Word: enjoyability
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...Really? Lift all public-service strictures from British broadcasting and what would remain? North argues that the élite would find a way to ensure that the sorts of programs they enjoy continue to be made. Andy Duncan, chief executive of Channel 4, disagrees, and vehemently. "There would be a huge reduction in the quality of television in this country. If people had a profit motive only there'd be less investment in content, particularly in some of the areas where quite clearly the market wouldn't provide as much...
...advice that doesn't fit in a suitcase but will almost certainly matter more than Band-Aids: Learn how to text-message, do not let your kids watch TV news, and never depend on the government. And "as you drive away from a house and possessions you may never enjoy again," wrote a survivor, "remember the song about how you can't drag a U-Haul behind your hearse...
...enough, it is at the very least a concrete step in the right direction. We understand the reasons that the legislation must define clearly who falls under its protection and that it must discriminate between serious journalists and those who simply claim to be journalists so they can enjoy the benefits of the shield law. But college journalists are just as serious about their craft as many professionals, and excluding them simply for legislative convenience is arbitrary and unnecessary. Some may argue that college newspapers would rarely require the coverage of the shield law. After all, the law is meant...
...heady brew. I caught up with him around midnight, on Mt. Auburn Street, as he sauntered home after a punch event. Steve—whoa, watch it buddy, careful where you walk! How did it go? “I dunno man. I’m just going to enjoy the free beer while it lasts. I don’t have high hopes about all of this.” It sounds like you’ve got a good attitude. Too bad you didn’t hit it off with any of the dudes in the club...
...heroic and occult. Organizations all over the world, without any direct connection, have appropriated its name. (The Freemasons reportedly have an "Order of the Knights of Templar," thus consummating a kind of conspiracy theorist's dream marriage.) Such homages should not obscure the fact that however much power they enjoy in the realm of fiction and fantasy, it almost certainly does not equal that which they once actually possessed - and then abruptly lost...