Mistakes are always forgivable, if one has the courage to admit them. | | Shenanigans around the leak of a lewd 11-year-old tape. Questions about accountability and second chances. Does Billy Bush get to come back? | | | | | "Mistakes are always forgivable, if one has the courage to admit them." | | | | | rantnrave:// BILLY BUSH's firing by NBCU, prompted by an early example of TRUMP getting his slime all over others, may seem like an odd entry point to discuss questions of accountability and second chances. I get that. But I follow media for a living. This could be almost anyone in similar circumstances. A fascinating situation for many reasons. The nascent movements addressing sexual harassment, professional behavior, and accountability. The politics in the office and on the national stage. Internal rivalries. The fact that it was more than 11 years ago. The debate over degrees of bad. Mistakes or offenses? How a company deals with these issues. Who stays and who goes? Employee training. Should someone lose their livelihood as a result? How long should the punishment be? Do we forgive, rehabilitate, and improve? I explore this and more in "rantnraveXL: Thinking About Mistakes, Punishments, Redemption and Billy Bush..." This piece was read by many. It was passed around via email and SMS by many. It was not shared publicly on social media by many. Most are too scared to have the conversation and that's not a good thing for anyone... Something that has always annoyed me in business relationships is a selective replier. Someone who answers only certain questions and certain emails. The omissions speak volumes and often that is their answer. Even if passive aggressive or cowardly... The enormity of DISNEY's success is without precedent, but so too are the company's future successes, challenges, and opportunities. REDEF traces, critiques and prognosticates all three in MediaSET: "Walt's Way: What Disney Has Achieved But Must Yet Become"... The worst part of getting older and understanding more is the reality of finding out that certain things I thought I knew or were bedrocks of my constitutions are not as I thought. Some totally. Some partially. But very disheartening... One massive bill, two legislative bodies to pass, ten thousand opinions. Can music and tech companies convince Washington to improve the way musicians and composers are paid? And is that in fact what they're doing? MusicREDEF's MATTY KARAS takes a look in MusicSET: "Money for Something: Debating the Music Modernization Act"... The market s**** on TWITTER for cleaning up fake accounts and bad bots. The market is a moron... I've just donated $500 to help this poor man who was attacked by the scum of the earth in Trump's AMERICA. I hope he recovers and knows that there is a good America that has good people. And I hope those that did this burn in hell. And is this the America you want?... Who will save us?... I'm a f***ing pioneer... Happy Birthday to ANNA KOHANSKI MASON, BRET TAYLOR, RICK HOLZMAN, STEFAN BLOM, JOHN NAJARIAN, and CAROL VALENTI MAHONEY. | | | - Jason Hirschhorn, curator | | | | | REDEF | Shenanigans around the leak of a lewd 11-year-old tape. Questions about accountability, second chances, and an incomplete conversation. | | | | BuzzFeed | Pregnant women in immigration detention under the Trump administration say they have been denied medical care, shackled around the stomach, and abused. | | | | Medium | In an excerpt from the new book 'Valley of Genius,' Silicon Valley insiders give an oral history of Atari, the company behind Pong | | | | Vox | He's a veteran of every conservative fight from the Clinton impeachment to the fight against Obamacare. | | | | The Atlantic | How Vladimir Putin is revolutionizing information warfare | | | | Open Culture | Someone went through a great deal of effort to stitch together a montage of dance scenes from some 300 feature films. Below find a list of films in order of their appearance, and with the appropriate timestamp. | | | | The Intercept | A 'reckless' fracking company, poisoned springs, and a family forced to buy water at Walmart. | | | | Skift | The inside story of twin deals that created an online hotel-booking juggernaut. | | | | The Monthly | After decades of influence, the media mogul isn't so much a person as an epoch. | | | | Dazed Digital | Recruited aged just 14 via his father, Richard Weshe was the subject of many urban myths -- arrested in 1988, he's still in prison today. | | | | Tribuneindia News Service | | | Popular Mechanics | From hunks of iron streaking through the sky, to the construction of skyscrapers and megastructures, this is the history of the world's greatest alloy. | | | | Refinery29 | Martofel admitted in a Facebook post that his inspiration for Feminist Apparel was his own history of sexually abusing women. | | | | The New Yorker | One night in the winter of 1996, Rob Eaton, a recording engineer who'd worked with Duran Duran and Pat Metheny, showed up at the home of a high-school chemistry teacher in Petaluma, California. Eaton had heard that the teacher had something that he and others like him were eager to get their hands on. (Originally published Nov. 26, 2012.) | | | | GQ | After the blockbuster success of 'Kong: Skull Island,' director Jordan Vogt-Roberts fled Hollywood to live the expat dream life in Vietnam. Then, one night at a Saigon club, he was brutally beaten by a mysterious mob of gangsters. | | | | Project Syndicate | When it comes to tackling the "fake news" problem, there is no silver bullet. The modern information ecosystem is like a Rubik's Cube: a different move is required to "solve" each individual square, and success requires getting all sides in place. | | | | The Atlantic | Today's most powerful companies are enemies of free expression. | | | | n+1 | From domestic concentration camps to the war on terror. | | | | The Guardian | The first 'test-tube' baby turns 40 this month, but the impact of in vitro fertilisation extends far beyond solutions to fertility problems | | | | CNBC | As Netflix and Amazon search for new users abroad, they are increasingly looking to India as a big market. Once crippled by poor internet infrastructure and low household income, the world's second-largest internet market has exhibited tremendous potential in the recent years. It's proving, however, to be a tough nut to crack for the American streaming leaders. | | | | Monday Note | High salaries, but also obscene tax breaks resulting from unbeatable bargaining power, are widening the gap between the rich and the poor in many US cities. | | | | | | YouTube | | | | | | | | | | | | | © Copyright 2018, The REDEF Group | | |
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