Archive for the ‘Word Press’ Category

Liu Who? What Did The Comptroller Know, And When Did He Know It?

Everywhere John Liu has traveled this week he has found a crowd of people waiting for him, hanging on his every word.

They were members of the citys press corps, and Mr. Liu treated them to a rolling, week-long, five-borough press conferencea dialogue that read as if it could be snatched from a piece of absurdist opera, key words and phrases thrown together and repeated ad nauseam. Mr. Liu himself starred as the antihero, trying to keep his timbre steady as he falls deeper and deeper into the abyss.

Scene: A Lunar New Year Celebration at a dim sum restaurant in Chinatown. Mr. Liu onstage feeding two Chinese dragons a piece of felt bait suspended from a pole while a three-piece percussion orchestra bangs out a song next to him. On his way out the door

Press: Mr. Comptroller, have you been interviewed at all by the feds?

Mr. Liu: This was a wonderful event.

Press: Is there anything you feel like you have done wrong regarding your campaign fund-raising?

Mr. Liu: I feel very privileged to be in a position to serve New Yorkers and will continue to do so.

Press: Are you concerned that some members of your staff will be implicated in this growing fund-raising scandal?

Mr. Liu: I feel very privileged to serve. Thank you for coming here. This was a wonderful event.

It was a scene played out with only slight variation all around the city, like a traveling road show or a pop-up piece of performance art, the protagonist surrounded by his chorus.

See the original post:
Liu Who? What Did The Comptroller Know, And When Did He Know It?

TeamLab Announces the First Online HTML5-based Word Processor

Ascensio System SIA introduces the beta version of the first full-fledged HTML5-based TeamLab Document Editor.

Hannover, Germany (PRWEB) March 08, 2012

The cutting edge technology, that drives TeamLab Document Editor, differs from all the other existing counterparts, getting use of all the HTML5 features. It supplies the tool with an array of competitive strengths making it a proper alternative to desktop word processors in terms of functional variety. In contrast to all the existing online word processors TeamLab Document Editor provides...

the input that is always identical to the output: a processed file keeps the same style, paragraphs, symbol and line spacing etc. while displaying in any browser on any OS as well as while importing or printing;

Pursuing a goal to erase boundaries between desktop and online word processors, TeamLab Document Editor combines the convenience and mobility of web applications with the multifunctionality of conventional package doc processors like Microsoft Office Word or OpenOffice Writer.

The introduction of TeamLab Document Editor will take place during the press-conference on Wednesday, 7th March, 2012, 15:30 16:30, Room 3B in the Convention Center (CC), CeBIT 2012, Hannover, Germany. If you would like to attend the press conference, please notify us at pr@teamlab.com.

To try the beta version of the new editor right now, visit TeamLab Demo Portal at http://html5.teamlab.com

About TeamLab

TeamLab is a free online service for business collaboration, document, project and customer relationship management that integrates a number of web tools helping employees to organize and automate business processes.

For more information refer to http://www.teamlab.com

Continued here:
TeamLab Announces the First Online HTML5-based Word Processor

Paula Deen Fights Back In ‘N Word’ Lawsuit, Claims Accuser Demanded ‘Large Sum Of Money’ Or She’d Go To The Press

Splash News/Facebook

By Radar Staff

Paula Deens attorneys Tuesday denied a former workers accusations that the celebrity chef and her brother fostered a hostile work atmosphere while running a Savannah, Georgia restaurant where sexual harassment and racial slurs were on the menu.

PHOTOS: Celebrities Who Have Filed For Bankruptcy

Lisa Jackson, a former manager at Uncle Bubba's Seafood and Oyster House, "makes false allegations against Paula Deen and they will be proven false in court," according to a statement from Deens attorney from the Oliver Maner law firm. "She has made baseless, inflammatory allegations, threatening to go to the press and ruin Paula Deen's reputation and the reputation of her businesses unless we paid her a large sum of money.

We refused to bow to that kind of pressure and refused to pay money to address false claims."

As RadarOnline.com was first to report, Jacksons suit alleges Deen and her brother, Bubba Hiers, used racial epithets while working at the establishment -- including one aimed at the Oval Office.

PHOTOS: Diabetic Paula Deen Tucks Into A High Calorie, Fatty Treat

"In the presence of Ms. Jackson and Uncle Bubba's restaurant manager and a vendor, Bubba Hiers stated they should send President Obama to the oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico so he could n***er-rig it," according to the suit.

As for Deen, Jackson claims the celeb chef made her uncomfortable with her attempt at humor during a discussion about planning her brothers 2007 wedding.

Continue reading here:
Paula Deen Fights Back In ‘N Word’ Lawsuit, Claims Accuser Demanded ‘Large Sum Of Money’ Or She’d Go To The Press

Alliances the buzz word for Europe auto survival

PSA Peugeot Citroen CEO Philippe Varin addresses the media on Wednesday, March 7, 2012 during the press preview days at the 82nd Geneva International Motor Show in Geneva, Switzerland.The Motor Show will open it's doors to public from 8th to the 18th of March presenting more than 260 exhibitors and more than 180 world...

Frank Augstein, Associated Press

GENEVA Alliances are the buzz word of European automakers' struggle for survival.

PSA Peugeot-Citroen chairman Philippe Varin said Tuesday at the Geneva Motor Show that a new alliance with General Motors will allow the French automaker to return to long-term profitability in Europe.

There is hardly a potential ally that Fiat and Chrysler CEO Sergio Marchionne will rule out.

"We are open to everything," Marchionne said, even as the fresh GM-Peugeot alliance complicates Fiat's search for potential new partners.

While alliances have been around for a while some more successful than others the brutal European car market characterized by plummeting sales, idled factories and fierce competition is pushing many automakers to look for partners for new technology and access to fresh markets without reinventing the wheel.

"This requires more and more investment that nobody can do except through acquisitions and alliances," said Carlos Ghosn, head of the 13-year-old Nissan and Renault alliance. "If Nissan were alone and Renault were alone there were many things we could not do."

Targeted alliances are driven by the logic that a good four-cylinder engine is a good four-cylinder no matter who builds it, and no driver cares about what platform the car is on. Only when it comes to more powerful engines, does brand identity come into play. Maserati and Ferrari, for example, strictly restrict their powertrain technologies to those brands.

The Peugeot-GM alliance is somewhat broader. GM becomes the French automaker's second-largest shareholder with a 7-percent stake, behind the Peugeot family, whose stake drops from 31 percent to around 25 percent.

Read more:
Alliances the buzz word for Europe auto survival

Word of Mouth: Eddie Murphy comedy is dusted off by Paramount

At the height of Eddie Murphy's popularity, millions of Americans flocked to his hit films like "Beverly Hills Cop" and "Coming to America." Paramount Pictures executives are crossing their fingers that even a fraction of that interest surfaces for the actor's "A Thousand Words," a comedy that arrives in theaters this weekend nearly four years after it was made and seemingly a lifetime removed from Murphy's 1980s heyday.

Going out with minimal publicity support from the star, the DreamWorks production has generated tepid interest in pre-release surveys, and analysts expect an opening weekend box office of less than $10 million. A Paramount spokeswoman said the movie cost $40 million. But two people familiar with the production who were not authorized by the studio to speak publicly on the subject pegged the price tag at about $70 million.

To boost interest, the studio has targeted female and African American filmgoers with a series of promotions and ads while hoping that Murphy's return to his comedic wheelhouse will take care of the rest.

"This is a sweet, heartfelt movie, and it's a chance to see Eddie do some very physical comedy," said Megan Colligan, Paramount's president of domestic marketing and distribution. "He's really funny in this film."

A high-concept comedy about a fast-talking book agent, "A Thousand Words" harks back to Jim Carrey comedies including "Liar Liar" and "Bruce Almighty." ("Words" scribe Steve Koren also penned "Bruce Almighty.") Successful but prone to ethically dubious behavior, Jack McCall (Murphy) is thrown for a loop when he discovers a tree whose leaves fall off whenever he speaks. He's told by a mystical figure that the tree's branches will be bare after he utters 1,000 words, at which point he will die. The set-up yields numerous opportunities for Murphy to engage in gestures and exaggerated body language.

"A Thousand Words" was one of the last movies made while DreamWorks was a Paramount subsidiary, and it was left at Paramount for the studio to market and distribute when the two entities parted ways. When the film went into production in 2008, there was reason for the studio to be optimistic about the arrangement. Murphy was not far removed from his 2007 Oscar nomination for his supporting role in "Dreamgirls"; his 2007 commercial hit "Norbit," which like "Words" was directed by the comedy veteran Brian Robbins; and his third go-round as the voice of Donkey in the animated "Shrek the Third."

But Murphy's career soon took a nose dive. His next two leading roles, in 2008's "Meet Dave" (also directed by Robbins) and "Imagine That," were box-office fiascos, with neither reaching $20 million in domestic receipts. Paramount decided to put some distance between "Words" and those films, according to a person familiar with the studio's internal discussions who was not authorized to talk about them publicly. "Imagine That" in particular was an issue because of its similarities to "Words," the person said. (Released by Paramount in 2009, "Imagine That" also centered on a brash high-flier who is taught humility.)

In addition, "A Thousand Words" received poor marks from test audiences soon after it was finished, according to two people familiar with the screenings who were not authorized to talk about them publicly.

Last summer, Paramount looked to be getting a boost when Murphy was named host of the 2012 Oscars. But those hopes went up in smoke in November when Murphy withdrew from the gig shortly after the show's producer, Brett Ratner, resigned because of controversial comments. The November returns from Murphy's film "Tower Heist," a splashy production that managed only $78 million in domestic box office, didn't help either.

Throughout last year, Paramount played musical chairs with the "Words" release date, postponing the PG-13 film from Jan. 13, 2012, to March 23 (which would have pitted it against female-oriented juggernaut "The Hunger Games"), then delaying it to April 20. Finally, Steve Harvey's "Think Like a Man," a female-oriented comedy with several black stars, moved on to "Word's" April 20 date, and Paramount opted to push up "Words" to March 9.

Read the original post:
Word of Mouth: Eddie Murphy comedy is dusted off by Paramount