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2,361 result(s) for "Whitney, Daisy"
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When you were here
When his mother dies three weeks before his high school graduation, Danny goes to Tokyo, where his mother had been going for cancer treatments, to learn about the city his mother loved and, with the help of his friends, come to terms with her death.
Spinning the Web on the TV Set
The media ecosystem of Internet video, mobile entertainment and traditional television is turning into a mad, beautiful mess where everyone is a competitor and everyone is a customer. The newest entrant to the wild rumpus is Clearleap, an Atlanta-based startup that is kind of like a Brightcove for television. The company launched officially last week with a handful of unnamed cable and telco operators as initial customers. They'll use the company's Web-based technology not only to bring Internet video content to the television, but also to deliver more traditional local and national programming.
Getting Through Tough Times
In an interview, Marc Goldstein, CEO, North America, GroupM, and the chairman of the 4A's Media Policy Committee, talked about the challenges the media business faces in this economic climate. Multiple businesses and industries in the economy are all having difficulties and challenges, whether banking, automotive or retail. This is not something isolated to the ad industry. Clients are sharpening their pencils and determining if they want to continue with spending of the past, and there are more and more choices for advertisers to spend money, whether it be the traditional side of television, magazines and radio or the entire digital side and video side and opportunities in search.
Can iPhone Save Local TV News?
Last week ABC News started offering text and video reports from the network and its owned stations for free on iPhones, joining CBS News, which lets citizen journalists upload videos of news on the street using their iPhones with the Eyemobile application. One of the reasons news organizations are targeting the popular mobile phone is because of cord-cutters. Even if the iPhone generation becomes local news consumers, don't expect stations to have so many live trucks, reporters and boots on the ground in the future.
Election Night: The Plane Truth
The author was flying over \"ruby red\" Utah last Tuesday when the television networks called the presidential election for Sen Barack Obama. But she was one of the few on the flight who tuned in that early. As the evening progressed, more passengers flipped on their televisions. Three more times that night, the passengers cheered together -- when Sen Obama first took the stage in Chicago for his victory speech, at the beginning of his \"Yes we can\" refrain and when the speech ended.