Word: profitably
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Stevens’ work does show promise, as is indicated by his acquisition of a grant from the Xeric Foundation, a non-profit corporation offering financial assistance to self-publishing comic book creators. Although “Guilty” does not entirely live up to its potential, its artwork and the narrative it embodies hold the kind of profound and simple truth that could one day make for something great...
...purchased seats this year. Overall revenues jumped 16.7% last season, to $140 million, and Moreno expects about $155 million in 2005. He says he lost $20 million on the team last year--"You have to invest in your product to get a return later"-- but expects to turn a profit next season...
...national radio show, guests of a gay-and-lesbian duo named Derek and Romaine who were celebrating their second anniversary on the air. With a bartender mixing martinis in the studio, the scene was suggestive of radio's party days, before Big Radio ate the AM/FM dial, demanded quarterly profit growth and sucked the fun right out of the control booth. Except that a wannabe big corporate entity was footing the bill for the show, broadcast from a gleaming new studio in a Rockefeller Center skyscraper. And the Glamazons were tame compared with the time Romaine invited a male porn...
Welcome to Sirius Satellite Radio, a company running edgy programming and sparing no expense in its quest to breathe life into radio--and one day turn a profit for shareholders. Based in New York City and run by pugnacious radio-industry veteran and media icon Mel Karmazin, Sirius broadcasts 65 channels of commercial-free music, sliced and diced in formats from Broadway-show tunes to '80s hair bands, along with channels dedicated to sports, news, weather and niche shows like Derek and Romaine's, which would be fined into extinction if the FCC had its way. This being satellite radio...
...management of tax-exempt charities he set up. Abramoff may have funded, at least indirectly, some of DeLay's most controversial overseas travel. Two weeks ago, TIME reported that when DeLay traveled to Britain in 2000, on a trip ostensibly arranged and paid for by a non-profit organization, his congressional staff turned to Abramoff to arrange the trip, and made extensive demands of Abramoff's office-for expensive hotel rooms, and even tickets to the "Lion King." Two sources say the London trip itself was the idea of DeLay's staff, not Abramoff or the non-profit National Center...