If you haven’t seen it yet, Keith Olbermann has issued a message to “Countdown Viewers.” Here it is:
Statement To The Viewers Of Countdown
I want to sincerely thank you for the honor of your extraordinary and ground-rattling support.
Your efforts have been integral to the remedying of these recent events, and the results should remind us of the power of individuals spontaneously acting together to correct injustices great or small.
I also wish to apologize to you viewers for having precipitated such anxiety and unnecessary drama. You should know that I mistakenly violated an inconsistently applied rule – which I previously knew nothing about — that pertains to the process by which such political contributions are approved by NBC.
Certainly this mistake merited a form of public acknowledgment and/or internal warning, and an on-air discussion about the merits of limitations on such campaign contributions by all employees of news organizations.
Instead, after my representative was assured that no suspension was contemplated, I was suspended without a hearing, and learned of that suspension through the media.
You should also know that I did not attempt to keep any of these political contributions secret; I knew they would be known to you and the rest of the public. I did not make them through a relative, friend, corporation, PAC, or any other intermediary, and I did not blame them on some kind of convenient ‘mistake’ by their recipients.
When a website contacted NBC about one of the donations, I immediately volunteered that there were in fact three of them; and contrary to much of the subsequent reporting, I immediately volunteered to explain all this, on-air and off, in the fashion MSNBC desired.
I genuinely look forward to rejoining you on Countdown on Tuesday, to begin the repayment of your latest display of support and loyalty – support and loyalty that is truly mutual.
So, that sounds about right to me. I would agree that it merited discussion, but certainly not suspension. Anyhow, I’m glad Olbermann will be back on the air (or, on the cable, I guess is more like it) tonight.
In other news, yesterday was a little like Christmas. I put in for an upgrade for my work Blackberry, and decided to try for something that wasn’t a free upgrade. Instead, I went for the Torch, which is a nifty little 3G touchscreen model that has WiFi and a slides open to reveal a hardware keyboard. While I would probably have preferred a Droid out of general principles, this thing is pretty nifty, fits in my old Curve holster, and is way better than my old one. Would have been great while I was waiting for my Internet to get installed, but, well, better late than never.
So now I better go and try to figure out how to use it.
new stuff here too.
got a glass lens, beauty surgery, interesting watching your lens removed. for a while it’s just you and your optic nerve.
i’m gaining better vision gradually as it heals up. comparing the two eyes is fun. the one with the cataract looks brown and blurred compared to the new one.
SJ, the new lens replacement surgery is miraculous. I have a friend who wore glasses all her life and now, in her 60’s, has 20/20 vision.
NYC school chancellor, Joel Klein just resigned. :banana:
He left to take a job as vice president at News Corp. (Just one more reason to dislike him .)
Klein’s experience in education consisted of a six week stint as a substitute math teacher at a junior high. He used that experience to turn the schools into test prep mills. He will not be missed.
His replacement, Cathy Black, has no experience in education, which, according to Mayor Bloomberg, is a requirement for running the largest school system in the country.
Yes, this is the same Mayor Bloomberg who overturned the term limits law to run for a third term as mayor because he said HIS experience was so important in these difficult times.
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2010/11/09/publishing-exec-named-new_n_781167.html
Just finished my second history of art and architecture test. Not feeling too good about this one. A lot of the works I actually liked weren’t on the test.
Congratulations SJ on your new look on life :yippee:
Of course, you seem to always have a good look on life :banana:
thanks Art, i’ve been fortunate in every way that counts.
On Tuesday afternoon, a set of emails surfaced on the Philadelphia news site Phawker. Phawker said that the emails showed the “100% for real” correspondence between Olbermann and Philadelphia Daily News columnist Stu Bykofsky over the weekend. In the emails, “Olbermann” talks about his boss, MSNBC President Phil Griffin, in hyperbolic, insulting terms.
In one email, “Olbermann” says that Griffin is “not my boss (thank god), nor is he intellectually qualified to be…I’ll be anchoring on election night 2012, long after Phil Griffin has moved on to a job for which he’s actually qualified, perhaps on QVC.”
snip
The incendiary emails seemed too good to be true — and, as it turns out, they were. The emails from “Olbermann” came from keith@keitholbermann.com. That’s an address that is not owned by Olbermann, but by Tucker Carlson, conservative pundit and editor of the Daily Caller website. In July, Carlson announced that he had purchased the domain name KeithOlbermann.com, and told Politico that people could email him at Keith@KeithOlbermann.com — the same address that the emails to Bykofsky came from.
Once people raised their suspicions about the authenticity of the emails, Olbermann quickly denied that he had any involvement in them. “Complete fake,” he tweeted. “Email address shown not mine.” Bykofsky and Phawker both acknowledged that they had been hoaxed.
The only one who hasn’t spoken out? Carlson himself.
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2010/11/09/keith-olbermann-hoax-did-_n_781241.html