Hollywood got intel on Bin Laden raid

As officials decried leaks on bin Laden raid, they granted special access to filmmakers.



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via POLITICO Top Stories http://www.pheedcontent.com/click.phdo

Break Out the Bubbly, The Great Gatsby Trailer Is Finally Here [Video]


We’ve been hearing for months about Baz Luhrman’s movie version of the classic book, but now the trailer has arrived, and we can see just how much of a spectacle this Great Gatsby is going to be. The answer appears to be a very large one. In any event, it looks like we’re in for a lot of Leonardo DiCaprio’s patented hard-staring serious face. Gatsby purists may not go for it, but for the rest of us it looks like there’s more than enough drama, inspired outfits, and champagne to keep us entertained.

[Via Gossip Cop]

via Jezebel http://jezebel.com/5912533/break-out-the-bubbly-the-great-gatsby-trailer-is-finally-here

Facebook CFO Increased IPO Shares

With Morgan Stanley’s backing prior to going public.

via Cheat Sheet http://www.thedailybeast.com/cheats/2012/05/22/facebook-cfo-increased-ipo-shares.html?utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=Feed%3A+thedailybeast%2Fcheat-sheet+%28The+Daily+Beast+-+Cheat+Sheet%29

Disney Halts Big-Budget Order of the Seven Movie Exclusive – Hollywood Reporter

Disney Halts Big-Budget Order of the Seven Movie Exclusive – Hollywood Reporter.

The Problem With Cory Booker’s Twitter Feed

It was only fitting that last night, attempting to squash the firestorm created by his criticism of President Obama’s latest ad attacking Mitt Romney’s private equity at Bain, Cory Booker took to Twitter. If there’s one thing everyone agrees upon about Booker, it’s that his Twitter feed is so great. He has famously used it to talk directly to voters for some time now, a move that regularly earns him the kind of praise summed up in a recent admiring article by Buzzfeed: His social media presence is “a singular glimpse at the future of political life on the social web,” that offers a “mix of responses to constituents complaining about broken traffic lights, self-help aphorisms, and the occasional song lyric or words of encouragement for the New Jersey Devils.” So when Booker started the hashtag #IStandWithObama to repudiate a Republican National Committee petition, hinted at the pain he was undergoing (“In the depth of winter, I finally learned that within me there lay an invincible summer.” – Albert Camus“), and retweeted messages from people who were backing him (“Thanks RT @Keethers: @Creoleleo @stefsstuff I’d submit that Booker has done more to elect Obama than all the folks upset with him right now”), that should have been the perfect crisis-management solution, right?

Wrong. It was irritating, in a way that’s quintessentially Booker. Twitter ruined the shining Cory Booker image for me some time ago, the same way his Bain remarks seem to have ruined it for others. It has nothing to do with his policy and everything to do with his self-presentation. Things I admire about a politician in the abstract (dogged, micro-level commitment to his constituents, say) are incredibly annoying when I and the more than a million other people who follow Booker are looped in on all of those interactions — mostly, I can’t help but suspect, so we could all know they were happening. A mayor showing up with a snow shovel in response to an @reply might make a great story, but is responding to individual complaints about garbage pickup and electricity outages really the best use of his time — or the most efficient way to tackle the problem? And it’s but one step from there to: Should he really be spending this much time on Twitter, anyway?

Booker seems to genuinely enjoy it, but there’s surely a heavy dose of brand-management behind the decision to tweet (as there is for any politician, naturally). His feed reveals Booker to be relentlessly self-promotional and narcissistic; these are qualities inherent to most politicians and acquired by the rest in order to win campaigns, but there’s something particularly unnerving about having them so fully on display. Twitter is a place where bragging, humble or otherwise, is mocked. That Booker is doing the bragging himself, rather than letting a staffer sing his praises, makes it worse. The man rescued people from a burning building not so long ago, and yet by that point I’d become so closely attuned to his self-promotion that I found myself getting irritated with him for basking in the moment. He’d risked his life, admirable any way you slice it, and I still couldn’t help wondering if the PR possibilities had been a factor in his decision.

Yet the bar is so low for politicians’ Twitter feeds that Booker still gets praised as the form’s highest practitioner. Mostly, their feeds err on the side of the extremely anodyne: Barack Obama, Mitt Romney, Michelle Obama, and even Mr. Gaffee-tastic himself, Joe Biden, keep their feeds strictly to pre-approved, vetted talking points and announcements of appearances, manned by faceless low-level communications staffers. A few politicians offer a more unmediated look at their inner lives, and are celebrated for it — Claire McCaskill’s football fandom, we now know, is not just for show, nor is Chuck Grassley’s hatred of the so-called History Channel. Politicians! They’re Just Like Us! (Except with less aptitude for smartphone keyboards.)

But even those feeds feature plenty of deadly dull tweets. “At 1 pm central going to talk on the floor of Senate about saving rural post offices.“  Or “Watch C-SPAN live on the internet if you want to watch our hearing on wartime contracting. Will last 11/2 to 2 hours.” Hold the phones, Claire! And that’s the problem: The central tension in political tweeting is really just an outcropping of a more general tension politicians face every day, and why the whole thing drives so many observers nuts — you need to show enough personality that people aren’t bored, but show too much and you might just shoot yourself in the foot. Or @reply yourself into the ground.

Related: Twitter Made Me Hate You

Read more posts by Noreen Malone

Filed Under:
cory booker
,twitter

via Daily Intel http://nymag.com/daily/intel/2012/05/problem-with-cory-bookers-twitter-feed.html

Stuck with Joe: Why Obama won’t pick Hillary Clinton

Joe Biden Lays Into Romney, GOP: 'They Don't Get Who We Are!'A Biden-for-Clinton switch would stamp Obama as a president who is acting just like any other politician, Yahoo!’s Jeff Greenfield writes.

via Yahoo! News – Latest News & Headlines http://news.yahoo.com/don%E2%80%99t-worry–joe–it-ain%E2%80%99t-so–why-obama-won%E2%80%99t-run-with-hillary-clinton-.html

Cristina Cordova – Facebook Social Reader Apps Face Continued Decline

Cristina Cordova – Facebook Social Reader Apps Face Continued Decline.

Facebook Tweaking Timelines

Facebook confirms that it has begun testing new looks for “Timelines.”




via Talking Points Memo http://talkingpointsmemo.com/archives/2012/05/tweaking_timelines.php?utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=Feed%3A+Talking-Points-Memo+%28Talking+Points+Memo%3A+by+Joshua+Micah+Marshall%29

Obama’s Primary Challenger

The President faces John Wolfe on the Arkansas Dem primary ballot.

via The Page by Mark Halperin http://thepage.time.com/2012/05/22/obamas-primary-challenger/

Newt Gingrich’s Presidential Campaign Was Not Good for His Career and Bottom Line

It has become a commonality in American politics that many underdog presidential candidates are mostly in the race, at the end of the day, to raise their brand awareness and in turn boost their bottom line through lucrative consulting gigs and book deals that then come their way.

Not so, it turns out, for Newt Gingrich. The former Speaker of the House went into the GOP’s primary with plenty of well-paying private sector work (including, famously, that $1.6 million gig as Freddie Mac’s historian), and a personal net worth of between $6.7 million and $30.1 million. In addition to the more than $4 million of debt the campaign ended with, Newt left the race with those private ventures in shambles, reports Reuters.

Newt Inc., which also includes his nonprofit foundations, is deeply in debt. Even the profits from Callista’s Gingrich Productions are in danger, thanks to bankruptcy proceedings for the former Gingrich Group-owned Center for Health Transformation (sold last May); a judge may force the couple to hand over much of its remaining net worth to settle those debts. And Newt’s quixotic campaign looks like a huge part of the reversal of fortunes.

A political nonprofit he headed, American Solutions for Winning the Future, which raised $52 million between its founding in 2007 and its dissolution last July, also ended in debt.

The decline of the health policy center began earlier than previously realized. When Gingrich began considering a presidential bid in early 2010, “the membership began to drop off,” according to Nancy Desmond, who served as managing partner of Gingrich Group LLC, which did business as the Center for Health Transformation. […] Opened in 2003, the center pulled in $59 million over nine years from more than 300 companies, some of which paid as much as $200,000 in dues. Among its activities, the center and Gingrich helped push a mandate requiring everyone to carry health insurance. At the time, the position was beneficial to the center’s healthcare industry members, but Gingrich later repudiated it as a candidate.

Perhaps, then, Gingrich needs to focus his private sector energy on the policy positions he was most passionate and consistent about. Maybe he can get a gig consulting with NASA and turn this space ship around?

Read more posts by Noreen Malone

Filed Under:
eye of newt
,newt gingrich
,no money mo problems
,politics

via Daily Intel http://nymag.com/daily/intel/2012/05/gingrichs-presidential-campaign-bad-for-career.html