For a moment there, it seemed Hayden Panettiere’s first major acting gig since NBC pulled the plug on her supernatural cult series, Heroes, would never see the light of day. In spite of feverish attempts by attorneys for American exchange student-turned-condemned killer Amanda Knox, Lifetime will premiere The Amanda Knox Story — a dramatization of [...]
Posts Tagged ‘ft’
Lifetime “The Amanda Knox Story†Trailer [Ft. Hayden Panettiere]
AUDIO: Jennifer Lopez “On The Floor†[Ft. Pitbull]
Jennifer Lopez already has a new gig on American Idol, now the mother of two also has new music on the radio. On Tuesday, Jenny from the Block announced the world premiere of her new single, “On the Floor” featuring Miami hip-hopster Pitbull. The talent show judge released the official version of the song to [...]
Injuries Continue To Plague “Spider-Man†Musical As Stunt Double Plunges 30 Ft. During Show
Let’s hope there’s a doctor in the house the next time Spidey swings on Broadway. A performance of Spider-Man: Turn Off the Dark on Broadway went awry this week after a stuntman fell 30ft. and left the theater in an ambulance. Firefighters were called to the Foxwoods Theatre in Manhattan at about 10:45 PM Monday [...]
Goldman scouts for an executive to head Asia operations: FT
Goldman Sachs <GS.N> is scouting for an executive to manage its operations in Asia to succeed the region’s incumbent Michael Evans, the Financial Times said.
Evans has also been the co-chairman of Goldman’s business standards committee, which was formed in May when the bank was under pressure from US regulators, FT said.
Conspirator in Colorado:Denver & Ft. Collins
SEPTEMBER 16 IN CERVANTES MASTERPIECE BALLROOM;
SEPTEMBER 18 IN MISHAWAKA
AMPITHEATRE
![]() Conspirator |
Conspirator, featuring
Aron Magner and Marc Brownstein of The Disco Biscuits will perform two special Colorado dates at Cervantes Masterpiece-Denver,
CO and the Mishawaka Amphitheatre-(Outside of Fort Collins, CO).
Joining them on support in Denver will be Break Science (Featuring Adam Deitch of Pretty Lights and Pretty Lights Music artist Michal Menert). Joining them in Fort
Collins is M80 Dubstation (Featuring
Jon Gutwillig of the Disco Biscuits) and The Ginger Kids (Featuring Ben Hazelgrove and Lane
Shaw of Pnuma Trio).
Thursday, September 16
Re:Creation with:
CONSPIRATOR (Marc & Aron of the Disco Biscuits)
with: Break Science (feat. Adam Deitch of Pretty Lights), Michal Menert (Pretty Lights Music)
Cervantes Masterpiece Ballroom
2637 Welton St.
Denver, CO
All Ages
$25 in advance // $30 at the door
http://conspiratorcervantes.eventbrite.com
Saturday, September 18
Re:Creation with:
CONSPIRATOR (Marc & Aron of the Disco Biscuits)
with: M80 Dubstation (Jon the Barber of the Disco Biscuits), Ginger Kids (Lane & Ben of Pnuma Trio)
Mishawaka Amphitheatre
1317 Poudre Canyon
Bellvue, CO
All Ages
$25 in advance // $30 at the door
http://conspiratormish.eventbrite.com
Conspirator
Tour Dates
::
Conspirator News
::
Conspirator
Concert
Reviews
Google 99.9% Certain to Shutter Chinese Search Engine, FT Says
Google could shutter its Google.cn search engine within weeks after talks with the Chinese government over censorship have stalled, according to a March 13 report in the Financial Times. This latest step comes two months after the search engine in January vowed to stop censoring search results and to possibly exit business in China in total after it detected cyber-attacks from within China aimed at gaining access to the Gmail accounts of human rights activists.
– Google could shutter its Google.cn search engine within weeks after
talks
with the Chinese government over censorship have stalled, according to a
March
13 report in the Financial
Times.
Citing a source familiar with Google’s position on the matter, the
Times
said the chances of Google closi…
Prudential taps Asian sovereign funds to finance AIA deal: FT sources
UK insurer Prudential is tapping sovereign wealth funds in China and Singapore to help finance its US$35.5 billion ($49.9 billion) buyout of US insurance giant AIG’s Asian arm, an FT report said today, according to Dow Jones Newsires.
The Financial Times quoted unidentified sources as saying that Prudential and its advisers were in talks with the sovereign wealth funds to support a planned US$20 billion share offer for AIA.
It said the Singapore and China sovereign wealth funds had not made a final decision but their response was positive.
Now pay up
By Clare Davidson
Business reporter, BBC News

In recent years, we have grown accustomed to the idea that news is free.
Vendors of free newspapers thrust their product upon you on the street, and much newspaper content is freely available online.
But Rupert Murdoch’s latest move could mark a bold change.
The media tycoon has said his News Corp will charge online customers for news content across all its websites.
Alfonso Marone, analyst and partner at Value Partners Group summarises the problem: "Online advertising is not working, so [News Corp] is basically asking itself, ‘What can we do’."
Business model
"The challenge with digital media is how to monetise it," says Mathew Horsman, an analyst at Mediatique. A new pricing model has to be developed, he explains.
Analysts cite the Financial Times and Wall Street Journal – which is owned by New Corp – as successful models.
In its recent earnings report, the Financial Times said it was seeking to rely less on advertising revenue – which has fallen significantly during the recession – and more on subscriptions.
But Douglas McCabe, an analyst at Enders, says these websites both fit "very firmly" in the business content category – not the general news model.
They provide specialist news and charge for premium content.
"Businesses [which tend to subscribe the the FT or Wall Street Journal] are used to digitally delivered newswires, they are familiar with paying for news," says Mr McCabe.
But for other types of news, this is not the case.
Entertainment
So clearly, consumers are more keen to pay for some forms or content over others.
People pay when you have given them what they want or you make it "impossible to do anything else", says Mr Horsman.
In this category comes live sports coverage, Hollywood films, and some specialist interest content – in general terms, entertainment.
But for news, it is harder. If, for example, an election is made freely available on several outlets it is unclear why individuals would pay for such coverage.
Today there is huge choice at no cost. Audiences aren’t as loyal; they don’t need to be.
Newspapers worked because they were a package. But once you start breaking it up, people are far less prepared to pay for segments, analysts argue.
‘Oil tanker’
Mr McCabe predicts some forms of charging will emerge and different models will be tested.
"The problem is that it will never be of the monetary volume that is enjoyed today for newspapers."
He says attempts to transfer the old newspaper model online is "like an oil tanker – it’s too difficult to turn around".
Newspapers will need to think differently about their audiences and how to segment them as well as think about how to divide content, according to their strengths, he argues.
So the key is to not to have everything freely available – to have a model in which there is free content, but there is also more specialised, bespoke, paid-for content.
"There has to be more to do than watching each other’s Twitters. We want narrative and quality," says Mr Horsman.
Intermediary
For others, ease of access is key.
Mr Marcone believes that a micro-charging structure, where readers pay just 5p or 10p to access an article, might work.
"This is less than the price of an SMS [text message]. Each 5p or 10p adds up to a significant number".
But he warns that it would be hard to make people open accounts for individual papers.
Instead, intermediaries could provide access to a range of publications.
Mr McCabe says: "Intermediaries might work, but they won’t start tomorrow." In the interim, a mixture of micro-charging and subscriptions is likely to continue.
The news landscape has changed dramatically in the past decade, and so have our news habits.
However News Corp develops its new charging model, it seems clear that media firms will have to try an alternative to both the paid for traditional newspaper and the everything-is-free online model.
Even if News Corp does start charging and others follow suit, analysts say doing a U-turn on the free news model will be hard to pull off.
This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.
Waylon Lewis: Money Magazine names eco-hipsterless Louisville, Colorado best place to live.
Some towns nestled along the Rockies are full of pretentious eco-hipsters. Not Louisville. Money Magazine names Louisville, Colorado, the number one US town to…




