Author Topic: funny AOL article  (Read 653 times)

Mr Smith

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funny AOL article
« on: 16 December 2002, 08:49 »
I love the new corporate term for shitty advertising: "Premium Content"

A Low-Key View From the Top at AOL

By Harry Berkowitz
STAFF WRITER

December 15, 2002

There could hardly be a speech by a major media executive that was less filled with hype.

It was nothing like the speeches media moguls made in the 1990s, as they touted the supposedly unlimited prospects for bigger and bigger, more complex mergers, full of synergy and soaring profits.

Richard Parsons was presenting a progress report on himself, on the world's biggest media company and on the media industry at the UBS Warburg annual media conference in Manhattan last week.

"We haven't effectively figured out how to manage the things we created - and that's our challenge," Parsons said of the media industry and of the "complicated" enterprise AOL Time Warner had become.

The low-key speech came one year and five days after he was named to succeed Gerald Levin as chief executive of AOL Time Warner - and nearly two years after America Online and Time Warner completed the biggest media merger ever.

To Parsons, 54, who grew up in a tough neighborhood in Queens, has fallen the job of making this megamerger work. He brings to the job a background as a conciliator well schooled in the worlds of politics, law and finance.

Add entertainment to that resum
War is an ugly thing, but not the ugliest of things. The decayed and degraded state of moral and patriotic feeling which thinks that nothing is worth war is much worse. The person who has nothing for which he is willing to fight, nothing which is more important than his own personal safety, is a miserable creature and has no chance of being free unless made and kept so by the exertions of better men than himself.
John Stuart Mill