Thoughts about writing, journalism, contemporary media and marketing...and my travels, and life.
Monday, August 15, 2011
Welcome, new students! Well, new to me, anyway...
Starting in September, I will welcome two new Marketing classes of Bachelor of Arts in Management students at the University of Redlands. Well, they've been students for awhile, working alongside their classmates in their respective cohorts, but it will be my first time to meet them. I am looking forward to it: great text, lots of current issues to explore, and real-time applications and exercises to work on together. I will post from time to time, as ideas surface or conversations provoke further exploration!
Thursday, January 7, 2010
Hiatus to work on master's degree!
Not teaching for awhile, so I can concentrate on completing my master's degree. Taking a hiatus from this blog.
Be back in 2011!
Be back in 2011!
Friday, September 25, 2009
Sunday, September 13, 2009
Outbursts 2
Add to this week's list:
Kanye West cutting off Taylor Swift during her acceptance of the "best video" award at MTV's VMA telecast...he jumped in front of her, he grabbed her mic, and said that "beyonce had the best video ever"...even Beyonce, with the camera trained on her face, was shocked.
Rude. Uncalled for.
Kanye West cutting off Taylor Swift during her acceptance of the "best video" award at MTV's VMA telecast...he jumped in front of her, he grabbed her mic, and said that "beyonce had the best video ever"...even Beyonce, with the camera trained on her face, was shocked.
Rude. Uncalled for.
Outbursts
This week's Boneheaded Outbursts awards go to:
Senator Joe Wilson (Yells "you lie!" to the President during Wednesday night's health care speech); even McCain thought it was disrespectful Postscript: Wilson lines his reelection pockets and signs autographs following apology to Obama
Serena Williams (Profanity penalty earns defending U.S. Open Champion loss at match point)
Bob McDonnell (Virginia gubernatorial candidate drops F-bomb during candidate interview on radio)
Senator Joe Wilson (Yells "you lie!" to the President during Wednesday night's health care speech); even McCain thought it was disrespectful Postscript: Wilson lines his reelection pockets and signs autographs following apology to Obama
Serena Williams (Profanity penalty earns defending U.S. Open Champion loss at match point)
Bob McDonnell (Virginia gubernatorial candidate drops F-bomb during candidate interview on radio)
Thursday, September 3, 2009
Diane Sawyer and Katie Couric hold two of three flagship network newscast slots
For the first time, two of the three solo anchors on the prestigious network evening newscasts will be women, according to a recent National Public Radio report about Diane Sawyer's ascent to the World News evening anchor slot for ABC.
Charlie Gibson is leaving the post he took three years ago, after a long career in broadcast journalism including ABC's morning news show slot co-hosting Good Morning America with Joan Lunden. Gibson retires at 66. Sawyer starts her job in January 2010 at the age of 63.
When I saw the "Frost/Nixon" movie recently, I was tickled to learn that the blonde helping prepare Nixon for his interviews with talk show host David Frost was Diane Sawyer. I hadn't paid much attention in 1972 when Watergate actually happened, being only 12 at the time.
In any event, hats off to Ms. Sawyer at this auspicious achievement in her career, having risen through the ranks of the male-dominated broadcast news world long before it became fashionable for women to be there.
Charlie Gibson is leaving the post he took three years ago, after a long career in broadcast journalism including ABC's morning news show slot co-hosting Good Morning America with Joan Lunden. Gibson retires at 66. Sawyer starts her job in January 2010 at the age of 63.
When I saw the "Frost/Nixon" movie recently, I was tickled to learn that the blonde helping prepare Nixon for his interviews with talk show host David Frost was Diane Sawyer. I hadn't paid much attention in 1972 when Watergate actually happened, being only 12 at the time.
In any event, hats off to Ms. Sawyer at this auspicious achievement in her career, having risen through the ranks of the male-dominated broadcast news world long before it became fashionable for women to be there.
Friday, July 17, 2009
Walter Cronkite dies at 92

from EW.com...
CBS newsman Walter Cronkite, legendarily known as "The Most Trusted Man in America," passed away today at his home in New York at the age of 92. He had reportedly been suffering from cerebrovascular disease.
With the face of a small-town druggist, an easily-parodied delivery that was both herky-jerky and orotund (“As-tronaut Juhn Glenn...”), and a mien of utter seriousness, Walter Cronkite was the acknowledged king of the golden era of network news. Serving as the managing editor of the CBS Evening News between 1962 and 1981, Cronkite projected a professional authority and personal integrity that invested him with a credibility no contemporary journalist, operating in a more skeptical era, possesses. When Cronkite ended a broadcast with his signature “And that’s the way it is,” neither he nor his audience doubted that it was true.
Born in 1916 in St. Joseph, Missouri, Cronkite entered journalism as an undergraduate. But it was during World War II, as a reporter for UPI, that Cronkite first distinguished himself. He sent classic dispatches from battlefields in North Africa, Normandy, and from the belly of a B-17 bomber over Germany, and parachuted with airborne troops into Holland. He joined CBS News in 1950 and soon distinguished himself with his coverage of the Korean War. “He had that special quality that television demands,” David Halberstam wrote in The Powers That Be, “that audiences sense, and that is somehow intangible -- he had weight, he projected a kind of authority.”
Thursday, July 16, 2009
Social Media Today Blog has important message
This blog post frames the question:
Will Google WAVE Eliminate the Need for PR as Media Relations?
Check it out!
Will Google WAVE Eliminate the Need for PR as Media Relations?
Check it out!
Sunday, July 5, 2009
Take a look at this vid-kid
I absolutely adore the expression on this kid's face when the company guy hands him the cardboard truck. This is one of my favorite TV commercials right now; it never fails to get my attention if I am multi-tasking with the TV on.
Ally Bank is making a play in the market, talking about being honest (beyond usual "fine print" tactics) in their practices, yadda yadda yadda.
I really haven't figured out what they are trying to say, but the kids' facial expression at the end of the spot speaks volumes!
Ally Bank is making a play in the market, talking about being honest (beyond usual "fine print" tactics) in their practices, yadda yadda yadda.
I really haven't figured out what they are trying to say, but the kids' facial expression at the end of the spot speaks volumes!
Friday, July 3, 2009
Cynthia Wright of The Wright Image gives back
Click on the headline above to read the latest news about friend and former colleague at California Baptist University, Cynthia Wright.
(Thanks, PressKitn!)
(Thanks, PressKitn!)
Sunday, June 21, 2009
Cell phone revolution: people of Iran "beg to differ" with Ayatollah
It's astonishing and certainly an historic moment in our world history, where hundreds if not thousands of Iranian citizens are videotaping or sending SMS messages to points around the globe giving us glimpses of the post-election chaos in Tehran.
Demonstrations. Police crackdowns. Violence. Death.
The theocracy no longer meets the needs of the people. It is clear they are unwilling to accept the "holy ordained" edict of the Ayatollah that the election results stand. The people of Iran want change: the economy, the current leadership, the integration into a greater world society. It is a nation divided. There is no outside nationality trying to take power or change things...pray for this nation, and its difficult time of change.
"A nation divided cannot stand," we learned in our own American history lessons. It is not about religion. It is about freedom to choose. In a pluralistic society, we must allow one another space, and respect, despite our differences--no matter how emotional we are about them.
Coverage: almost.at
Global Voices
"Here goes everybody," by Clay Shirky
Demonstrations. Police crackdowns. Violence. Death.
The theocracy no longer meets the needs of the people. It is clear they are unwilling to accept the "holy ordained" edict of the Ayatollah that the election results stand. The people of Iran want change: the economy, the current leadership, the integration into a greater world society. It is a nation divided. There is no outside nationality trying to take power or change things...pray for this nation, and its difficult time of change.
"A nation divided cannot stand," we learned in our own American history lessons. It is not about religion. It is about freedom to choose. In a pluralistic society, we must allow one another space, and respect, despite our differences--no matter how emotional we are about them.
Coverage: almost.at
Global Voices
"Here goes everybody," by Clay Shirky
Saturday, June 20, 2009
Seeking Ashton Kutcher
Okay, they say it's impossible...how can a tiny chapter of professional public relations practitioners (forgive the alliteration) get megaproducer/star/celebrity and husband of Demi Moore to Riverside to speak/make us laugh at our annual awards ceremony? And, saddest of all...we can't even set up an episode of "Punk'd" to see how Ashton would react when we offered him only $500 to show up for 20 or 30 minutes one hour east of Los Angeles where he lives?
I Tweeted this morning that I need help reaching the famous funny guy (and prolific Tweeter). Stay tuned...can six degrees (more like a thousand in this case, by the time you add up the entourage he no doubt has protecting him from pedestrian folk like me) work? We need Ashton to wow us on Oct. 21, 2009. We also wouldn't mind him giving away a Nikon camera - that would be the PR coup of the decade for our 80-member club!
Let me know if you can pass on my request to Ashton, thanks! :)
I Tweeted this morning that I need help reaching the famous funny guy (and prolific Tweeter). Stay tuned...can six degrees (more like a thousand in this case, by the time you add up the entourage he no doubt has protecting him from pedestrian folk like me) work? We need Ashton to wow us on Oct. 21, 2009. We also wouldn't mind him giving away a Nikon camera - that would be the PR coup of the decade for our 80-member club!
Let me know if you can pass on my request to Ashton, thanks! :)
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