Posted at 7:17 AM on February 8, 2010
by Bob Collins
(2 Comments)
Filed under: Five by 8
When her son started running away, Oie said she put missing child posters in spots he'd be likely to go, staying up nights terrified about how to find him. They took him to doctors, she said, put him through treatment programs. The state took custody of Zach to pay for his treatment at centers across the state, she said.On a given night, there are another 649 like him in Minnesota.
He was in and out of foster homes. While at one, he lit another kid on fire, causing him third-degree burns on his stomach and chest, Brooke Oie and her husband said. Between foster homes, they would sometimes bring Zach back to live with them, only to encounter so many problems that they'd send him away again.
As Mr. Burnett described it, Mr. Letterman had the idea to invite Mr. Leno to participate, playing off a similar ad he put together with Ms, Winfrey the last time CBS had the Super Bowl in 2007. "Dave wrote the bit himself," Mr. Burnett said. "He just thought: it's the Super Bowl, you're supposed to entertain people."
One concern with an index such as this is the potential for inappropriate precision to be conveyed to the user.That's good advice, but how often do we hear of studies that some activity raises your risk of cancer?
| Meteorologist | Range | Average |
| Chikage Windler (KSTP) | 5-11 | 8 |
| Craig Edwards | 6 | 6 |
| Ron Trenda (WCCO) | 9-13 | 11 |
| Erik Maitland (KMSP) | 5-10 | 7.5 |
| National Weather Service | 6-10 | 8 |
| Sven Sundgaard (KARE) | 3-6 | 4.5 |
| Paul Huttner (MPR) | 5-10 | 7.5 |
| Ian Leonard (KMSP) | 4-6 | 5 |
| Mike Fairbourne (WCCO) | 6-8 | 7 |
Posted at 10:40 AM on February 8, 2010
by Bob Collins
(107 Comments)
Filed under: Surveys and trivia
It was late at night and I wasn't sure I'd seen the billboard correctly as I whizzed past it on I-35 in Wyoming last week on the way back from Wrenshall. But an e-mailer confirms I saw what I thought I saw.
It's beginning to sweep along the Internet, accompanied by various claims that it's a Photoshop fake. But it's not. It's real.
There's no billboard ownership plate on this particular billboard, making tracing the person who had the cash to post it difficult to find. It's time to crowdsource this puppy.
Update 11:44 a.m. - An e-mail to Wyoming Mayor Sheldon Anderson yields no further clue:
Wish I could take credit for it. Calls every day asking if it was me. If you find out let me know.
Update 11:46 a.m. - Luke Hellier at Minnesota Democrats Exposed thought he had a lead on the owner, but alas....
The person who I thought did not put up the billboard. He has been contacted about keeping it up if the current owner takes it down due to money.
We may have to offer a News Cut coffee mug to smoke the owner out. Sadly, we don't have News Cut coffee mugs.
Update 7:43 a.m. Tue 2/9 - FoxNews asked me to be on today to talk about the billboard. I declined, noting I don't know anything other than that there's this billboard. But it's interesting how the story has spiraled from the blog, to the NPR blog, to a couple of national blogs, to Drudge etc. True, I'm intrigued by the mystery of it all, but it's also a reminder of how the truly trivial can grab our attention. I write about deeper, more meaningful news, too. Maybe that's the bigger story here: Can blogs exist without the trivia?
By the way, for those of you visiting News Cut for the first time via the national blogs, stay for awhile. Look around.
7:52 a.m. - Colleague reports MSNBC just called looking for me. Dear MSNBC: "No." Now go find out who paid for this billboard, willya?
(107 Comments)
Posted at 1:09 PM on February 8, 2010
by Bob Collins
When Harvard considers the New Orleans Saints decision to start the second half with an onside kick, the American business community must take notice.
Andrew O'Connell, blogging on the Harvard Business Review Web site, considers the real-world business applications of Saints coach Sean Payton's thinking. He cites research showing "if a CEO simultaneously viewed the coming event as potentially both positive and negative -- and if those simultaneous convictions were intensely held -- the leader was more likely to take organizational action in response."
A top executive's ambivalence about an issue does not get in the way of reacting," Plambeck and Weber write in a recent issue of Organization Science, nor does it "paralyze organizational action responses." Instead, the leader's view of a situation as both good and bad creates what psychologists call "emotional arousal" and heightened alertness. That's partly because CEOs, like the rest of us, typically are quick to categorize developments as good or bad, black or white. When an issue shapes up as both positive and negative, there's a resulting "sense of unusualness" that stimulates "a more creative and deliberate" search for responses, Plambeck and Weber write.
Let's translate that into English. If a CEO is ambivalent to the point of not being sure what to do, there is a great chance of a creative (and risky) approach to the problem.
(h/t: @khortenbach)
Of course, for the math and stat freaks, it's a little simpler to figure out as Nate Silver at fivethirtyeight.com did. It made statistical sense to try it, he writes.
Posted at 12:59 PM on February 8, 2010
by Bob Collins
(1 Comments)
Filed under: Sports
The end of the football season, the snow, and this Super Bowl ad probably have many people thinking green lawns and baseball.
So I shot an e-mail over to the Twins today to determine the next benchmark date for a return of the summer game: the date on which the Twins equipment truck leaves Minnesota for spring training.
The truck will be packed up on Friday. It leaves on Saturday.
(1 Comments)
Posted at 1:57 PM on February 8, 2010
by Bob Collins
(2 Comments)
Filed under: Icons
Rep. John Murtha, D-Pennsylvania, has died. The Pennsylvania congressman wielded power the old-fashioned way at the Capitol, often with accusations of ethical lapses.
But he became a household name because of a particularly raucous session of the House in 2005 when Rep. Jean Schmidt of Ohio singled him out when saying "cowards cut and run."
Murtha was a decorated soldier and long-time automatic vote for defense spending.
(2 Comments)
Posted at 3:06 PM on February 8, 2010
by Bob Collins
(5 Comments)
Filed under: Health
Now that Minnesota has had the debate over second-hand smoke in passing a statewide smoking ban, we can move on to the next topic: third-hand smoke.
New Scientist reports on research that nicotine collecting on carpets and furniture poses a hazard to young children. The researchers reportedly are suggesting people who have smoked in their homes, remove both.
That paves the way for the ELA ("elusive local angle"):
Stephen Hecht at the Masonic Cancer Center at the University of Minnesota thinks that this could be an overreaction. There is as yet no direct evidence that chemicals formed in this way have proved harmful. "I personally feel that exposure by this route would be minimal, but the studies need to be carried out," Hecht says.
Posted at 3:56 PM on February 8, 2010
by Bob Collins
(1 Comments)
Filed under: Economy
| President | Inauguration Day |
2/8 one year later |
Diff. |
Pct. |
| Barack Obama | 7949.09 |
9908.39 |
1959.3 |
24.6% |
| Bill Clinton | 3241.95 |
3906.03 |
664.08 |
20.5% |
| George H.W. Bush | 2235.43 |
2644.37 |
408.94 |
18.3% |
| George W. Bush | 10587 |
9744 |
-843 |
-8.0% |
| Ronald Reagan | 950.68 |
833.43 |
-117.25 |
-12.3% |
| Jimmy Carter | 959.03 |
782.66 |
-176.37 |
-18.4% |
Posted at 8:23 PM on February 8, 2010
by Bob Collins
(11 Comments)
Filed under: Crime and Justice
Does it matter that the judge in the California case on whether the state's ban on same-sex marriage is constitutional is gay?
The San Francisco Chronicle has "outed" U.S. District Court Judge Vaughn Walker.
Many gay politicians in San Francisco and lawyers who have had dealings with Walker say the 65-year-old jurist, appointed to the bench by President George H.W. Bush in 1989, has never taken pains to disguise - or advertise - his orientation.
They also don't believe it will influence how he rules on the case he's now hearing - whether Proposition 8, the 2008 ballot measure approved by state voters to ban same-sex marriage, unconstitutionally discriminates against gays and lesbians.
The blog, Above the Law, concurs mostly. If this were the 1860s and the civil rights case was about slavery, there wouldn't be a question of whether a black judge could rule impartially, would there?
Some commenters at the site disagree:
"The judge is gay? That's a lose-lose situation for the gay marriage people. If he rules it unconstitutional, opponents will say it's a biased outcome. If he rules it constitutional, opponents will say 'even a gay judge doesn't think your position is valid.'"
But there's also a pragmatic response. The case, no matter how the judge rules, is going to end up being decided for good in some other court higher up the judicial food chain.
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