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Venezuela to spend more on media control despite economic crisis

A new media mogul has emerged in Venezuela: the state.

Despite an economic crisis that is bringing public finances to its knees, the self-proclaimed Bolivarian Revolution controls 14 television channels, a global satellite network (TeleSur), four newspapers soon to be five and dozens of radio stations.

The mission of this media empire is to promote the governments actions, support socialist values and drive forward the revolution, as worded in the executives recent 2015 budget proposal.

In order to finance just part of this conglomerate, the Nicols Maduro administration is planning to invest 3.6 billion bolivars next year equivalent to slightly over $508 million according to the official exchange rate, but only 64.7 million under Venezuelas controversial exchange system.

The government is simultaneously planning to use its parliamentary majority to pass a law that will allow it to directly fund over 500 community stations sympathetic to former president Hugo Chvez, bypassing local authorities.

The late Chvez always considered the media a key battleground in his quest to establish a Bolivarian regime based on his own interpretation of socialism, populism and Latin American regionalism. Now his successor, Nicols Maduro, is following in his footsteps.

The figures on state control of the media were drawn up by Marcelino Bisbal, director of postgraduate media studies at the Andrs Bello Catholic University (UCAB) in Caracas, a Jesuit-run learning center.

We took all the items earmarked for communication in the budget law, and the largest share corresponded to the Information and Communication Ministry, said the scholar.

Even though this renewed investment effort maintains no relation to the low audience ratings of the state-owned media, Bisbal said the logic behind it was the states desire to fill all areas of public life. And while it is true, as state spokesmen say, that there are still many more private outlets than public ones, they are intimidated and self-censoring, and dominated by the official truth.

The 3.6 billion bolivars slated for investment in the media surpasses the money allocated to the judicial and electoral branches of government, two of the five powers granted to the state under the 1999 Constitution. That is despite the fact that 2015 is an election year, a fact that normally requires additional funding for the National Electoral Council.

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Venezuela to spend more on media control despite economic crisis

Eye On Education: Program Teaches Girls How To Control Media And Message

BOSTON (CBS) Every day we are bombarded with images in magazines, on TV, and online. And those images can shape a young girls self-esteem before she even understands what shes looking at.

Everybodys always really skinny.

Most of the girls are white.

It makes me feel unattractive, like a I can never look like that.

Everybody looks perfect and it kind of lowered my self-esteem.

Thats just a sampling of sixth grade girls describing how those glossy, photoshopped pictures can make them feel.

But now there is a new program teaching girls how to take control of media and the message.

Read: More Eye on Education stories

What media is teaching girls, overall, in mainstream media is that theyre not enough. They are not sexy enough, not hot enough, theyre not enough, Michelle Cove told WBZ-TV.

Thats why she started the non-profit organization Media Girls.

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Eye On Education: Program Teaches Girls How To Control Media And Message

Bill Cosby's Silence On Rape Allegations Makes Huge Media Noise

Bill Cosby speaks during a Veterans Day ceremony this year in Philadelphia. Matt Rourke/AP hide caption

Bill Cosby speaks during a Veterans Day ceremony this year in Philadelphia.

This may be the first time in a long while that Bill Cosby can't control the public conversation about Bill Cosby.

Read the recent biography Cosby: His Life and Times, and you see a portrait of a talented performer who took control of his business and career interests early on, forever suspicious of journalists and industry executives who might try to interfere.

But in the recent explosion of attention to allegations that the comedy superstar drugged and sexually assaulted several women years ago, in incidents reaching back to the late 1960s, Cosby has remained uncharacteristically silent epitomized by his interview with NPR's Scott Simon, who found the comic would only shake his head and utter no sound when asked about the allegations.

His attorney did provide a statement posted on Cosby's website that said, in part, "decade-old, discredited allegations against Mr. Cosby have resurfaced. The fact that they are being repeated does not make them true. Mr. Cosby doesn't not intend to dignify these allegations with any comment."

Later, a joint statement from Cosby's attorney and a lawyer for Andrea Constand, a woman who settled a lawsuit with Cosby over such allegations in 2006, was posted on the site that read, in part: "The statement released by Mr. Cosby's attorney over the weekend was not intended to refer in any way to Andrea Constand. As previously reported, differences between Mr. Cosby and Ms. Constand were resolved to the mutual satisfaction of Mr. Cosby and Ms. Constand years ago."

News of Cosby's silence rocketed across media; the moment was covered everywhere from NBC's Today show to CNN, USA Today and The Washington Post, which called it "perhaps the most significant dead air in the history of National Public Radio."

When NPR most recently spoke to Cosby, four women had come forward publicly with rape allegations: Constand, Beth Ferrier, Tamara Green and Barbara Bowman. (See this story for a more detailed account of their allegations.) Over the weekend, another woman, 66-year-old publicist Joan Tarshis, also told media outlets she was drugged and raped by Cosby when she was 19 years old. Constand filed a lawsuit in 2005 that included 13 women willing to tell similar stories, Greene and Bowman among them; the suit was settled, no terms were disclosed and Cosby was never charged with a crime.

But several recent events, including the 30th anniversary of The Cosby Show and the publication of the biography, have pushed media to reconsider Cosby's legacy.

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Bill Cosby's Silence On Rape Allegations Makes Huge Media Noise

George Zimmerman grand jury hears civil rights testimony …

ORLANDO, Fla., Nov. 13 (UPI) -- Nearly three years after George Zimmerman shot and killed Trayvon Martin, a grand jury is considering whether he violated the unarmed teen's civil rights.

A federal grand jury convened Wednesday to consider whether there is enough evidence to indict Zimmerman, who was acquitted of second-degree murder last July. Zimmerman maintained he acted in self-defense.

One of Zimmerman's supporters from his first trial has turned against him, saying he wants to "make amends" with Martin's family. Frank Taaffe, Zimmerman's former neighbor, says he now believes Zimmerman's actions were racially charged.

"This is a young man who didn't deserve to die," Taaffe told reporters before he testified on subpoena by a U.S. Department of Justice attorney Wednesday.

Taaffe said the recent deaths of both of his sons changed his perspective on Zimmerman's actions.

"If there's a young man not doing anything but talking on the phone, in the rain, sauntering about, let it go," he said, of what Zimmerman should have done the night he saw Martin walking through a Sanford neighborhood. "You know, that's why they have law enforcement. Let them handle it."

Taaffe said he expected to testify about a phone call he received in the days before Zimmerman was arrested. The caller, who claimed to be Zimmerman, made a "racial comment," but the number was unregistered and Taaffe said he can't be sure it was Zimmerman on the phone.

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George Zimmerman grand jury hears civil rights testimony ...

Biz Stone, CEO and Co-founder Jelly Industries, Inc. & Co-founder, Twitter – Video


Biz Stone, CEO and Co-founder Jelly Industries, Inc. Co-founder, Twitter
Dean Rich Lyons interviews CEO and Co-founder of Jelly Industries, Inc. Co-founder of Twitter Biz Stone on the future of social networking and his "must-do tips" for success as an entrepreneur....

By: Berkeley-Haas

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Biz Stone, CEO and Co-founder Jelly Industries, Inc. & Co-founder, Twitter - Video