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...talk-show host. His diction is that of group therapy, and his tenure has been one long television gala. He's the man from Disney. It's been a series of poses, and very convincing ones. It's entertainment. Reagan was an actor pretending to be a politician; Clinton is a politician pretending to be an actor...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Election 2000: What We'll Remember | 11/20/2000 | See Source »

...brand. My outlook ain't really about how much revenue we're making right now. The purity of the W is more where my heart is at. A few years ago I made a comment to my brothers, my business partners, that we gonna take this from digital to Disney. Wu Tang is gonna be like the Mickey Mouse ears. And with that kind of goal we got involved with a lot of different things to make that come to fruition. But some things got outta hand because the partners we wound up joining with didn't have the same...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Interview: Robert Diggs, a.k.a. the RZA | 11/17/2000 | See Source »

Even before Napster, Bertelsmann's e-empire spanned global Web brands, including partnerships with giant search engine TerraLycos, music sites CDNow and GetMusic and a 40% interest in Barnes&Noble.com Middelhoff claims that as of July, Bertelsmann was ahead of every competitor except the Walt Disney Co. in visitors to its online sites. "Speed, speed, speed" is the Middelhoff mantra. "The world is changing fast," he said over dinner in Germany last June. "Companies must continually reinvent themselves and not be tied to one structure...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Napster Meister | 11/13/2000 | See Source »

...like complaining that Dan Quayle plagiarized your speech. Really, what vindication do you hope to win? In the case of Suzanne Lloyd Hayes, granddaughter of silent-film star Harold Lloyd, the answer is about $50 million worth. Hayes, on behalf of the Harold Lloyd Trust, alleges that the Walt Disney Co. violated federal copyright law because The Waterboy is "demonstrably a copy of The Freshman," the 1924 comedy classic starring her grandfather. Like The Waterboy, The Freshman told the story of a bumbling football waterboy who happens his way onto the team, becomes the butt of jokes, falls in love...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: People: Nov. 13, 2000 | 11/13/2000 | See Source »

...just a matter of time before they invented a touch-screen handheld for kids. The C-Book Reader ($50) may actually help the little ones learn to read. The device, which will go on sale in early 2001, runs animated stories from cartridges. Among the first six titles are Disney's Winnie the Pooh and 101 Dalmatians. Kids can read the text, flip page by page along with the narration or watch a primitive animated version. For Mom and Dad's sake, the reader comes with a headphone jack...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: In Brief: Nov. 13, 2000 | 11/13/2000 | See Source »

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