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Tom McHale

Hill Holliday Spreads Happiness With 'Social Experiments' in Boston | Adweek - 0 views

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    For an example of how marketing can be used by non-profits for social good read this: "All advertising strives to sell happiness, implying that buying certain goods or services will make you feel better than you did before. Pitching happiness itself, striving to communicate the gravity of the concept and its importance in our daily lives, is a different matter entirely-and that's the metaphorical mission of Hill Holliday's pro-bono "Happier Boston" push for suicide-prevention group Samaritans Inc. In addition to a Web site and PSAs, the campaign is taking its message to the streets via "social experiments." These include cheering "fans" at railroad platforms to greet commuters and wish them a great day; surprise skyscraper elevator sing-alongs; and handing out citrus fruits emblazoned with the message, "Orange you happy?"
Tom McHale

Creativity Best of 2012: A Fridge Magnet that Orders Your Favorite Pizza | Creativity P... - 0 views

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    "From now until New Year's, Creativity will be counting down the best creative brand ideas of 2012."
Tom McHale

What The Media Got Wrong In The Newtown Story : NPR - 0 views

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    "In the hours following the Newtown, Conn. shooting, several initial media reports provided false information. For example, the gunman's brother was originally identified as the shooter. NPR's media correspondent David Folkenflik explains how and why the media falsely reported key details."
Tom McHale

How Should Children Learn to Shop? - Room for Debate - NYTimes.com - 1 views

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    "Holiday shoppers will mob the malls this weekend. Some of them are shopping for children. Some of them are children. This time of year reminds us of a question facing parents year-round: When and how should children learn to be consumers?"
Tom McHale

Getting It First, or Getting It Right? - NYTimes.com - 0 views

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    "THE media critic Jack Shafer wrote recently that, in the age of Twitter, the public had better get used to a new fact of life: News stories, especially the early reports of breaking news events, are very likely to be inaccurate. To this, I offer a radical response: That's not good enough. Or maybe it's good enough for some news organizations and some news consumers.  Are mistakes like this inevitable in the hypercompetitive age of social media?
Tom McHale

Watch and Rate | Link TV - 0 views

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    Rate videos according to journalistic values or take the news challenge.
Tom McHale

TED | TED Playlists | What makes us happy? - 1 views

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    TED talks on happiness
Tom McHale

Why has Al Jazeera set its sights on U.S.? - CNN.com - 0 views

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    "The controversial Qatari TV network Al Jazeera has bought Current TV, gaining access to millions more U.S. viewers and taking a major step forward in cracking the longed-for U.S. market. The move is the network's crowning achievement in the U.S. after years struggling to be accepted in the wake of the September 11, 2001 attacks, when Al Jazeera was vilified by the Bush administration for broadcasting the notorious Osama bin Laden videos and other anti-American material. But following the U.S. military withdrawal from Iraq, U.S. relations with the channel improved. Recently Al Jazeera's English-language channel has won several prestigious industry awards, as well as plaudits from senior U.S. policy-makers such as Hillary Clinton."
Tom McHale

Think Media Consolidation Is Good for Journalism? Think Again | Free Press - 0 views

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    "The Federal Communications Commission is pushing a plan to gut its 30-year-old newspaper/broadcast cross-ownership ban. This proposal would allow one company to own a local paper, two TV stations and up to eight radio stations in a single market. Advocates of more media consolidation argue that allowing TV stations and newspapers to merge is critical to cutting costs and saving local journalism."
Tom McHale

Miss Representation » Blog Archive » The Newtown Shooting and Why We Must Red... - 0 views

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    "As I sit here in Northern California, I ask myself, "how can I possibly do anything that would make a difference for that grief stricken family whose child's room is empty tonight?" How can I possibly make any difference to the town of Newton, Connecticut - who will have to carry today's horror and sadness with them, forevermore? What we can do is teach our young boys and young men that being emotional and empathetic are part of "being a man." That "sharing one's feelings to sort out one's problems" is a masculine trait. We need some new definitions of "manly" so our boys can express and know their full selves, not just the culturally accepted "extremes" that predominately exist today."
Tom McHale

Manhood Crisis At The Heart of The Newtown Tragedy: Part I | The Starting Five - 0 views

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    "You've been saying for years that mass shootings have a lot to do with masculinity. Why is this a problem and why does it persist?"
Tom McHale

Independent Lens . HIP-HOP: Beyond Beats & Rhymes . Masculinity | PBS - 0 views

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    "Deadly school shootings and street shootings have put young men and boys in front of-and behind-the trigger. Meanwhile, news reports proclaim a "classroom crisis" in which boys are being left behind in American schools. Are boys really at risk, and could masculinity itself be the culprit?"
Tom McHale

Web stories vs. newspaper reports - 0 views

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    "Jim Amoss, the longtime editor of The Times-Picayune, addresses whether the quality of the paper's reporting will be affected by moving to a digital platform in this 60 Minutes Extra video interview. "Will journalists be judged by the amount of online traffic their stories receive?""
Tom McHale

One Dad's Ill-Fated Battle Against the Princesses - Andy Hinds - The Atlantic - 0 views

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    "Four years ago, the news that my wife and I were going to have twin girls coincided with the moment of my most fervent dedication to the notion that gender is, for the most part, socially constructed. The degree to which those differences are innate or socially nurtured is up for debate, but there's little doubt that popular culture and the marketplace go to great lengths to emphasize and capitalize on them. Before the twins were born, friends and family inundated us with hand-me-down "girl clothes."  I made sure to put anything with princess logos or imagery into the giveaway pile. The princess trope represented passivity, entitlement, materialism, and submissiveness, and no daughter of mine would wear a onesie that celebrated such loathsome values."
Tom McHale

Despite Newtown, we crave violent movies - CNN.com - 1 views

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    "Mass shootings -- like those at Newtown, Columbine, the Sikh temple in Wisconsin, and the Aurora, Colorado, movie theater -- and everyday street violence, like what's going on in Chicago, can be addressed immediately by legislation. But background checks and assault rifle bans will not free us from our most debilitating shackle, and that is our numbness, if not addiction, to violence, particularly in film."
Tom McHale

Famous Old Guy Salivates Over Young Woman On Live TV. Because That's Not Creepy At All? - 0 views

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    "According to Musburger's wonky logic, McCarron earned a hot girlfriend by being really good at throwing a pointy ball around on a field. In case you're still wondering why people like myself find Musburger's comments creepy, I'd now like to issue a friendly reminder that a) girls are not prizes that you win for being good at things and b) when you issue uninvited commentary on women's looks or bodies, this is why we throw things at you."
Tom McHale

Why New Jersey's Antibullying Law Should Be a Model for Other States | TIME.com - 0 views

shared by Tom McHale on 17 Jan 13 - No Cached
  • On Sept. 1, New Jersey’s new antibullying law — billed as the nation’s toughest — took effect. The law, which co-sponsor Barbara Buono, the state’s senate majority leader, called “a powerful message to every child in New Jersey,” is an important step forward in combating the bullying of young people.
    • Tom McHale
       
      intro of topic and opinion
  • Critics say the law is too burdensome for teachers and too expensive for school districts and will spawn too many lawsuits.
    • Tom McHale
       
      Lists counter-arguments
  • But here’s why New Jersey should ignore its critics and press ahead — and why other states should follow its lead.
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      States purpose or thesis of essay
  • ...9 more annotations...
  • Clementi committed suicide last Septe
  • mber after his roommate allegedly took a video of his romantic encounter with a man and streamed it on the Internet. (VIDEO: Chris Colfer Talks Glee, Bullying and Being Yourself) The state responded by indicting Clementi’s roommate on hate-crime charges, but it also did something farther reaching: legislators drafted a law requiring its public schools to adopt extensive antibullying policies. Forty-seven states already have antibullying statutes on the books (New Jersey had a weaker law in place previously), but the new law goes far beyond what most others require. Among other things, New Jersey schools must conduct extensive training of staff and students; appoint safety teams made up of parents, teachers and staff; and launch an investigation of every allegation of bullying within one day.
    • Tom McHale
       
      Background or context and details provided for the topic.
  • These particulars are important, but perhaps the most significant thing about the New Jersey law is the strong message it sends. Other states’ laws have similar aims but lack the rigorous oversight and quick response mechanisms that New Jersey is putting in place. The Anti-Bullying Bill of Rights unambiguously puts the state, school officials and law enforcement on the side of victims — and it puts bullies on notice.
    • Tom McHale
       
      Expands on argument - why the law is a good thing
  • But now that it is being implemented, critics are attacking it as being too demanding and too costly. In a recent New York Times article headlined “Bullying Law Puts New Jersey Schools on Spot,” school officials complained that the new law imposes excessive requirements while not providing necessary resources.
    • Tom McHale
       
      Counter-argument
  • The critics’ concerns are not entirely trivial. The Anti-Bullying Bill of Rights has a lot of rules, including 18 pages of “required components.” Training staff will be a lot of work, and it will be expensive for cash-strapped school districts. Making matters worse, any estimate of extra costs, in terms of demands on existing staff and the possible need for outside consultants, is difficult; even the New Jersey’s legislature’s own fiscal estimate ducked the issue. The law also contains a good deal of language that will be challenging to interpret. It defines bullying as, among other things, creating a hostile educational environment “by interfering with a student’s education or by severely or pervasively causing physical or emotional harm to the student.” When does a schoolyard jibe or a mean comment in the cafeteria cross the line? It will require thoughtful interpretation. The law will also, necessarily, thrust school officials into the tricky area of policing student expression, including statements made off campus. This puts schools in a bit of a bind: in several recent rulings, federal courts have reminded schools that they must respect the free-speech rights of their students, even when that speech is harsh or provocative. New Jersey’s law pushes schools in the opposite direction, requiring them to monitor and police certain kinds of speech.
  • There is, however, a broad answer to these concerns: effective antibullying laws are worth the trouble. Bullying is a serious national problem, and Clementi is far from the only student in recent years believed to have taken his life over it. Last year, the parents of Sladjana Vidovic, a Croatian student who attended high school in Mentor, Ohio, sued after their daughter hanged herself. Sladjana is one of five students in Mentor who killed themselves in a span of a little more than three years after allegedly being bullied. Of course, there are countless instances every year of bullying in which the victims do not kill themselves but are nevertheless greatly affected. They drop out. They turn to drugs or alcohol, or run away from home. Or they simply suffer in silence.
    • Tom McHale
       
      Emotional argument - examples of kids dying and suffering.
  • The bipartisan and near unanimous support for the Anti-Bullying Bill of Rights in the state legislature shows how united New Jerseyans are in the belief that stronger steps must be taken to combat bullying. Even if implementing the law is not easy, it is clearly something the citizenry wants done.
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      Argument that everyone supports it because politicians voted for it.
  • There may be kinks to work out in the new law, but the big picture is that New Jersey is putting itself out in front nationally on the issue of bullying — and standing firmly with the victims. That is the right place to be.
    • Tom McHale
       
      Conclusion that leaves the reader with something to think about - emotional appeal
  • Critics of the new law complain that it will open the floodgates to lawsuits. The New Jersey Lawsuit Reform Alliance has charged that the Anti-Bullying Bill of Rights essentially gives trial lawyers “a blank check to sue school districts on behalf of bullied children.”
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      Another counter-argument
Tom McHale

Lesson | News and 'News Analysis': Navigating Fact and Opinion in The Times - NYTimes.com - 0 views

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    " Why is it important to be critical consumers of news media? How do we discern fact from opinion in The New York Times, and in other news reports? In this lesson, students will become familiar with the layout of the NYTimes.com home page and learn how news and opinion articles are labeled and organized for clarity. Then students will carefully consider the difference between fact and opinion and create guiding questions to help discern between the two when reading a news or opinion piece from any news source."
Tom McHale

Can Coke's new anti-obesity ads actually lower obesity rates? - The Week - 1 views

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    "The commercials are being touted as brilliant marketing. They associate sugary drinks with "happiness, fulfillment, and having fun," says Nancy Huehnergarth at The Huffington Post. But they don't really attempt to address obesity, says Michael F. Jacobson, executive director of the Center for Science in the Public Interest. "The soda industry is under siege, and for good reason," he says, and clearly, Coke is trying to control its image."
Tom McHale

Joan Ganz Cooney Center - What We Don't Know, and What We Need to Know, About the Effec... - 0 views

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    "While there is no demonstrated link between video game play and violence of the kind we have seen all too often in recent years, there is an active scientific debate over what we know and do not-and which next steps the scientific community should take to more definitively understand the dynamics of the many factors that are associated with highly damaging anti-social behavior. To help unpack the debate, I asked Cheryl Olson, Sci.D., one of the nation's leading authorities on the subject and author of Grand Theft Childhood to weigh in on the key research issues"
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