No time to post today, anyway Loren says it all. Check the comments at the 1938 Media site. Amusing.
Monday morning down.
Definite drama brewing as competing media mogul families duke it out with a $5 billion pot in the middle and a
jewel brand as the prize. It’s not the Montagues and Capulets, although there is no love lost between the two families and the battle can be Shakespearian in proportion. That’s what we have this week with Rupert Murdoch meeting the Bancrofts today to slap the Aussie woo on the current keepers of Dow Jones. See my analysis on Strumpette Week in Review 6-3-07. Kekst is representing the Bancroft family. Howard Rubenstein has represented Murdoch, as well as Murdoch’s New York Post, for decades.
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Dig into the June issue of Blogger & Podcaster magazine. Not only is it the first and only magazine for our industry (it premiered last month), it is the first magazine I actually enjoy reading online, thanks to the magazine-reading software. We also now have an industry association, International Blogging & New Media Association (IBNMA), dedicated to education, collaboration, communication, and advocacy. See page 45 of the magazine for details. Miles Durfee is president. He can be reached at miles@bloggerandpodcaster.com
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I have been exploring the virtual lanes and back alleys of outside.in and I am impressed how they narrow the
web down to your surrounding neighborhoods. I found the UptownFlavor blog that has news and events of my neighborhood near Harlem, plus locally produced videos. The UpperGreenSide blog has news about ‘green’ initiatives concerning the Upper East & Upper West sides of Manhattan, including sustainable food, clean transportation, energy efficiency, and waste reduction. Seems like a great way to connect with neighbors and to find fun and educational local events.
Google everywhere. Caveman crib. Architects yawn.
Google this, Google that. Google to add ‘universal’ search results. According to MediaWeek, Google will pull information from across the Web in all forms - web site links, images, video, blogs, maps or even from books - then present the results on a single page. There is also a new, updated version of Google analytics for your blog or website.
Fifty-five percent of global executives either currently use blogs as a business tool or say they plan to implement them in the next 12 months, according to a study by research organization Melcrum. Survey results indicate that 63% of executives use or plan to use online video, 43% podcasts, 51% RSS, and 41% social networks. Seventy-one percent of respondents say “improved employee engagement” is the top benefit of social media for their organization, while 59% name “improved internal collaboration” and 47% “creating a two-way dialogue with senior executives.” See press release.
PRBlogNews New Media Lab Introduces Cruxy
Brooklyn rules. Yes, we display a slight (read huge) bias toward anything coming out of Brooklyn, but Cruxy is truly reason to celebrate.
Evangelical entrepreneurship is alive and thriving and multiplying in Brooklyn as Cruxy co-founders Nathan Freitas and Jon Oakes (left) talk it over in front of a wall in Williamsburg.
What are they saying?
They are saying that Cruxy offers marketing, monetization and performance tools for digital creators – filmmakers, musicians or any kind of artists.
Monday Morning 5/7/07 NYC
Rise and shine. Be sure to check out the Week in Review I pen on Strumpette and then come back here and listen to music (see right column below in expanding “Music” section)
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Birth of an industry. Publisher Larry Genkin (right) tells PRBlogNews that the reaction to the inaugural issue of Blogger & Podcaster magazine has been staggering. “I feel like I am inside a tornado,” said an exultant Genkin.
“We’ve had over 200 news stories written about us in the last week and the resulting traffic caused our website to crash. Our readership is 3x beyond our guaranteed rate base of 20,000, which is making our advertisers happy. We’ve got subscribers on every continent now too,” said Genkin.
Monday Morning Coming Down
I am pleased to be doing the “Week In Review” column on Strumpette, starting today, with analysis of two of our favorite subjects, Edelman and Wal-Mart. Check it out.
We have our own magazine: Go to Blogger & Podcaster now to get your free inaugural, online edition. You can read the magazine in a cool reader online format that makes it fun and replicates the print copy. Robert Scoble, ubiquitous uber blogger, is on the cover, there are “how to” features, reviews on new technology, event previews, and ads that talk to you. Of course there are several podcasts to support the print and online copy. Congratulations to publisher Larry Genkin for jumping out there with a much needed new mag.
Rubel gets serious. A chastened Steve Rubel took a few days off fom his blog last week to do some sans-blog soul searching after a dustup with PC Mag editor Jim Louderback.  A 4/23 post on the The Participation Ladder sparks discssion of how many people in the blogosphere are inactive and spectators, as opposed to joiners and creators. In response to Rubel’s twitter about office dress etiquette: wear your shirt out on dress-down Friday, Steve. Be a wild man.
Yankee go home. Where are the Yankees going in two years? See New Yankee Stadium Construction for progress on the new Yankee Stadium on the site across the street from the old stadium. I hope we don’t have to wait two years for the Yankees to show some new life and start winning ball games.Â
Podcast expo set. The Podcast & New Media Expo is set for September 28-30 in Ontario, California, for a very reasonable $249 for full access to the entire event.
crayon does Coke. crayon has launched its “Virtual Thirst” competition for Coca-Cola and in the process sparked robust discussion on its social media press release (SMR). More on this later in the week.
“C” List Blogger And Proud Of It
OK, I admit to pangs of competitive jealousy to join the “B” list, but what’s wrong with hanging with the riff-raff on the “C” list? PRBlogNews is in the “middle authority” group, according to Technorati, with 10-99 blogs linking in the last six months, placing us on the cusp of the second quartile of the C list. See news on this from Kineda - a decidedly “A” list blogebrity.
To put this in perspective, Steve Rubel  (top “A” list PR/marketing blogger) probably has more links in to his blog in an hour than I do in a month. I have many rationalizations (excuses) for this, of course. Although PRBlogNews has existed in one form or another for a couple of years (the average blog has been in existence for 228 days), I revamped this blog six weeks ago and began blogging in earnest then. Consistency and longevity are key components to a popular blog.Â
Big greasy bears ripping your arms off …

Greasy limb ripping bears later … First there’s Strumpette, proving once again that she is the best thing going in the PR Blogosphere (is that a dubious sub-genre, or what?) with the inside info on the imminent demise of Edelman’s Me2Revolution, complete with juicy details like salaries for Steve Rubel, Phil Gomes and others in the Edelman PR Blog Mob. And there’s more … is King Richard Edelman’s $1 million investment to fund the start-up Revolution all but dried up? The end of the big-hype PR blog era is nigh and Richard is faced with the big question everybody wants the answer to: Can you make money at this new media PR 2.0 stuff? And, incidentially, whats is this PR 2.0 stuff, and is PR even capable of doing it, whatever it might be? What is King Richard to do, queries Amanda in Is the revolution over?Â
Classic Strumpette – decidedly satirical, anchored in serious investigative journalism, coupled with a dash of bravado and a lot of daring. She’s out to eviscerate and expose the “lying profession” of PR and some established PR bloggers clearly don’t like her insinuations or her methods. A couple of weeks ago she skewered Ronn Torossian of 5WPR, now King Richard, bankroller of the Social Media Revolution. Oh, Amanda, you are such a tough mistress.Â
I got hip to Strumpette from a headhunter in Peter Luger’s in Bklyn a couple of months ago. We were blabbing business at the bar until we could
be herded with the other carnivores into the meat troughs, and he basically said, after a few Bloody Mary’s, that I was an idiot and completely out of the loop because I did not read Strumpette. Why did he like it? “I don’t know what’s real,” he said, as if finally, in the world of NY PR, you could find a no bullshit zone that was built on absolutist illusion that approaches art that should be the highest order of our profession. What’s real and what isn’t? How do you define and justify the “greater truth”? Initial readings of Strumpette were a revelation. Wow – we really are capable of creativity and perhaps even change within the industry, and a PR blogger is leading the way.
I was going to make Strumpette a “Blog We Love” but that would trivialize it because because Strumpette really defines and domiantes its own space. Strumpette is a free fire zone where you want to spend time. That in itself is incredibly valuable and a virtually unique experience – to want to spend time at a blog. I am a natural speed reader and the Internet lends itself to the quick consumption of information and the proliferation of blogs spewing nonsense on the web is dispiriting. Strumpette is like The New Yorker of PR blogs – something brilliant is going on here even if you don’t know what it is.
I could go on and on with Amanda’s great lines but do yourself a favor and spend time there. Mix it up. This really is a conversation and sometimes the give and take gets ugly. She forces issues the industry would sooner forget or gloss over. When you come to Strumpette come heavy. Unless you happen on the weekend and get the new somnolent, frou-frou guest blogger Shel Holtz sprinkling the dust of old school elitism on a weekly roundup. Amanda undoubtedly tapped Shel to be inclusive – keep your friends close but your enemies closer – but Shel is like ether in the blogosphere. Does he have something to offer besides indignation at some perceived slight or a chivalrous defense of our fine upstanding profession? Come on, Shel, Strumpette is like a schoolyard pickup basketball game. Sometimes elbows fly. Might as well get loose and have some fun.Â

Volatility, baby, hang on for the ride. Tremblors are radiating through the world financial
markets, finally, and the broker bloggers are digging it.  FlyonWall Street is unrepetent, profane and absolutist: “If you don’t sell your stocks or hedge now, the big greasy bears are going to rip your arms and legs off, then use your torso as a fucking surf board.” You think this guy eats too much meat and drinks too much scotch?
Birinyi Associates ingenious Blogger Sentiment Poll turned decidedly bearish this week – jumping from 30% t0 42% bearish – in a survey of 53 Wall Street bloggers. TickerSense by Birinyi, with common sense postings and plenty of supporting graphs, is welcome relief from the plethora of staid, professorial Wall Street blogs. The methodology for the Blogger Sentiment Poll is questionable but the concept is solid and the results entertaining. And it’s good online financial services PR.

Finally, something all bloggers agree on: Big uproar over Vets’ Care comes from liberal bloggers, conservatives and all in
between. Countercolumn is outaged on the right. Bush Administration push for privatization may have helped create Walter Reed ‘disaster’- on the left in RawStory - the headline says it all.
For Immediate Release
I hate the PR releases now running on Bloglines PR circuit … VP appointed here, SVP there, blah blah here and there. Used to be Bloglines was a great source for ideas. Now it’s PR about PR, blah is pleased that blah is now leading the practice in ethical, sustainable, community based public relations that is a model of the industry and exemplary of the wide and deep capabilities of the firm. Is there no escape?
Actually a Google blog search for “public relations” yields much more interesting results: Did you know that there is a new era in Trinidad and Tobago public relations, and today Arizona Venture Capital is sponsoring a conference that highlights use of social media by Arizona companies, featuring social media gurus Robert Scoble and Chris Heuer. Looks very cool.
A search on Technorati for “Controllable Irregularity” yields an item in the Palm Beach Post saying the BusinessWeek cancelled a cover story
on jetBlue’s stellar customer service after the recent St. Valentine’s fiasco that left many passengers stranded and fuming. In my post on 2/23/07 I wondered about that broad caveat. In its new ballyhooed “Bill of Rights” jetBlue only needs to make restitiution to passengers in the event of “controllable irregularity,” a term they do not identify and has many of us wondering if jetBlue will find itself in a PR mess when the term is openly challenged by passengers.
In Jim Horton’s Online Public Relations Thoughts today he discusses an article on What Should Our Web Site Measure? that highlights an issue that plagues all of us in trying to migrate clients to PR 2.0 on the web: how do we measure web traffic to yield actionable analytics.

Those are the words of Jodi Kantor (left) of The New York Times. She recalls few times when she dealt with a PR person who really made a difference in a story, someone who was able to ‘anticipate’ what the Arts & Leisure section, which she used to edit, might need. It’s a digitial world but it’s an old story. PR people aren’t reading the paper and thinking like journalists. Kantor now covers politics in general, and Barack Obama specifically, for NYT.