Word: vogs
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Kinsley's column is a prime example of why liberals get such bad press. It's utter nonsense to posit that being black or being privy to the African-American experience somehow endows Freeman or Jones with voice-of-God (VOG) vocal cords. Their riveting vocal abilities are not racially based. NFL commentators have had the VOG sound, as did the late movie-trailer announcer Don LaFontaine and Robert Mitchum on the "Beef: It's What's for Dinner" TV spots. Those guys were white. Kinsley should do a bit more research before he puts his fingertips to the keyboard...
...Hollywood, they sometimes refer to an omniscient but unseen narrator as a VOG, short for voice of God. Scourby was the leading VOG of his day, in documentaries like Victory at Sea and numerous commercials. His was the voice in the first ever recording of the entire Bible, made in the 1940s. At that time, it was as natural to assume that God spoke with a British accent as it was to assume that he had a beard - or, for that matter, that...
...least until Denzel Washington gets a bit older - is Morgan Freeman. Jones is the Old Testament God, fierce and forbidding. Freeman is the New Testament version, all wise and all knowing, to be sure, but more approachable. He has done it twice in movies, has been the VOG in commercials for Listerine and Visa cards, among other products, and was the inevitable choice as narrator for that excruciatingly adorable movie about penguins. Freeman told an Associated Press reporter a few months ago that he is "tired of playing God." Who can blame him? At least as Freeman plays...
Mysterious Friends. BSN was not defeated, however, by Vogüé's $1,000,000 massive public-relations effort, but by mysterious Saint-Gobain "friends" with strong financial connections abroad. As soon as BSN announced its bid, Vogüé's allies started buying Saint-Gobain stock. In five weeks, some 4,600,000 Saint-Gobain shares changed hands at prices that climbed all the way to $48. Vogüé's "friends" paid $180 million for 3,500,000 shares, bringing their holdings to 42% of the company's stock, more than enough to assure...
...unexpected Saint-Gobain defense prompted BSN accusations that the company itself had illegally financed the purchases. Although Vogüé denied any wrongdoing, French Premier Maurice Couve de Murville ordered two quiet government investigations. No matter what the outcome of the inquiries, the battle itself has put French businessmen on notice that the old days of secrecy, silence and short-changed stockholders have faded. From now on, even the most tradition-steeped French managements will have to produce results in the profit column or face the possibility of another such flamboyant takeover attempt...