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...office every eight years, with stale, familiar corps of retainers, supporters and enemies." American democracy demands new faces. Klein also noted that if Hillary runs for President, it would be "a circus, a revisitation of the carnival ugliness that infested public life in the 1990s." I'm afraid that whoever the candidates will be, the campaign will be ugly. In American politics, the parties seem to think that no matter how preposterous and grossly fabricated a charge is, it pays to slander. The Bush Administration has set a tone that works for it. You can count on the Republicans...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Town Hall Titans | 6/2/2005 | See Source »

...Lite's readers are willing to buy the bulkier, paid-for evening version. And Britain's Office of Fair Trading last month ended Associated's exclusive rights to London Underground stations to distribute Metro, clearing the way for rivals to offer a free afternoon paper through the same channels. Whoever wins, "We think the Evening Standard would have to go free pretty quickly" afterward, warned Deutsche Bank analyst Mark Braley in a January research note, though Associated swats away the suggestion. How do free papers make money? By aggregating enough eyeballs - generally young and urban - to lure advertisers. Many newspapers...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Rise Of The Free Press | 5/15/2005 | See Source »

...trick going forward is for Microsoft to walk a delicate line between two opposing principles: openness and, for lack of a better word, closedness. Whoever is king of the living room will control the flow of 1s and 0s that very soon will make up the entire fabric of our living culture. That's a big responsibility, and a big test for any company--it's always tempting to use that kind of power to squeeze out the competition. If Xbox 360 were to take over your media cabinet, would it play DVDs with Sony Pictures movies on them...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Microsoft: Out of the X Box | 5/15/2005 | See Source »

...years reads like a sordid back-lot love story. He first bought shares in the studio in 1969, sold MGM/UA to Ted Turner in '86, bought back most of it a few months later, unloaded it to an Italian financier in '90 and bought it again in '96. Whoever got stiffed along the way (and he's been criticized for gutting the studio), it wasn't Captain Kirk; he earned $500 million just buying MGM from Turner. "He's got ice water in his veins," says a rival. "For him, it's always about the deal, not the business...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Dealmaker Rides Again | 5/9/2005 | See Source »

...York. “I would love to act all my life long, if people would let me,” she says. “Mike [M. Donahue ’05, a close friend and fellow recipient of an OFA prize] and I have both agreed that, whoever wins first, will thank the other in our Tony speeches...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: OFA Honors Thespians, Dancers, and Artists, Oh My! | 5/5/2005 | See Source »

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