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Archive for January, 2007

January 30th, 2007

Tune in to DMZ 4 Tonight!

Tune in tonight at 8 p.m. Central for DMZ, Episode 4, featuring Paul McEnany of Beyond Madison Avenue and Hee-Haw Marketing; Cam Beck of ChaosScenario; and Paul Herring of ChaosScenario. (Brian Clark is unable to join us this evening.)

Because it’s BTR, of course, you can call in live and ask questions — or simply berate the DMZ members.

What: Dallas Marketing Zoo
When: January 30, 2007 at 8:00 p.m. CST
Who: You
Number: 646-652-4815
Where: Blog Talk Radio

We hope to hear from you tonight.

January 27th, 2007

Reports of My Death Are Mildly Exaggerated

My wife and I went to a Volvo dealership to lease a new car today. We’d decided on the redesigned S-80 to replace my Saab 9-5.

After they ran my credit report, the manager came out, introduced himself and shook my hand. Then he asked me to sit down. Oh boy, I thought — not the old “good cop, bad cop” routine again.

Nope. He just put the credit report on the desk in front of me and asked me to read it. It said, “No credit rating — deceased.”

So I didn’t lease a car today. I told them I’d come back and try again when I’m feeling a little better.

Stay tuned.

January 26th, 2007

Michael Coyne’s Excellent Singapore Adventure


If you have any interest in the worlds of corporate, editorial or stock photography, I invite you to subscribe to the Black Star Rising blogzine. It’s fun stuff, and I’m proud to be a part of it.

I wanted to call your attention to the first post by a new contributor, the distinguished Black Star photographer Michael Coyne. Coyne describes a harrowing business trip to Singapore — which, despite its reputation for cleanliness, order and discipline, has a red-light district that ranks with the best (worst) of them.

Coyne’s story, of course, is illustrated with some, uh, colorful photography, like the shot above.

January 26th, 2007

Consumer Reports E-Mails Letter of "Regret" to Subscribers

Since I’m a subscriber, I just received it. Here it is, for you damage-control junkies out there. (Background here.)

Dear Scott Baradell,

By now, you’ve probably heard the news about my decision to withdraw the infant car seat report featured on ConsumerReports.org and in the February issue of Consumer Reports magazine. I took this action when we discovered a mistake in our side-impact crash tests.

We always strive to be accurate and fair, and I regret this error. Going forward, I want to make sure that our actions are as thorough and transparent as possible so that we preserve your trust as we continue to test, inform, and protect consumers. To that end, I’m writing you and the millions of other Consumers Union members to tell you what I know about the situation and what we’re doing about it.

Here’s what I know so far: One of our tests was intended to simulate how infant car seats perform in a side-impact crash at 38 mph. That’s the speed at which many new vehicles are tested in side crashes by the government’s auto safety agency. But upon reevaluating our data, we believe our tests simulated crashes that were much more severe than that.

Some of the questions I’ve heard involve our use of an outside lab to conduct the crash tests. While the vast majority of product testing by Consumers Union occurs in our own labs, we sometimes use outside contractors that have special test equipment or other expertise that we don’t. This enables us to inform you about the safety, reliability, and performance of important products that we couldn’t otherwise test.

That said, we expect all our testing to meet the same high standards, and our own staff oversees all projects. The board of directors and I are appointing a panel of experts to review this incident and determine what went wrong.

We’re also retesting the infant car seats featured in our article as thoroughly and quickly as possible, so that we can publish our findings and help parents who are making this important buying decision. I’ve directed that we suspend the article’s Ratings and other recommendations regarding specific car-seat models until this retesting is completed. In any case, I again stress the importance of what we say in the article: Any child car seat is better than no seat at all.

For 71 years, the staff of Consumers Union has worked hard to earn the trust of members like you and to build the stellar reputation we have enjoyed. We test more than 3,000 products each year, and errors like this one are rare. I apologize on behalf of Consumers Union and I promise you we’re working hard to ensure that such an error does not happen again.

Sincerely,

Jim Guest
President

At least he uses the world “apologize” near the end, rather than simply saying “I accept responsibility.”

January 25th, 2007

A Conversation on Social Media Tools

I’ll be participating in a BlogTalkRadio roundtable Monday night hosted by Mike Sansone and Wayne Hurlbert. The topic is “A Conversation on Social Media Tools,” and my fellow panelists will include Kami Huyse, Shawn Collins, Mandie Crawford and Jim Kukral.

I encourage you to call in and ask a question.

What: A Conversation on Social Media Tools
When: January 29, 2007 at 7:00 p.m. CST
Who: You
Call-in Number: 646-652-4643
Where: BlogTalkRadio

 

 

 
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