brazil's president, Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva, warned that such policies would "bankrupt" the world.

"If the rich countries are not consuming and want to grow its economy on exports, the world goes bankrupt because there would be no one to buy," he told reporters. "Everybody would like to sell."

Concerns about trade gaps, protectionism and a currency war threatened to overtake momentum for forming global solutions to the financial crisis created at last year's London summit.

So far, officials can't even agree on the agenda, much less a draft statement. Government ministers and senior G-20 officials have labored for days without success to come up with a substantive joint statement to be issued Friday, G-20 summit spokesman Kim Yoon-kyung said.

Leaders had a working dinner Thursday at Seoul's grand National Museum of Korea, greeted by sentries dressed in royal garb and escorted by children in traditional Korean dress. Outside, a few thousand protesters rallied against the G-20 and the South Korean government. Some scuffled with riot police, but the march from Seoul's main train station was largely peaceful.

"We can put people watching this summit at ease by reaching a concrete agreement that takes a step forward," South Korean President Lee Myung-bak said. "You, world leaders, know that our global economy can achieve a continuous, balanced growth with international solidarity."

However, his failure to announce that he and Obama, among the staunchest of allies at the summit, had agreed on a long-stalled free trade accord as expected did not bode well for the mood for compromise.

Besides providing a political boost for both, an agreement could have helped shift the tone for a summit where common ground looks increasingly narrow and nations appeared set to defend their short-term economic interests above all else.

A major issue confronting the G-20 is how to craft a new global economic order to replace one centered on the U.S. running huge trade deficits while countries such as China, Germany and Japan accumulate vast surpluses. The U.S. runs a trade deficit because it consumes more foreign products than it sells to others.

Obama made a pitch for balanced recovery across the globe and pushed for exchange rates based on the market. The message was primarily aimed at China, whose trade surplus with the U.S. is bigger than with any other trading partner. The U.S. contends that China deliberately undervalues its currency, the yuan, which gives it is exports an unfair competitive edge.

Chinese President Hu Jintao assured Obama during talks Thursday that China has an unswerving commitment to pressing ahead with currency reform, said Ma Zhaoxu, spokesman for the Chinese delegation.

The currency spat intensified after the U.S. Federal Reserve announced plans to purchase $600 billion in long-term government bonds to try to drive down interest rates, spur lending and boost the U.S. economy.

Analysts say it could spark an influx of cash into the financial markets of emerging nations in search of higher returns, making their currencies stronger, their exports more expensive and creating bubbles in stocks and other assets. While a cheaper dollar would benefit U.S. exports, it could also trigger a so-called currency war as countries race to devalue their currencies.

A U.S. proposal to limit current account surpluses and deficits to 4 percent of gross domestic product as a way to reduce trade gaps has met with opposition.

"Targets are neither economically appropriate or appropriate from a financial perspective," German Chancellor Angela Merkel said. "Current account balances are hard to target. What's important is that we don't resort to protectionist measures." Germany is the world's second-biggest exporter after China.

British Prime Minister David Cameron said nations with large budget deficits have a responsibility to deal with them.

"The alternative isn't some wonderland of continuous growth, the alternative is the markets questioning your economy, it's your interest rates rising, it's confidence falling and you see your economy go into the danger zone that others are in," he said.

Richard Portes, president of the Center for Economic Policy Research in London, said he shares Bank of England Gov. Mervyn King's fears that "the possibility that currency wars and global imbalances might lead to severe trade protectionism over the next year or so."

After the summit, many of the leaders head to Japan for the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation forum summit. They are expected to agree to take steps toward a sweeping Pacific-wide free trade agreement but some members have resisted.

___

Associated Press writers Ben Feller, Kelly Olsen, Foster Klug, Hyung-jin Kim, Vijay Joshi and Greg Keller in Seoul and Charles Hutzler in Beijing contributed to this report.

 



Posted by biginla at 2:32 PM GMT
Updated: Thursday, 11 November 2010 2:35 PM GMT
France 24 Newsletter by Biodun Iginla, BBC News, The Economist, France 24
Topic: france24, bbc news, biodun iginl
logomyF24 
Thursday November 11, 2010 08:11 (Paris time)


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  • WORLD

  • As world leaders gather in the South Korean capital of Seoul for two days of intense negotiations at the G20 summit, trade and currency disagreements are threatening to overshadow the summit.
  • Three Frenchmen kidnapped off the coast of Nigeria on September 22 have been released, the French Ministry of Foreign Affairs announced on Wednesday. The men were employees of France's offshore services firm Bourbon.
  • A series of bombings and mortar attacks targeting Christians killed at least three people and wounded dozens more in Baghdad on Wednesday. The attacks come 10 days after a brazen assault on a Catholic church killed 52.
  • The families of French victims of a 2002 bombing in Pakistan are to take the president of France's National Assembly to court for refusing to hand over evidence given to a parliamentary commission
  • French President Nicolas Sarkozy officially signed a controversial pension reform bill, raising the retirement age from 60 to 62, into law on Wednesday. The reform sparked weeks of street demonstrations and nationwide strikes.
  • BUSINESS

  • As world leaders gather in the South Korean capital of Seoul for two days of intense negotiations at the G20 summit, trade and currency disagreements are threatening to overshadow the summit.
  • US carmaker General Motors announced a two-billion-dollar profit for the third quarter on Wednesday, in further evidence of the company's return to health ahead of a planned initial public offering.
  • Europe's competition watchdog has fined 11 airlines, including Air France-KLM and British Airways, a total of nearly 800 million euros for fixing prices on surcharges for fuel and security.
  • Australian airline Qantas said Monday that it would keep its Airbus A380 fleet grounded for at least another 72 hours after investigators found oil leaks in some engines.
  • France said Friday that it would receive its first A400M military transport plane in 2013 after European governments struck a new deal to finance the aircraft, which has been plagued by cost overruns and manufacturing delays.
  • SPORTS

  • Frenchman Franck Cammas has won the ninth edition of the Route de Rhum, finishing the transatlantic solo sprint from Saint Malo in France to Guadeloupe's Pointe-à-Pitre in his giant trimaran Groupama 3 in nine days, three hours and 14 minutes.
  • The UCI international cycling authority said Monday it was asking the Spanish cycling federation to open disciplinary procedures against Tour de France champion Alberto Contador after it was revealed he had failed a drug test taken in July.
  • Red Bull drivers Sebastian Vettel and Mark Webber gave their team the constructor's title Sunday with a brilliant one-two at the Brazilian Grand Prix, but it will take a solo achievement for either of the two to win the driver's title next week.
  • Bottom-placed Arles-Avignon beat Caen 3-2 on Saturday to pick up their first win of the season. Stade Rennes remain second after a draw against Lyon, one point behind Ligue 1 leaders Brest, who lost to Lille.
  • Italy's Fed Cup squad have picked up their second title in a row, and their third in five years, with a 3-1 win over a US team deprived of the Williams sisters.
  • CULTURE

  • The best-selling author Michel Houellebecq, known for his blunt depictions of alienation and male angst, has won France's most prestigious literary prize, the Prix Goncourt, for his new novel, a satire of the Paris art world.
  • After 50 years making iconic and esoteric films alike, Jean-Luc Godard will be given his first Academy Award on Saturday. The decision by the director of "Breathless" to skip the ceremony has revived an old debate about his disdain for Hollywood.
  • Chinese artist Ai Weiwei said Monday he was no longer under house arrest, after police confined him to his home for three days to stop him from attending an event at his Shanghai studio set for demolition.

    Ai, 53, is one of China's most famous and controversial artists, who currently has an exhibition at London's Tate Modern. He also is an outspoken critic of the country's Communist rulers.

    "My house arrest was supposed to last until midnight last night. In fact, the police left at about 11:00 pm," Ai told AFP.

  • The BBC apologised on air on Thursday to the Band Aid humanitarian group and co-founder Bob Geldof (pictured) for a "misleading and unfair" report in March claiming aid money sent to Ethiopia in 1985 was used by rebel forces to buy weapons.
  • Alexandria Mills, an 18-year-old from the US state of Kentucky, became Miss World 2010 on Saturday, at the end of the beauty competition hosted in the Chinese resort town of Sanya.
  • SCIENCE

  • In today’s French press review, we focus on the five year anniversary of the riots that took place in the Parisian suburb of Clichy.
    The death of two boys chased by the police near a power transformer sparked extreme violence in the region.
    Also in the papers: medical assistance on the internet and the worst US campaign adverts, seven days before the mid-terms.

  • Finland has just become the first country in the world to make a law aiming to eradicate smoking entirely. The government has introduced a bill which aims to make Finland smoke-free by 2040. On October 1st, the first measures of the so-called Tobacco Act were introduced, making it harder for people under 18 to smoke, and restricting smoking outdoors. And tougher measures are to come. But can Europe follow the lead?

  • While over 200 countries come together in Japan to work out a road map to stop the extinction of species, ENVIRONMENT looks at the bugs and pests that are gaining in strength and taking over towns. Insecticides have gotten less toxic over the years and some species are profiting, but scientists in France may soon be able to trap them using the laws of attraction.

  • An accident at an Alumina factory in Hungary smothers three villages with a toxic sludge, leaving 9 dead and scores of others burned and badly injured. HEALTH meets those burned by the alkaline mud which ate deep into their skin. At Budapest’s hospitals doctors still rely on results from Greenpeace to see what metals or toxic materials are present in the mud.

  • A network of suspected Armenian gangsters used means such as setting up fake medical clinics to try and cheat the government's medical insurance programme out of $163 million, the largest fraud by a criminal enterprise in the programme’s history.
  • FRANCE

  • French President Nicolas Sarkozy officially signed a controversial pension reform bill, raising the retirement age from 60 to 62, into law on Wednesday. The reform sparked weeks of street demonstrations and nationwide strikes.
  • After eight months of speculation, a reshuffle of French President Nicolas Sarkozy’s cabinet is expected before the end of November. France24.com takes a look at the frontrunners and outsiders in the race to be named France’s next prime minister.
  • Three Frenchmen kidnapped off the coast of Nigeria on September 22 have been released, the French Ministry of Foreign Affairs announced on Wednesday. The men were employees of France's offshore services firm Bourbon.
  • Thirty-four Iraqi Christians and a Muslim guard hurt in last week's al Qaeda attack on a Baghdad church arrived in Paris late Monday. French Immigration Minister Eric Besson said it was in France's "tradition of asylum" to offer them treatment.
  • The families of French victims of a 2002 bombing in Pakistan are to take the president of France's National Assembly to court for refusing to hand over evidence given to a parliamentary commission
  • EUROPE

  • University students forced their way into the headquarters of British Prime Minister David Cameron's Conservative Party on Wednesday to protest against plans to triple tuition fees, overwhelming security guards and wrecking the reception area.
  • Turkey's stalling bid to join the European Union suffered another setback on Tuesday as the 27-nation bloc published an annual report pointing out areas in which Ankara should improve, including human rights and its relationship with Cyprus.
  • Europe's competition watchdog has fined 11 airlines, including Air France-KLM and British Airways, a total of nearly 800 million euros for fixing prices on surcharges for fuel and security.
  • A convoy of trucks carrying 123 tonnes of highly radioactive nuclear waste arrived at a storage site in Germany Tuesday, following days of furious protests that massively delayed the delivery.
  • European Union ministers have said visa requirements for Albanians and Bosnians would be lifted starting in December as the two states work towards EU membership, but warned that visas could be re-imposed if travel rules are abused.
  • MIDDLE-EAST

  • A series of bombings and mortar attacks targeting Christians killed at least three people and wounded dozens more in Baghdad on Wednesday. The attacks come 10 days after a brazen assault on a Catholic church killed 52.
  • Jordan has elected a parliament dominated by government loyalists after a boycott by opposition Islamists, according to official results released Wednesday. Islamist parties have disputed turnout figures, which the government estimates at 53 percent.
  • The US said on Monday it was "deeply disappointed" by Israel's plan to build 1,300 new homes in occupied East Jerusalem, as Palestinian leaders accused Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu of seeking to sabotage stalled peace talks.
  • Al Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula (AQAP) has claimed responsibility for a parcel bomb plot that was uncovered last week, as well as the crash in September of a UPS plane in Dubai.
  • Iraq's Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki and former Prime Minister Iyad Allawi were unable to reach a deal Monday, the first of three days of talks to discuss a proposed power-sharing accord.
  • AFRICA

  • With about seven percent of Sunday's run-off ballots counted, Guinea's former premier Cellou Dallein Diallo (left) held a slight edge over challenger Alpha Conde, partial electoral commission results indicated late on Tuesday.
  • Three Frenchmen kidnapped off the coast of Nigeria on September 22 have been released, the French Ministry of Foreign Affairs announced on Wednesday. The men were employees of France's offshore services firm Bourbon.
  • Opposition leader Henri Konan Bedie (right) has joined four rivals in calling on supporters to choose Alassana Ouattara (left) over current president Laurent Gbagbo when they vote in the last leg of the presidential race in two weeks.
  • Violent clashes broke out yet again on Monday in Laayoun, the largest city of Western Sahara, a desert region disputed between the Kingdom of Morocco and the Polisario Front rebel group, a Sahrawi nationalist movement.
  • At least three people, including one policeman, were killed and scores more were injured on Monday after Moroccan security forces raided a refugee camp in the disputed Western Sahara region.
  • AMERICAS

  • Cases of cholera were identified in the Haitian capital of Port-au-Prince on Tuesday as the death toll from the epidemic reached nearly 600. The disease could spread to tent camps that have housed over a million people since the Jan. 12 earthquake.
  • Former President George W. Bush reclaims the spotlight Tuesday with the release of a new memoir, "Decision Points", defending his "war on terror" and the Iraq invasion. The unpopular ex-president has kept a low profile since leaving the White House.
  • Hurricane Tomas killed at least 21 people as it battered Haiti over the weekend, inflicting further suffering on the Caribbean nation which is struggling to fight a cholera epidemic and rebuild after January's devastating earthquake.
  • The flooding in Haiti has worsened the cholera epidemic in the country as it emerged on Sunday that the death toll has passed 500. Dirty water supplies throughout the island are spreading disease quicker than aid can be delivered.
  • Six people lost their lives in Haiti as Hurricane Tomas moved across the Caribbean towards the Turks and Caicos Islands early Saturday. Hundreds of thousands of Haitians battled against the storm overnight in temporary flood-hit shelters.
  • ASIA-PACIFIC

  • Pakistan has condemned a US statement of support for India to be given a permanent seat on the UN Security Council, saying it has "serious concern" over India's commitment to observing international law and the principles of the UN charter.
  • The text of US President Barack Obama’s speech at Jakarta’s University of Indonesia delivered on Wednesday.
  • Almost 40 years after he left Indonesia, US President Barack Obama wrapped up his trip to the world’s most populous Muslim nation Wednesday with a major speech praising Indonesia’s religious tolerance.
  • US President Barack Obama has praised Indonesia's successful transition to democracy and has hailed Indonesian unity in diversity in a key speech at Indonesia's national university during a visit to Jakarta.
  • US President Barack Obama has praised Indonesia's successful transition to democracy and pledged closer ties with his childhood country ahead of a speech in which he is expected to reach out to the Muslim world.
 
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Posted by biginla at 2:19 PM GMT
Iraq parties reach deal on government, negotiator says
Topic: iraq, nasras ismail, bbc news, b

by Nasra Ismail, BBC News Analyst, for the BBC's Biodun Iginla

Nouri Maliki Nouri Maliki gradually gained the support of parliament's smaller factions

Iraq's main parties have agreed to form a government, ending eight months of deadlock since elections in March, says the official brokering the talks.

Kurdish regional president Masoud Barzani called the deal a "national partnership".

He said Nouri Maliki, a Shia, would remain as prime minister, while the main Sunni faction get the Speaker's post. Its leader, Iyad Allawi, will head a council for national strategy.

The Kurds will get the presidency.

Iraq's parliament is meeting on Thursday afternoon to take the first formal steps towards forming a government.

"Thank God, last night we made a big achievement, which is considered a victory for all Iraqis," Mr Barzani said at a news conference.

Checks and balances

On Wednesday, the parties reached a deal to keep Mr Maliki as prime minister after he gained the support of the Sunni coalition led by former PM Allawi.

Analysis

The focus is very much on this new body, called the National Council for Strategic Policy.

It is being offered to Iyad Allawi, the challenger who has lost ground to Mr Maliki over the past few months.

Whether he will personally accept it is still unclear at the moment, but his coalition should be allocated the council under this division of power.

The question is, will that body turn out to be an effective power-sharing instrument whereby they can influence policy, especially in the realms of security.

That issue is Mr Allawi's main concern and of some other people who believe Mr Maliki went a bit out on his own on a lot of security issues in the past four years.

Before the session, MPs said they would begin by electing a speaker and two deputies.

Next, they would vote for a president, expected to be the incumbent, Kurdish politician Jalal Talabani.

The president would hand the task of forming the government to the leader of the largest coalition - Mr Maliki.

He would then have a month to put together a cabinet.

If all goes according to plan now, says the BBC's Jim Muir in Baghdad, Iraq will end the day not actually with a new government but with agreement on the basis for it.

The reality should just be a matter of time, not more than a month, our correspondent says.

A government spokesman expressed confidence that the deal would give Iraq's Sunnis and the man they voted for, Iyad Allawi, enough to keep them on board the political process.

In addition to the council for national strategy, Mr Allawi's bloc will also get the foreign ministry.

Iraq government deadlock

  • March: Elections give two-seat lead to former PM Iyad Allawi - not enough to form a government
  • June: parliament meets for 20 minutes, MPs sworn in but delay formal return to work to give time for coalition talks
  • August: Iraq's Supreme Court orders parliament to re-convene
  • November: power-sharing deal agreed. Shia bloc to get PM's job, Sunnis to get speaker plus new role for Mr Allawi. Kurds keep presidency.

Negotiations to form a new government reached a stalemate after election results were announced. Mr Allawi's Al-Iraqiyya bloc won two more seats than Mr Maliki's State of Law party, but neither had enough seats to form a government.

The tide turned for Mr Maliki in early October when the militant young Shia cleric Moqtada Sadr announced that the 40 or so seats he controls in the new parliament would back the incumbent for a second term, our correspondent says.

Graphic

Are you in Iraq? What do you think of the new agreement? Send us your comments using the form below:

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Posted by biginla at 1:58 PM GMT
"Pop and Politics" - 3 new articles by Biodun Iginla, BBC News and MediaBistro
Topic: popular culture, us politics

Here are the latest updates for biginla@bbcnews

.com

Pop and Politics


 

  1. Things we’re checking out… old and new
  2. Miss Our Nov. 3rd Live Radio Show?
  3. Stories From the Road: Voting For Pedro
  4. More Recent Articles
  5. Search Pop and Politics
  6. Prior Mailing Archive

Things we’re checking out… old and new

President Obama visits India… new energy or same old strategy? This is from the Times of India. And this is from the Christian Science Monitor, pointing out as a side reference what this article from the guardian does more clearly: That the U.S. is selling arms to both India and Pakistan, two countries with the bomb who share a contested border and don’t get along.

Congressional redistricting maps heavily favor Republicans being able to redraw the lines. From Twitter: @benpolitico (Ben Smith of Politico.com) “Clip and save: Fantastic redistricting chart from the RNC, reflecting giant GOP edgehttp://is.gd/gQowj

I may not agree with Sarah Palin on everything, but this simple advice is worth heeding, “Have an intelligent message, and fight for your right to be heard.” That’s not just true in politics, but in fiction writing, journalism, education… just about anything worth doing. It’s the narrative, stupid.

What happens when a black academic moves to “Whitopia”… this book by Rich Benjamin came up in conversation; has some resonance with our work.

 

  • Email to a friend • Article Search • View comments • Track comments •  •

Miss Our Nov. 3rd Live Radio Show?

On Wednesday November 3rd, the Pop and Politics live event at WNYC’s Greene Space brought together panelists, audiences and web viewers for a fascinating discussion about how race, anger and the economy affected the outcome of the November 2010 midterm elections. Guests included actress Rosie Perez (visit her arts organization here), blogger Reihan Salam with The National Review, Princeton professor Melissa Harris-Perry, youth activist Erica Williams, and WNYC’s The Takeaway reporter Todd Zwillich.

You can watch video of the entire show below. Or click on the audio player below to stream the show now. Episode 3 MP3 You can also subscribe to our podcast to download an MP3 of the show: rss feed or . We also had a lively on-line conversation; click on the Cover It Live player below to scroll through a recap of the show highlights and viewer comments. And finally, listeners from the audience and the web prepared questions for Farai and the panelists, but there wasn’t time to get to them all. The questions are after the jump, take a look and join the discussion.

 

Pop and Politics with Farai Chideya 

Here are the questions that didn’t make the conversation. If you think you have an answer, use the comment section to respond.

‘Why Didn’t Obama put his massive ground troops to work sooner to help re-elect Democrats?” 
-Kris Broughton

“What major gaffes can we expect from the Republicans in the House as they seek to repay loyalty to the Tea Party
- Maitefa, Brooklyn

“There were no African Americans elected to the Senate. What do Tea Partiers and the GOP do to advance minority participation?” 
-Deborah Cunningham

“What will happen to the moderates left in the Republican party? With the party now moving further to the right, where do they fit in? 
- Stephanie Walsh, Jersey City/Ft. Lauderdale

“How will Allen West (Black Republican Congressman-elect from Florida) fit in with the Congressional Black Caucus?” 
- Norris McDonald

“Doesn’t the Tea Party realize that America is built on the fundamental foundation of immigration?” 
- Charles Mabheka, City College of New York

“Candidates need so much money to become part of the process and then become beholden to those who funded them. Is there any prospect of this changing?” 
Troy JohnsonHarlem, New York

“What effect will the defeat of prop 19 have on the future of marijuana legislation, both at the state and federal levels?” 
- Eric, Washington D.C.

“I liked what the caller from the Colorado Tea Party said about this not being about Republicans or Democrats (and I would add Tea Party) thing! She said it’s about rolling up our sleeves and getting work done. If we want to get the American Dreamback, what common ground do these three groups have going forward? ” 
- Megan Browne, Brooklyn

“How does the “Bloomberg Effect” (multi-billionaires spending millions to win elections) influence future elections?” 
- Ron Kavanaugh, The Bronx

“What is it going to take for legislators to openly condemn, challenge and ultimately abolish Don’t Ask Don’t Tell? Why do you think this is still such a contentious issue for Americans, regardless of class, race and gender?” 
- Jake Weingarten, 22, Chelsea, New School Student

“Since the election of Obama, I feel like we have come to see how post-racial America is NOT. How important is America’s “true” feelings about race going to affect the future of how we approach racial inequalities in America?” 
- Jonathan Boe, Crown Heights, Brooklyn

 

  • Email to a friend • Article Search • View comments • Track comments •  •


 

Stories From the Road: Voting For Pedro

18-year old Pedro Lopez left his girlfriend and a comfortable existence in Phoenix to register voters in Yuma, one of Arizona’s most conservative towns. Spurred by passage of Arizona’s anti-immigration law SB-1070, he was also motivated by what he saw as apathy on the part of non-registered Hispanics. Pop and Politics went door-to-door with Pedro to see if he was having any success. Pedro’s plea to register resonated particularly powerfully for one young potential voter he met.

 

  • Email to a friend • Article Search • View comments • Track comments •  •

More Recent Articles


 


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Posted by biginla at 11:57 AM GMT
New or updated articles by Biodun Iginla of The Economist and of the BBC
Topic: bbc news, biodun iginla, the eco
November 10th 2010


Japan and China: All at sea 
A video showing a Chinese captain ramming a Japanese patrol boat causes a storm
Watch 

Fiscal policy: The laboratory of the world 
Britain's spending cuts may play a big role in determining who the next occupant of the White House is
Full article 

Taiwan and Japan: Breaking formation 
This year Taiwan's standard of living surpassed Japan's
Full article 

Technology: Vroom 
How to drive at 1,000 mph
Full article 

Asia: The elephant outside the room 
Our Banyan columnist considers Barack Obama's visit to Asia
Full article 

Daily chart: In the red 
Comparing world debt during the Depression and now
Full article 

Middle East: Jordan's elections 
Real democracy is still some way off
Full article 

Culture: Bleak, beautiful north 
Chris Killip's photography transports New Yorkers to Britain in the 1970s and 80s
Full article 

Live online debate: Biotechnology 
Jeff Moyer calls biotechnology an agricultural "band-aid fix" while Daniel Fungai Mataruka argues that it could aid food security. Who is right?
Full article 



Posted by biginla at 12:31 AM GMT
BREAKING NEWS ALERT: Vikram Pandit: We must rethink Basel or growth will suffer
Topic: Vikram Pandit, bbc news, ft

by Judith Stein and Biodun Iginla, BBC News and The Economist
 
 

FT Comment: L eaders of the Group of 20 economies meeting in Seoul must decide whether to recommend additional capital and liquidity requirements for banks above and beyond those proposed by the Basel committee. They should proceed cautiously. There is a point beyond which more is not necessarily better. Hiking capital and liquidity requirements further could have significant negative impact on the banking system, on consumers and on the economy
http://link.ft.com/r/73UJGG/QF78M9/LYGOK/8A33X9/IY1VDA/E4/h?a1=2010&a2=11&a3=10 
 
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Posted by biginla at 12:18 AM GMT
Wednesday, 10 November 2010
National Conference for Media Reform April 8-10 in Boston--by Biodun Iginla, BBC News and The Free Press
Topic: media, free press, fcc, net neut
Free Press


Join the conversation about media reform

Register for NCMR 2011 today

NPRJon StewartKeith Olbermann.

In the last month, the problem of the media has been center stage in American politics and culture.

Political extremists threatened to defund public broadcasting. A comedian spoke before hundreds of thousands in Washington about the media’s threat to democracy. And a controversy around the political contributions of a TV news presenter obscured the deeper problems across the system.

You're well aware of the problem of the media. You've attended the National Conference for Media Reform before. Now, we need you and your friends to come to the next NCMR, to help turn media problems into media solutions.

Register for NCMR 2011 today at our discount early bird rate.

People everywhere believe that reforming the media is the first step in transforming democracy. They have joined a growing movement to demand better news, more independent and community media, and an open and accessible Internet.

We're bringing all of these people together under one roof. That's what the National Conference for Media Reform is all about.

In the coming months, we'll announce more information about the speakers, the program and the parties. But first, we need you to register for three jam-packed days of media reform, and to start sharing updates on the conference with your friends and colleagues.

See you there, 

-- Mary Alice and the Free Press Conference Team

P.S. Scholarships and sponsorship opportunities are available. Check out theconference website for more information.

P.P.S. Bring your friends to Boston! Get them to register too by spreading the word on Facebook and Twitter.

Free Press is a national, nonpartisan organization working to reform the media. Learn more at www.freepress.net

-- 
You can unsubscribe fro


Posted by biginla at 9:01 PM GMT
BREAKING NEWS ALERT: Panel Weighs Deep Cuts in Tax Breaks and Spending to Narrow Deficit
Topic: budget deficit, bbc news,
by Judith Stein and Biodun Iginla, BBC News and The Economist

Wed, November 10, 2010 -- 1:06 PM ET-----



A draft proposal to be released Wednesday by the chairmen of
President Obama's bipartisan commission on reducing the
federal debt calls for deep cuts in domestic and military
spending starting in 2012, and an overhaul of the tax code to
raise revenue. Those changes and others would erase nearly $4
trillion from projected deficits through 2020, the proposal
says.

The plan would reduce Social Security benefits to most future
retirees -- low-income people would get a higher benefit --
and it would subject higher levels of income to payroll taxes
to ensure Social Security's solvency for at least the next 75
years.

Posted by biginla at 6:40 PM GMT
Media coverage Israel and the Israeli-Palestinian conflict by Biodun Iginla, BBC News
Topic: israeli-palestinian conflict, na
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Description

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Media coverage of the Arab–Israeli conflict refers to the reporting of the Arab–Israeli conflictby journalists in international news media.

Media coverage of the conflict has been dogged by allegations of bias on both sides. These perceptions of bias, possibly exacerbated by the hostile media effect, have generated more complaints of partisan reporting than any other news topic and have led to a proliferation of media watchdog groups on both sides.

Types of bias

Bias in print and broadcast media may manifest itself in varying ways, including:

 

  • Diction: The use of emotive words or euphemistic terminology as well as double-speak may prejudice the audience one way or another.
  • Omission: The presentation of some facts but not all the facts may lead to false and biased conclusions.
  • Selective reporting: Over time, the news presented through a media organization may emphasize one side of the story at the expense of the other.
  • Decontextualization: News may appear without sufficient explanation of the circumstances of the events being reported.
  • Placement: The consistent placement of one viewpoint in preferential locations of an article (e.g. in the headline or in the first paragraph) may increase reader exposure to one side of the story.
  • Factual errors: Errors in content may mislead the reader.
Print and broadcast media may be biased for varying reasons, including:

 

Source

Description above from the Wikipedia article Media coverage Israel and the Israeli-Palestinian conflict, licensed under CC-BY-SA, full list of contributors here. Community Pages are not affiliated with, or endorsed by, anyone associated with the topic.

Posted by biginla at 6:28 PM GMT

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