3 posts tagged with Television by Mo Nickels.
Displaying 1 through 3 of 3.

Related tags:
+ (512)
+ (151)
+ (81)
+ (77)
+ (76)
+ (73)
+ (69)
+ (67)
+ (67)
+ (64)
+ (63)
+ (61)
+ (59)
+ (52)
+ (42)
+ (39)
+ (39)
+ (38)
+ (37)
+ (36)
+ (31)
+ (31)
+ (30)
+ (29)
+ (29)
+ (28)
+ (26)
+ (26)
+ (26)
+ (24)
+ (24)
+ (24)
+ (24)
+ (24)
+ (23)
+ (22)
+ (22)
+ (22)
+ (22)
+ (22)
+ (21)
+ (21)
+ (20)
+ (20)
+ (19)
+ (19)
+ (18)
+ (18)
+ (17)
+ (17)
+ (17)
+ (17)
+ (17)
+ (17)
+ (16)
+ (15)
+ (15)
+ (15)
+ (15)
+ (15)


Users that often use this tag:
Artw (51)
fearfulsymmetry (40)
zarq (35)
feelinglistless (26)
miss lynnster (22)
not_on_display (20)
Rhaomi (16)
owillis (15)
crunchland (11)
mathowie (10)
aaron (10)
Joe Beese (10)
ColdChef (9)
adrober (9)
reenum (8)
ZachsMind (7)
Steven Den Beste (7)
goodnewsfortheinsane (7)
Trurl (7)
palegirl (6)
kliuless (6)
luser (6)
carsonb (6)
Mwongozi (6)
amyms (6)
BarneyFifesBullet (5)
anastasiav (5)
braun_richard (5)
Navelgazer (5)
Iridic (5)
crossoverman (5)
mccarty.tim (5)
machaus (4)
tranquileye (4)
MrBaliHai (4)
Postroad (4)
Sal Amander (4)
tiaka (4)
riffola (4)
wendell (4)
McBain (4)
WolfDaddy (4)
LinusMines (4)
XQUZYPHYR (4)
myopicman (4)
item (4)
JPowers (4)
Rev. Syung Myung Me (4)
dhammond (4)
codacorolla (4)
tdecius (3)
CrazyUncleJoe (3)
Mo Nickels (3)
sudama (3)
holgate (3)
john (3)
hijinx (3)
baylink (3)
netbros (3)
rschram (3)
A public television program about finding jobs. This isn't the expected roundtable of flabby retraining advice from consultants pimping their own firms. It's 30-second elevator pitches and happy landings. Read a news article about it. (via The Mediavore.)
posted by Mo Nickels on Apr 15, 2009 - 3 comments

Television military analysts are wooed, courted, and privileged by the Pentagon. An in-depth investigative report by the New York Times uncovers logrolling, shilling, touting, back-scratching, and just plain bias on the part of the experts that television networks put on the air to talk about the war. Some of them appear to be as good as owned by the Defense Department. "The effort, which began with the buildup to the Iraq war and continues to this day, has sought to exploit ideological and military allegiances, and also a powerful financial dynamic: Most of the analysts have ties to military contractors vested in the very war policies they are asked to assess on air. Those business relationships are hardly ever disclosed to the viewers, and sometimes not even to the networks themselves."
posted by Mo Nickels on Apr 19, 2008 - 37 comments

Political television ads. Lots of them. Just in case you didn't know. Go crazy.
posted by Mo Nickels on Nov 3, 2000 - 0 comments

Page: 1