Tuesday, September 15, 2009

Jay Leno Ratings

Jay Leno Ratings
Jay Leno's new prime-time comedy hour debuted Monday night, garnering underwhelming reviews across the blogosphere and conservative estimates of audience size. Indeed, the show closely resembled Leno's old "Tonight Show," with few of the promised new elements in sight. Now, the $10 million question: Once the novelty has worn off, how many viewers will watch night after night? In a decidedly unscientific survey of audience response, the Monitor tuned into three demographic groups in the Los Angeles area for some insight on what the future may hold for "The Jay Leno Show."
"I would tune in again," says Katherine Carter, a 20-something who gathered with three friends in Marina Del Rey to take in the debut. "I thought it was really funny, but some of the skits went on too long." She adds, "It was a bit slow." Her buddy, Eva Fedderley, has stronger reactions, saying she found the new Leno show "boring, with very little to actually sink my teeth into." She elaborates: "It was bland, and everyone seemed nervous and awkward." Sacha Bollas chimes in with a bit more support for the comedian. "I like Jay," he says. "I'm glad to see him back, although," he adds with a laugh, "he still kills punch lines." The clinical psychologist adds that although he did enjoy the show, he wouldn't tune in intentionally. "I might stay with it if I found it channel-surfing," he says.
Over in Whittier, a younger group gathered in the living room of the Harris dorm on the campus of Whittier College. One student expressed surprise that Leno was still around, but a few said they were looking forward to seeing the show. "I appreciated seeing Kanye West," says Nick Santoro, a sophomore from Boston. He questions, though, whether there is a need for yet another talk show. "Jay's had his time," he says. "Now everyone has to have a show, even [actress] Tori Spelling. Jay won't last," he predicts. "Maybe he'll outlast Tori, but not by much."

Fast Flip Google

Fast Flip Google
Google Labs has been very active lately. The most recent service launched in Google Labs is Fast Flip, a visual version of Google News that encourages serendipitous discoveries. "Fast Flip is a new reading experience that combines the best elements of print and online articles. Like a print magazine, Fast Flip lets you browse sequentially through bundles of recent news, headlines and popular topics, as well as feeds from individual top publishers. As the name suggests, flipping through content is very fast, so you can quickly look through a lot of pages until you find something interesting," explains Krishna Bharat, the man behind Google News.
The homepage shows thumbnails of the news articles and clicking on the thumbnail loads a screenshot of the article. You can't read the entire article in Google Fast Flip, so you need to visit the original source. The service shows articles from a small number of sources, including BBC News, New York Times, Newsweek and Slate.
The nice thing is that you can quickly go to the next preview by clicking on the blue right arrow or by using the right-arrow key. The service provides recommendation based on the articles you read, you email or explicitly like.

Patrick Swayze

Patrick Swayze
Patrick Swayze is a well-known actor, who starred in Dirty Dancing and Ghost and he has been fighting with pancreatic cancer for the last 20 months. Annett Wolf, Patrick Swayze’s publicist, told to the press that Mr. Swayze died on Monday with family on his side. Swayze, 57, has been diagnosed with pancreatic cancer in January 2008 and the doctors only gave him 6 months to live, though he survived for another 14 months.
After he survived the 6 months the doctors predicted, he was planning to play in “The Beast”, a drama series for A&E and already filmed a season. “How do you nurture a positive attitude when all the statistics say you’re a dead man?” he said to Bill Carter of The New York Times last October. “You go to work.”
Patrick Swayze had the role of an undercover F.B.I. agent and had the premiere in January. Just before the series began, Patrick Swayze has been invited on ABC to Barbara Walters Special and he talked about his illness, where he said: “I keep my heart and my soul and my spirit open to miracles.” Unfortunately, people didn’t even know it’s correct name, because a lot of them are searching for Patrick Swazy, which is sad.
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