How to Fix Disney

Newsweek has an article on Disney’s financial problems and how management is approaching them, and Cory Doctorow has some intersetig ideas on how Disney could turn things around.

Anywhere, here’s my grand plan on how Disney can stop mismanaging its licensed properties. Everyone at the company should be forced to sit and watch Piglet’s Big Movie. I had to sit through this sugar coated piece of crap with my daughter, so it’s the least the folks at Disney could do. Plus, it is a perfect example of just how badly Disney has mismanaged what should be a killer franchise.

Like everything else, though, they’ve just run Pooh through the corporate meat grinder until the characters are indistinguishable from every other product line geared toward younger kids.

Installing Movable Type

Since I had nothing else to do today (not!), I figured why not go ahead and try to install Movable Type on my laptop.

Why the heck would I want MT on my laptop? Well, because I wanted a weblog I could easily access, post to and search that was only locally available (i.e. for things that I don’t want to risk putting on a publically available server like this). I have Radio Userland installed on my machine, but it didn’t have the features I needed.

I was very impressed at how easy it was to install. First I downloaded and installed Abyss Web Server which has a very small footprint. After making sure I had configured Zone Alarm to prevent anyone from the outside from ever accessing it, I downloaded the MT install package.

The actual process of installing and getting the Perl script to work took about 15 minutes. I actually spent another 15 minutes trying to configure out how to set up an alias with Abyss to hold the static image and CSS files that MT uses.

And then I was up and running with a local install of MT. MT isn’t as powerful as Conversant, but it will do the job for what I plan on using it for. Six Apart did an excellent job on the install documentation.

Mbeki Continues to Adopt the U.N. Approach

Thabo Mbeki has really done an excellent job of adopting the United Nations approach to wars, ethnic conflict and human rights violations in Africa. Just ignore the proble, court dictators, and justify the unjustifiable 90 percent of the time, and then once or twice a year make a pretty speech at an international conference.

Whitewash, rinse, and repeat.

Source:

Mbeki: End conflict in Africa. The Natal Witness (South Africa), May 26, 2003.

When Is PETA Going to Sue the CDFE?

Okay, here’s something I genuinely don’t understand — why hasn’t People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals sued Ron Arnold and the Center for the Defense of Free Enterprise for libel yet? This is hard to understand for two reasons.

First, PETA is hardly afraid to file lawsuits. Just last February, for example, PETA said it would sue the state of New Jersey after PETA activists Dan Shannon and Jay Kelly hit a deer in that state while driving a PETA-owned vehicle. One news organization I wrote an op-ed about PETA for made me go over it with a fine-tooth comb because of PETA’s perceived litigiousness. This is not an organization known for holding their lawyers at bay.

Second, Ron Arnold has said a number of things which PETA and its attorneys say are patently untrue and would thereby be libelous. For example, here’s Arnold describing PETA in no uncertain terms for the New Jersey Herald earlier this month,

We believe the evidence shows that PETA’s leaders and personnel have been involved in criminal activities of such a magnitude for such a length of time that they have no legal right to a tax exemption.

Or how about its filing with the IRS last year where Arnold and CDFE asserted,

PETA openly and actively induces and encourages unlawful acts . . .

Maybe PETA agrees with Arnold that it actively encourages criminal acts. But no, PETA attorney Jeff Kerr tells the New Jersey Herald,

That is completely ludicrous and they’ve known about it for a long time. Everything it [PETA] does is directly related to trying to help end the suffering and exploitation of animals. Everything we do is consistent with the charitable mission of PETA.

Well, if Arnold’s assertions are really that ludicrous, it’s a bit odd that PETA doesn’t seek recourse in the courts through a libel action. Either they really know Arnold’s statement is, in fact, accurate, or they’re too busy suing states when their own activists hit deer to bother.

Source:

Animal rights group attacked; PETA integrity under question. Pat Mindos, New Jersey Herald, May 6, 2003.

More anti-Google FUD

It is odd for Dave Winer to continue to insist that webloggers have an obligation to make sure they are factually correct, when he regularly points to all sorts of nonsense. For example, he continues his passive-aggressive approach toward Google by linking to this article in which Jeremy Zawodny complains about aspects of Google’s page rank algorithm. But Zawodny’s problems are ones that have been reported repeatedly by weblogs and really come down to the often-bizarre things that can temporarily happen to a site while Google is updating its index.

Zawodny writes,

It has already happened. And the results are less than ideal. A Google search for “jeremy” now [sometimes] yields something far different than what it used to. Notice that Google now believes that my home page is more important than my blog. That is, for lack of a better term, retarded.

When I do a Google search on “jeremy” the first link is to Zawodny’s site. But it is not surprising that sometimes a different link comes up. This happens all the time to AnimalRights.Net when Google is updating its index. Usually the site sits at #3, but sometimes temporarily drops to 4 or 5, and occasionally falls off entirely. Such problems appear to be an artifact of the way Google updates its index and propagates such updates to its various servers.

Some of the posters who comment on Zawodny’s claim also put forth a further claim, that Google is no longer crawling new pages on their sites. I don’t know how Google decides how often it should crawl sites, but it crawls AnimalRights.Net very frequently (a bit too frequently, actually). For example, just a few days after I wrote an article that mentioned a California Court Commissioner, that article is already the third link returned on a search on that commissioner’s name.

The really odd thing here is that with no evidence whatsoever, people are running around making claims that Google wants to purge or reduce the importance of weblogs in its database. Given the paucity of evidence, that is absurd. Plus it would be a huge mistake.

The situation is actually the reverse — Google is free riding on the backs of individual webloggers who are collectively performing a function not unlike Google’s automated news service. By indexing all of that content and then using page rank and other methods to make it easy to drill down through, Google has a win-win situation that benefits it as well as visitors to the search engine.

The only people who seem to think this is a bad thing are some of the traditional media folks who are pissed that some weblogger comes up first in a Google search rather than the New York Times or some other such site. But the fact is that the weblogger link is likely more useful than the NYT link would be anyway (when was the last time an NYT story linked to criticism of said story in another newspaper, for example — something that happens all the time in weblog land).

PETA's David Duke Ad Declined by Billboard Company

A billboard advertising company in Texas has turned down People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals’ attempt to run an ad featuring David Duke with a photoshopped milk mustache. Duke is currently serving time in a federal prison in Big Spring, Texas, for mail and tax fraud.

Last November PETA ran two billboards featuring the ad in Duke’s home state of Louisiana. The ad features Duke in front of a Confederate flag with the copy,

Got (lactose) intolerance? The white stuff ain’t the right stuff

As I said last year, this campaign is indecipherably bizarre. On the other hand, it shouldn’t be too surprising that PETA would choose someone like Duke to feature in an ad.

Both PETA and Duke mastered the art of trying to put a respectable face on their respective movements, while at the same time encouraging and even funding more extremists elements in their midst.

Sources:

Jailed David Duke won’t get milk mustache. Associated Press, May 22, 2003.

White Sheet Won?t Come Off Ad Featuring David Duke, Says Billboard Company. People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals, Press Release, May 22, 2003.