Susan Boyle CD review: Talent abundant, but less evident on disc
I Dreamed a Dream Susan Boyle (Columbia) TWO AND A HALF STARS In April, Susan Boyle walked up to the microphone of the British reality show "Brit...
I Dreamed a Dream Susan Boyle (Columbia) TWO AND A HALF STARS In April, Susan Boyle walked up to the microphone of the British reality show "Brit...
AP | STEPHANIE REITZ | Posted 11.23.2009 | New York
When Henry Spelman found out he'd won a Rhodes Scholarship, his first call was to his girlfriend. To share the good news, of course, but also to see w...
WorldFocus.org | WorldFocus.org | Posted 11.20.2009 | Home
Gideon Rose of Foreign Affairs Magazine and James Rubin of Columbia University's School of International and Public Affairs join Daljit Dhaliwal to di...
Posted 11.19.2009 | Impact
Many know Shakira for her Latin-inspired pop songs and hip gyrations. But the singer was subdued and earnest in a recent op-ed in the Economist, where...
Bronx News Network | Bronx News Network | Posted 11.16.2009 | Home
The Bronx Ink, an online publication written by students at Columbia University's Graduate School of Journalism, recently published an extensive piece...
AP | BETH J. HARPAZ | Posted 11.16.2009 | New York
NEW YORK (Associated Press) - Jeremiah Miller calls the time Barack Obama spent in New York "the lost years," because that period from 1981 to 1985 is...
MSNBC | MSNBC | Posted 11.12.2009 | Home
Frederic Mishkin, former Federal Reserve Board Governor and a Columbia University economics professor, discusses Sen. Dodd's financial reform bill and...
Joan Konner | Posted 11.06.2009 | Books
Nothing exists. Nothing is an essential presence in our lives. Paradoxical? Yes. Illogical and irrational? Yes. Yet to ignore Nothing is to deny our road to renewal.
WorldFocus.org | WorldFocus.org | Posted 11.06.2009 | Home
This week, Daljit Dhaliwal speaks with Carla Robbins, deputy editorial page editor of The New York Times, and James Rubin, adjunct professor at Columb...
The Aspen Times | Aspen Times | Posted 11.06.2009 | Home
Jon Pittenger Aspen, CO Colorado Jon Pittenger of Glenwood Springs passed away Nov. 3, 2009. He was 50.Jon was born in Columbia, Mo. on J...
Glenwood Springs Post Independent | Post Independent | Posted 11.06.2009 | Home
Jon Pittenger Post Independent Glenwood Springs, CO Colorado Jon Pittenger of Glenwood Springs passed away Nov. 3, 2009. He was 50. Jon w...
Bronx News Network | Bronx News Network | Posted 10.29.2009 | Home
Michelle Obama and Jill Biden were in the Bronx yesterday to watch the Yankees game. Beforehand, they visited a veterans center in Kingsbridge Heights...
AP | LAURA IMPELLIZZERI | Posted 10.26.2009 | Home
— "The Curse of the Mogul: What's Wrong With the World's Leading Media Companies" (Portfolio, 272 pages, $26.95), by Jonathan A. Knee, Bruce C. Greenwald and Ava Seave: For each of the world's many now-faltering media conglomerates, there are thousands of former writers, artists, actors, managers, sales people and other employees, plus countless investors, consultants and fans.
So there's no shortage of backseat drivers nattering like disillusioned lovers as media companies crash. The dispassionate critique from Columbia University economist and business professor Greenwald, business instructor and former investment banker Knee and media consultant Seave, which grew out of a class at Columbia's business school, contrasts with most recent commentary.
Reviewing the financial and stock market performance by top media companies – GE/NBC, Disney, Viacom, Time Warner, Vivendi, News Corp. and other conglomerates that produce and distribute information and entertainment – the authors conclude the companies have fallen short of the stock market, "significantly and relentlessly," for more than a decade.
They see a simple cause: decision-making in which efficiency is almost taboo and the fundamentals of economics and accounting are frequently suspended in favor of historic status as first mover or a belief unrelated businesses will suddenly experience "convergence."
"Without drastic action," the authors warn, "There is little reason to think that performance during the next 10 years will be any better."
Michael Henry Adams | Posted 10.29.2009 | New York
Another trip to the fabulous River House overlooking the East River.
Racked | Racked | Posted 10.20.2009 | Home
Via Flickr/Angela Rutherford In the new stretch of retail and residential that is Columbus Village, between 97th and 100th Streets, Upper West Side...
AP | COLLEEN LONG | Posted 10.14.2009 | Home
NEW YORK — Julia Stiles first played the role of life-wrecker Carol in "Oleanna" when she was in college, and the play, about a confused student who accuses her professor of sexual impropriety, stuck with her well beyond the final curtain.
She never felt that she had gotten the part quite right. Now she has a do-over, in a Broadway revival with Bill Pullman.
"I love this play," says Stiles, who took time off from Columbia University to perform the role on London's West End in 2004. "But I always felt I didn't quite get it right, and I really welcomed the chance to get back into it."
Five years later, she is reprising the role in the David Mamet play opposite Pullman who plays John, the object of Carol's ire. The play runs 80 minutes with no intermission, and the story makes the audience twist and squirm with confusion as the heat and intensity rise until the final most shocking moment.
Now 28 and no longer a student – she graduated from Columbia in 2005 – Stiles has a different perspective on both the two-character drama and her role.
AP | SEANNA ADCOX | Posted 10.14.2009 | Media
COLUMBIA, S.C. — South Carolina pardoned syndicated radio host Tom Joyner's great-uncles Wednesday, nearly a century after they were sent to the electric chair for the 1913 murder of a Confederate Army veteran.
Officials believe the two men are the first in the state to be posthumously pardoned in a capital murder case.
Black landowners Thomas and Meeks Griffin were executed 94 years ago after a jury convicted them of killing 73-year-old John Lewis, a wealthy white veteran living in Blackstock, a Chester County town 40 miles north of Columbia. Two other black men were also put to death for the crime.
"This won't bring them back, but this will bring closure. I hope now that they rest in peace," Joyner said. "This is a good day."
Joyner, who lives in Dallas, and his attorney made a presentation to the state parole and pardon board on Wednesday, then left the room while the board voted. Family members who flew in for the hearing included his wife and sons, of Dallas, and brother and his family, from Jackson, Miss.
Michael Kubin | Posted 10.13.2009 | Comedy
What will President Obama say in his Nobel Peace Prize lecture? Eleven possible quibbles, questions and quotations: you decide.
Curbed | Curbed | Posted 10.13.2009 | Home
[Photo at right via The New York Times.] We're not sure what crazy secrets Columbia University is planning to house in the labs of its new science ...
The Huffington Post | Posted 10.12.2009 | Entertainment
NEW YORK - The first song from the upcoming Michael Jackson music documentary "This Is It" made it's debut online early Monday morning on MichaelJacks...
WorldFocus.org | WorldFocus.org | Posted 10.06.2009 | Home
In August, Worldfocus web producer Ben Piven traveled to the 2009 Arirang Games in Pyongyang, North Korea, with a point-and-shoot camera. A North Kore...
Pulitzer Center. | Pulitzer Center | Posted 10.02.2009 | Home
Micah Fink, for the Pulitzer CenterNumbers, statistics and dates are notoriously difficult elements in any television script. Most people find it hard...
AP | MALCOLM RITTER | Posted 09.30.2009 | Home
NEW YORK — A new study suggests retired National Football League players may have a high rate of Alzheimer's disease or other memory problems.
The telephone survey asked if the retirees had ever been diagnosed with dementia, Alzheimer's disease or other memory-related disease. Nearly 2 percent of the former players ages 30 to 49 said yes. That's 19 times the rate for the same age group in the general population.
For retirees over 50, the rate was about five times higher.
Lead author David Weir emphasized the results don't show football causes memory problems, only that the risk is worth studying. The study of more than 1,000 ex-players was performed by the University of Michigan at the request of the NFL and its Player Care Foundation.
AP | RYAN J. FOLEY | Posted 11.23.2009 | Home
One best-selling book advocating fresh, local foods is shaking up America's Dairyland.
Students across University of Wisconsin-Madison's campus, organic grocers, scientists, and dairy farmers large and small have jumped into the debate on how food is produced and eaten. The discussions started last month when the university began giving Michael Pollan's book, "In Defense of Food," free to all incoming freshmen and school officials urged professors to use it in class.
"I have not seen the students this excited about something in years," Irwin Goodman, a horticulture professor who is vice dean of the College of Agricultural and Life Sciences said of the buzz on campus about Pollan's field-to-table philosophies.
The book urges readers to "eat food, not too much, mostly plants" and criticizes food companies and scientists for replacing traditional foods with unhealthier, highly processed substitutes and confusing consumers with health claims.
Pollan's work has been used on college campuses from the University of California-Berkeley, where he is a journalism professor, to Columbia University in New York City for courses ranging from science journalism to environmental politics. But the program at UW-Madison is unique because the book and related topics are being discussed everywhere from French and political science courses to an exhibit on the history of food. And Pollan is to speak at the 17,000-seat Kohl Center Thursday in the liberal college town.
NJ.com | NJ.com | Posted 11.23.2009 | Home