a writer’s group

From Script to Screen, a Writers Dream

CNET Cuts 120 Jobs June 23, 2008

Filed under: environment and current events — lniggl @ 8:22 pm

CNET The Associated Press reports that tech publisher CNET is cutting 120 positions – all in the U.S.

All the layoffs – about 4.4 percent of CNet’s work force – will involve employees in the U.S., according to a document CNet filed Wednesday with the Securities and Exchange Commission.

CNet’s suite of popular websites commands a huge worldwide audience, but its investors have long complained the company’s profits haven’t kept pace with the growth of Internet advertising.

The company indicated in the filing that the layoffs would be effective immediately and cost at least $3.8-million in severance pay, outplacement and other expenses.

 

TV Viewership Down After Writers’ Strike June 23, 2008

Filed under: Uncategorized — lniggl @ 8:21 pm


Since the writers’ strike ended, television shows have not been rebounding to their previous viewership levels. In fact, top television shows’ ratings are plummeting. Once reason proposed is that no one knew when their shows were back, so they never tuned back in.

Spring has sprung leaks in big-network lineups. Ratings shortfalls for some top series have sparked Hollywood hand-wringing on the eve of next week’s fall schedule announcements. Such shows as ER, CSI: Miami, My Name Is Earl, The Simpsons and Supernatural hit all-time lows in recent weeks, and others — including Grey’s Anatomy and Cold Case — are down sharply from last spring.

Some observers blame the writers’ strike, which forced a three-month gap in most scripted series and led viewers to stray. Most series have trickled back but without the usual marketing fanfare. “I’m not convinced people realized their shows were back,” says ABC prime-time research chief Larry Hyams. “It’s not like there was a premiere week” that lured them.

Strike-hobbled scripted series weren’t the only ones to lose ground. American Idol, Survivor and Deal or No Deal did, too, part of the typical ratings erosion as series age. “There has been significant slippage compared to normal series averages,” says ad buyer John Rash of Campbell-Mithun in Minneapolis. “What’s difficult to discern is if this is a post-strike media malaise that will be corrected” next fall.

But it’s not as if viewers abandoned TV. Nielsen data show overall viewership is flat or up slightly from last spring. Instead, more people are watching cable. And more of them are recording shows on DVRs, now in 24% of homes, up from 16% last spring. More than 2 million Grey’s viewers — 10% of its total audience — now watch the show one to seven days after it airs.

We think viewership will rebound in the fall — so long as there are some interesting new shows. But we also think people are watching their favorite shows online. For example, on Friday afternoons every hour on the hour, you can watch the livestream of that night’s episode of Battlestar Galactica on Scifi.com for free. You watch 80% less commercials, it’s in HD, and best of all – it makes the time you were supposed to be working just breeze by. Mark it down as research for your next science fiction novel,

 

Writer’s Blog: Vatican Still Angry at Dan Brown June 23, 2008

Filed under: art, music and books — lniggl @ 8:20 pm


The Vatican is still quite peeved with Dan Brown. In fact, it’s still so mad that it has banned Tom Hanks and Ron Howard from shooting any scenes from the upcoming film Angels & Demons at the Vatican or at any Catholic churches in Rome.

The Vatican has banned the makers of Angels & Demons, the latest Dan Brown thriller to be filmed, from shooting scenes not only in the Vatican but in any church in Rome on the ground that it is “an offence against God” and “wounds common religious feelings”.

Archbishop Velasio De Paolis, head of the Vatican’s Prefecture for Economic Affairs, said that the author had “turned the Gospels upside down to poison the faith. It would be unacceptable to transform churches into film sets so that his blasphemous novels can be made into mendacious films in the name of business.”

Father Marco Fibbi, spokesman for the diocese of Rome, said: “Normally we read the script, but this time it was not necessary. The name Dan Brown was enough.” The Vatican fiercely condemned both the novel The Da Vinci Code and its film version, which starred Tom Hanks as the Harvard professor Robert Langdon.

Hanks also stars in Angels & Demons which, like The Da Vinci Code, is directed by Ron Howard. Published before The Da Vinci Code — which suggested that Jesus Christ married Mary Magdalene and had children — Angels & Demons revolves around a plot by a sinister elite known as The Illuminati to seize control of the papacy during a conclave to elect a new Pope.

“The name Dan Brown was enough”? That’s pretty harsh. No doubt Ron Howard will find an acceptable substitute site for filming. After all, the Vatican couldn’t stop the filmmakers from shooting the exteriors of the churches in question because they had permission from the local authorities.

 

Kindle: Amazon’s New Wireless Reading Device June 23, 2008

Filed under: Uncategorized — lniggl @ 8:18 pm

Kindle: Amazon’s New Wireless Reading Device

 

Product Overview

  • Revolutionary electronic-paper display provides a sharp, high-resolution screen that looks and reads like real paper.
  • Simple to use: no computer, no cables, no syncing.
  • Wireless connectivity enables you to shop the Kindle Store directly from your Kindle—whether you’re in the back of a taxi, at the airport, or in bed.
  • Buy a book and it is auto-delivered wirelessly in less than one minute.
  • More than 130,000 books available, including more than 98 of 112 current New York Times® Best Sellers.
  • New York Times® Best Sellers and New Releases $9.99, unless marked otherwise.
  • Free book samples. Download and read first chapters for free before you decide to buy.
  • Top U.S. newspapers including The New York Times, Wall Street Journal, and Washington Post; top magazines including TIME, Atlantic Monthly, and Forbes—all auto-delivered wirelessly.
  • Top international newspapers from France, Germany, and Ireland; Le Monde, Frankfurter Allgemeine, and The Irish Times—all auto-delivered wirelessly.
  • More than 300 top blogs from the worlds of business, technology, sports, entertainment, and politics, including BoingBoing, Slashdot, TechCrunch, ESPN’s Bill Simmons, The Onion, Michelle Malkin, and The Huffington Post—all updated wirelessly throughout the day.
  • Lighter and thinner than a typical paperback; weighs only 10.3 ounces.
  • Holds over 200 titles.
  • Long battery life. Leave wireless on and recharge approximately every other day. Turn wireless off and read for a week or more before recharging. Fully recharges in 2 hours.
  • Unlike WiFi, Kindle utilizes the same high-speed data network (EVDO) as advanced cell phones—so you never have to locate a hotspot.
  • No monthly wireless bills, service plans, or commitments—we take care of the wireless delivery so you can simply click, buy, and read.
  • Includes free wireless access to the planet’s most exhaustive and up-to-date encyclopedia—Wikipedia.org.
  • Email your Word documents and pictures (.JPG, .GIF, .BMP, .PNG) to Kindle for easy on-the-go viewing.
  • Included in the box: Kindle wireless reader, Book cover, Power adapter, USB 2.0 cable

 

RECYCLE! June 23, 2008

Filed under: art, music and books — lniggl @ 8:16 pm

greatgreengoods.comrescued.jpg
Hand-printed notebook by British brand Sukie. Made out of 100% rescued recycled paper. We all need a place to write down our deepest thought and wildest dreams.
$19.99 at Mod Cloth

 

recycled vinyl record clock June 23, 2008

Filed under: art, music and books — lniggl @ 8:15 pm

hautenature.blogspot.com – I like the more unusual looking records that The Grateful Thread uses for their repurposed clocks.