By Dylan on March 30, 2006 12:24 PM
A British High Court case pitting the Beatles’ record co., Apple Corps, against Apple’s iTunes is underway. “Le Freak” is played in the courtroom. Seriously.
Wal-Mart looking for senior-level flaks on the attack.
A memorial for murdered Seattle rave kids that draws a Styles section worthy crowd.
Bloggers, they’re relentless. Just ask a California Republican Congressional candidate, whose photo of a peaceful and prosperous Baghdad was really Istanbul.
If you’ve seen one solar eclipse, you’ve seen ‘em all.
By Dylan on March 29, 2006 2:30 PM
Lou Dobbs: CNN anchor-advocate takes up immigration issue, wins viewers.
Randy Quaid files suit over role in Brokeback Mountain, still considered by some to be an “arthouse” film.
Apple’s chief technology officer and Mac OSX developer is set to leave.
Nigeria says ex-President of Liberia has disappeared. Ours, however, keeps popping up.
Commissioner of baseball Bud Selig to announce a steroid investigation. Not that there’s a book out that essentially does the investigation for him.
By Dylan on March 28, 2006 4:09 PM
Bush meets with reporters for off-the-record talks. The Times reports about it, but does not participate.
Google is ramping up its lobbying efforts in Washington.
Interpublic Groupe gives Wall Street 8 hours of speeches and presentations around the corner from mb HQ at the Puck Building in SoHo.
Two years later, the Federal Election Commission rules unanimously that political communication on the Internet, including blogs, is not regulated by campaign finance laws.
The only part of NASCAR we find mildly interesting: The post-race brouhaha.