US – Saturday, November 7
Military base is site of soldier’s rampage
An Army psychiatrist who had treated soldiers wounded in foreign wars opened fire with two handguns on soldiers preparing for foreign deployment at the Fort Hood U.S. Army post in Texas on Thursday, killing 12 and wounding 30 others.
 
Sante D’Orazio: You can’t hide from this lens
With Sante D’Orazio behind the camera, celebrities will do the craziest things. Famous faces from Angelina Jolie to Pamela Anderson have posed for the photographer. Now D’Orazio presents his favorite photos from the past 10 years in a new book, “Barely Private.”
 
A wee little way to try to get famous
There are hundreds of ways to get your name in the paper: appear on reality TV, get knocked up by a reality star, film yourself while getting knocked up by a reality star ... the list is endless. But here’s a new one: A model named Yvette Monet has put a restraining order on ex-boyfriend Verne Troyer, according to RadarOnline.
 
A ‘Carol’ that hits some high notes
REVIEW. There is something creepy about the way Robert Zemeckis makes movies. In his last three films — first “The Polar Express,” then “Beowulf,” and now “A Christmas Carol”— the director has employed a hybrid method that crosses live action with animation. He no doubt thinks the work is pioneering, but “pioneering” usually has a positive connotation.
 
Wal-Mart: $20 meal for 8 people
NEW YORK. Wal-Mart has cut prices on turkeys and other Thanksgiving staples. U.S. stores began yesterday selling whole, 12-pound turkeys for 40 cents a pound. That’s a third of last Thanksgiving’s average price.
 
Get your groove back in Jamaica
Haunted colonial mansions, triathlons and motivational theme parks — not things you think of when you think of Jamaica? Think again, mon. Jamaica is fast becoming the health and activity capital of the Caribbean. Feel like you need to recharge rather than merely relax? With direct flights on JetBlue launching in January and locals that welcome you with open arms, you’ll be getting your groove back in no time.
 
Updated 22:58, August the 2nd, 2007
 

Kalan: Newspapers are information’s horse & buggy

A major shake-up in the newspaper business has been all over the media, which can only mean one thing: Not much else is going on this week. Otherwise, why bother telling us that media magnate Rupert Murdoch has purchased Dow Jones (which is apparently the company that publishes The Wall Street Journal and not a stout old man in suspenders, as I’d always assumed)? Many fear that Murdoch’s sensational style of journalism could destroy the credibility of the Journal, the premier source of news for the financial world and people who wish that photographs were never invented. But those media worrywarts are forgetting a very important fact: Nobody reads newspapers anymore.

It’s true that for many years, newspapers were the only way to get the news. But that was a different time, when people were less focused on up-to-the-minute information and more focused on not being eaten by dinosaurs. A printed paper filled with day-old stories worked just fine back then. Ever since the Ice Age, however, and the introduction of technologies such as television, the Internet and mental telepathy, newspaper sales have plummeted. As this very copy of Metro shows, the only way to get most people to read a newspaper is to literally force it into their hands. Even then they usually just flip to the brilliant Friday humor column, laugh uproariously and then throw the rest away.

I’ll admit something’s wrong with Murdoch’s purchase of The Wall Street Journal, but it has nothing to do with sensationalism. It’s that he’s now involved in one of history’s most shameful invasions of privacy. As I understand it, a journal is meant to be a secret place where Wall Street can record its most personal thoughts, feelings and fantasies. That anyone is reading Wall Street’s journal at all is rude. For them to distribute it for others to laugh at is simply outrageous.

In the end, Rupert Murdoch can’t destroy the American newspaper because there will always be a place for it in our society. Though obsolete as a medium for news, opinions, movie reviews, cartoons, crossword puzzles or classified advertisements, there’s still one thing it can do better than the Internet ever can: Wrap up fish. Quell your anxieties, newspapers. Unless Apple comes out with some sort of computerized iWrap fish containment system — which would be pretty awesome — I think you’re going to be all right.

Elliott Kalan is a producer for “The Daily Show with Jon Stewart.” He co-hosts the online comedy show “Fist City.”

 
 
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MMMpod
The November MMMpod features interviews and music with a band called Girls, a band of girls called Supercute, and a supercute vampire. Yes, listeners, we have Pattinson!



 
Metro Life Panel