April 27, 2024

Archives for December 2019

Sonny Mehta, Knopf Editor, Remembered by His Writers

When he was honored at the Center for Fiction gala last year, Sonny abandoned the taciturn habits of a lifetime and spoke at great length, and with deep emotion, about his life in books. All of us who heard him that day were greatly moved, partly because it was such a shock to hear him speak so openly — and so much! — and partly, I think, because we feared it was a sort of farewell. It’s so sad, today, to know that it was.

Many years ago, when I was in London to promote one of my early novels, Sonny Mehta somehow found out that I was in town and invited me for a drink at his flat in Knightsbridge. He also invited an Iranian novelist he wanted me to meet. The invitation was especially generous given that, if memory serves, I was then published in hardcover by Random House, though Vintage, Sonny’s imprint, published me in trade paperback. He and I had met maybe once or twice before in New York. But of course he’d read my early books and no doubt surmised from these that I was a small-town boy who would be feeling a bit out of his depth in London (I was), and that with this invitation he would make me feel both welcome and important. Anyway, at the end of a very pleasant evening we decided to go out for a bite to eat. It was raining, though, and the restaurant was a bit too far to walk to, so a taxi was in order. Outside Sonny’s flat, the Iranian novelist said, “We’ll probably have more luck if we let Richard hail it.” My first reaction was puzzlement. Why would someone like me, who hadn’t a wealth of experience hailing big-city taxis, be more likely to succeed than my two urbanite companions? But before I’d even fully articulated the question, I understood. I had light skin. I remember glancing at Sonny, whose sad expression seemed to say, “He’s right, you know.” Even now I can feel the profound embarrassment of acknowledging this shared truth about the world we lived in, and the look on Sonny’s face suggested that he, no doubt a regular victim of that same world, was also deeply embarrassed.

In fact, I think that’s what I’ll remember most about Sonny, the impression he so often managed to convey: not just that the world needed to be a kinder, fairer, better place than it was, but also that he might somehow be partly to blame, that he’d been aware of the world’s imperfections for some time now and meaning to do something about them, but it had somehow slipped his mind and so, as a result, here we were with no choice but to genuflect before its ugliness. In a world where far too many people refuse to take responsibility even for what is clearly their fault, here was a man who felt responsible when he wasn’t. A man, in other words, whose moral imagination could be counted on. The kind of man you’d be pleased to give your book to when you yourself couldn’t make it any better.

Sonny was always smart and kind and friendly. Maybe what I am most grateful for is that he let me do what I wanted to do. He championed “The Greenlanders,” which, I think, everyone thought was truly odd and maybe not sellable. I talked him into a few other things, too. But I think I my best memory was just going to an Indian restaurant with him somewhere in Manhattan, and then strolling back down the street, chatting about this and that. I was very fond of him, and will miss him so!

After my novel “A Boy’s Own Story” was turned down by my previous London publisher, Sonny bought it, surrendered his own office for interviews with every small gay bar publication, arranged for a sellout public event at a trendy theater, gave a chic party at his house, where his jet-set wife arrived after jumping out of a plane with Viscount Linley, the queen’s nephew, and where the beautiful whippet wore an expensive pearl necklace and half the guests were sniffing cocaine. He sold 100,000 copies, and the publicist, Jacqui Graham, won a prize. A heady moment for a simple guy like me from the Midwest.

Follow New York Times Books on Facebook, Twitter and Instagram, sign up for our newsletter or our literary calendar. And listen to us on the Book Review podcast.

Article source: https://www.nytimes.com/2019/12/31/books/sonny-mehta-salman-rushdie-bret-easton-ellis.html?emc=rss&partner=rss

Racism Dispute Roils Romance Writers Group

Ms. Davis, who filed one of the complaints, said she was “stunned” by the R.W.A.’s judgment against Ms. Milan and said the penalty “far exceeded the substance of the complaint.” “We asked for an apology. That was what we wanted,” she said. (In the complaint, she said of Ms. Milan: “She cannot be allowed to hold a position of authority, or to use her voice to urge others to follow her lead.”)

HelenKay Dimon, who was president of R.W.A. until her term ended in late August, said that she thought there had been a series of breakdowns in the process and is calling for a full audit.

“People care enough to get that upset,” she said. Now, the organization needs to “step up and take responsibility and have a plan.”

“I think the organization and the membership and the people who drove this decision are not the same things,” Ms. Milan said. “The response of the membership should be heartening to anyone who cares about diversity in R.W.A. and romance.”

Correction: Dec. 30, 2019
An earlier version of this article incorrectly said the R.W.A. rejected a petition calling for its president’s resignation. The petition hasn’t been submitted.

Follow New York Times Books on Facebook, Twitter and Instagram, sign up for our newsletter or our literary calendar. And listen to us on the Book Review podcast.

Article source: https://www.nytimes.com/2019/12/30/books/courtney-milan-romance-writers-america.html?emc=rss&partner=rss

Boeing to pay compensation to Turkish Airlines over 737 MAX grounding

The company did not specify how much Boeing will shell out. According to Hurriyet newspaper, the payout will total $225 million, with $150 million in compensation and $75 million covering things such as spare parts and training.

The announcement comes after Turkish Airlines said earlier this month it was preparing to bring a lawsuit against Boeing due to uncertainty regarding the 737 MAX and its losses.

Also on rt.com Turkish Airlines prepares to sue Boeing for financial losses due to 737 MAX grounding

The Turkish flagship-carrier has 24 Boeing 737 MAX planes in its fleet. The 737 MAX has been grounded since March, after two crashes just five months apart in Indonesia and Ethiopia killed 346 people.

Last week Boeing fired its CEO Dennis Muilenburg, explaining the move as “necessary to restore confidence” in the firm, as it struggles to restore trust of investors, clients, and aviation regulators.

Boeing acknowledged this month it would not be able to reach its 2019 profit targets and announced it would halt 737 MAX production in January.

For more stories on economy finance visit RT’s business section

Article source: https://www.rt.com/business/477174-turkish-airlines-boeing-compensation-deal/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=RSS

California Wanted to Protect Uber Drivers. Now It May Hurt Freelancers.

“There aren’t many full-time writing jobs in Bakersfield, so these kinds of remote editing contracts are important for me,” said Ms. Gallegos. “I just feel really frustrated and like I’m getting set back from my goals.”

Proponents of the new law argue that many companies are playing on worker anxieties and that many of the arrangements that employers are abandoning were illegal even before A.B. 5.

“A lot of these employers are sending out these fearmongering emails,” said Assemblywoman Lorena Gonzalez of San Diego, the bill’s author. “I guess in this day and age of Twitter, that’s an easy thing to do — create a kind of mass hysteria.”

Ms. Gonzalez, a progressive Democrat, has in recent weeks become a fierce Twitter presence pushing back at critics, sometimes with profanity.

When asked about some of Ms. Gonzalez’s tweets, a spokeswoman said by email: “The assemblywoman is incredibly angry at an economic system that has caused a permanent underclass in her community of working men and women who are constantly being squeezed by corporate greed.”

Ms. Gonzalez has said the problems facing companies that rely on freelancers preceded the new law.

SB Nation, the sports website owned by Vox Media, which cited A.B. 5 as the reason it recently let go about 200 freelancers, was already sued by freelancers before the law changed. In one lawsuit, freelancers claimed that they worked as many as 40 hours a week but earned less than $150 a month.

A spokeswoman for Vox Media declined to comment but cited a post from SB Nation’s executive director in which he said the change was also “part of a business and staffing strategy that we have been exploring over the past two years.”

Article source: https://www.nytimes.com/2019/12/31/technology/california-freelance-gig-workers.html?emc=rss&partner=rss

Fallen Nissan boss Carlos Ghosn makes improbable ‘escape’ from Japan

The executive reached Lebanon, one of the countries where he has citizenship. It would be hard for Japan to get the celebrity fugitive back, since Beirut has no extradition agreement with Tokyo.

1 Renault appoints new leadership as imprisoned Ghosn resigns

“I am now in Lebanon and will no longer be held hostage by a rigged Japanese justice system where guilt is presumed, discrimination is rampant, and basic human rights are denied, in flagrant disregard of Japan’s legal obligations under international law and treaties it is bound to uphold,” Ghosn said on Tuesday.

“I have not fled justice – I have escaped injustice and political persecution,” he stated, adding that he will finally use the opportunity to freely communicate with the media starting next week.

It is unclear how one the world’s prominent and most recognizable businessmen managed to get out of Japan, given that he was under police surveillance while out on bail after serving months in a Japanese jail cell on charges of financial wrongdoing. Ghosn needed a court permission to travel even across Japan, not to mention overseas. All his communication channels, including mobile phone and the Internet, were severely restricted.

Interestingly, all Ghosn’s three passports were required to be held by his lawyers, who said they were “surprised” by their client’s “inexcusable” behavior.

Also on rt.com Tit for tat? France investigates Japan’s Olympic boss as Japan charges French ex-CEO of Nissan

As a French citizen, Ghosn would be able to get consular support from France, junior economy minister Agnes Pannier-Runacher said on Tuesday. However, the minister said she was “very surprised” by the news of the escape.

The former Nissan head was arrested in November 2018 and charged with financial misdeeds, including hiding income and enriching himself through payments to dealerships in other countries. During his arrest, Ghosn was subsequently stripped of leadership roles in Nissan-Renault-Mitsubishi alliance. The former executive denied all the allegations, calling his detention “outrageous and arbitrary.”

Ghosn was the driving force behind the creation of the Nissan-Renault-Mitsubishi alliance, and is widely credited for saving Nissan. When Nissan was on the verge of bankruptcy nearly two decades ago, it was Ghosn who suggested bailing out the Japanese carmaker. French Renault bought 36.8 percent of Nissan in 1999, giving birth to the Renault-Nissan alliance and essentially saving the latter from collapse.

For more stories on economy finance visit RT’s business section

Article source: https://www.rt.com/business/477161-ghosn-escapes-japan-lebanon/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=RSS

Huawei says ‘survival’ is its ‘first priority’ for 2020 amid mounting pressure from Washington

Company chairman Eric Xu said that sales revenue for 2019 was predicted to reach $121 billion (850 billion yuan). It is an 18-percent increase from the previous year, but was still lower than initially expected.

He attributed the setback to the US government’s “long-term” campaign against the tech giant. “These figures are lower than our initial projections, yet business remains solid and we stand strong in the face of adversity,” Xu said in a New Year’s message to employees and customers. He added: “Survival will be our first priority” in 2020. 

Also on rt.com Huawei denies US media claim it received $75 billion in grants from Chinese government

According to Xu, who holds the chairmanship under the company’s rotating leadership scheme, Huawei would need to “go all out” to build up its mobile services ecosystem. That will be the company’s answer to Google apps and services to “ensure that we can keep selling our smartphones in overseas markets.”

Chinese tech giant Huawei has been embroiled in the US-China trade conflict in the past year. The company was accused by the Trump administration of being a tool of the Chinese intelligence, a charge both Huawei and Beijing have repeatedly denied.

For more stories on economy finance visit RT’s business section

Article source: https://www.rt.com/business/477162-huawei-survival-priority-2020/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=RSS

‘We have full confidence in Modi’s govt’: Huawei thanks New Delhi after being cleared for 5G trials

“The age of 5G is coming… We have taken a decision to give 5G spectrum for trials to all the players,” India’s telecommunications and IT minister, Ravi Shankar Prasad, said on Monday. This comes after months of speculation as to whether New Delhi would follow the example of the US and some of its allies by shutting the Chinese firm out of its budding 5G market.

Apparently, the government of PM Narendra Modi decided to keep its options open, allowing Huawei to take part in the trials. Asked about the Chinese firm in particular, Prasad doubled down, noting that “all players means all players.”

Huawei’s participation in the trials has been a contentious issue in India and a subject of a review by a special committee chaired by the principal scientific adviser, tasked with ensuring India’s security is not compromised as a result of the future trials. 

Also on rt.com China’s Huawei to create alternative to Google services in India by year’s end

The company has welcomed the decision, with Huawei India CEO Jay Chen expressing his gratitude to the Indian government for what he called its “continued faith in Huawei.”

“We have our full confidence in Indian Government and industry to partner with best technology for India’s own long term benefit and also for cross industry development. Huawei is always committed to India.”

Chen said he hopes the technical know-how and “high quality networks” possessed by Huawei – the world’s largest supplier of telecommunications network equipment – will help to revitalize the Indian telecom industry.

While it’s still unclear if New Delhi will take its cooperation with Huawei, which has been active in India since 1999, to a new level and allow it to sell its telecommunications equipment after the trials are over, the country has already defied its major ally, the US, which reportedly urged India to snub Huawei’s 5G bid, citing security concerns.

Also on rt.com Countries resisting US pressure to ban Huawei’s 5G equipment

The US Department of Commerce reportedly sent a letter to the Indian government as far back as June, recommending that it study security-related issues before partnering with the Chinese firm.

Huawei, in turn, called on the Indian authorities to “make an independent decision on 5G” in September, vowing to address any security concerns that may arise in the process.

India plans to hold its 5G trials in the first quarter of the coming year, while the spectrum auctions for telecom technology are set to take place by the end of 2020. Washington has been on a global mission to stop any of its allies from enlisting the help of the Chinese firm to develop ultrafast 5G networks. However, while some of them caved in to the pressure, many, including Germany, Italy and Portugal, signaled that they have no intention of barring Huawei from their respective 5G markets.

Think your friends would be interested? Share this story!

Article source: https://www.rt.com/business/477153-huawei-5g-india-permit/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=RSS

Russia & Ukraine strike last-minute gas transit deal to avoid stoppage of energy supplies to Europe

The package deal inked between the Russian company and Ukraine has restored the balance of interests between the parties, Gazprom CEO Alexey Miller said, noting that the Russian energy giant “has made everything possible and has proved one more time that it is a responsible supplier and a reliable partner.”

The agreement will ensure the transit of Russian gas through pipelines on Ukrainian territory for the next five years, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky revealed, adding that Kiev is set to receive over $7 billion from Moscow under the deal.

After the current contract expires, the parties will have an option to extend the deal for another 10 years, Zelensky wrote in a Facebook post late on Monday.

Pursuant to the deal, Ukraine’s Naftogaz will transmit 65 billion cubic meters of Russian gas in 2020 and 40 billion cubic meters annually in the 2021-2024 period, the Ukrainian leader confirmed.

Also on rt.com Russia Ukraine to drop reciprocal claims and lift asset seizures as part of new gas transit agreement

All legal issues that existed between the two companies have been settled, Gazprom confirmed in a statement, noting that the parties also agreed not to initiate any lawsuits with respect to the 2009 transit contract that expires in January.

The two sides signed the documents on Monday following a marathon five days of negotiations in Vienna, with the old agreement due to expire on December 31.

Last week, Russia and Ukraine reached an agreement “in principle” to extend the gas contract, and they have been working on the final documents since then. The delegations had to determine how Russia’s Gazprom will cooperate with the Ukrainian operator of the national gas system, and how the transit of the blue fuel will be organized, as well as finalizing an agreement to drop reciprocal claims.

Subscribe to RT newsletter to get stories the mainstream media won’t tell you.

Article source: https://www.rt.com/business/476861-russia-ukraine-gas-transit-deal/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=RSS

Jimmy Iovine Knows Music and Tech. Here’s Why He’s Worried.

Are you impressed by artists’ work now?

Artists have these new platforms that are very, very powerful. So why do visual artists like Mark Bradford, Kara Walker, Ed Ruscha, Jenny Holzer make such powerful statements on where we are today in our culture, like Marvin Gaye, Public Enemy, Bob Dylan or Rage Against the Machine did? What has changed?

One of the reasons I left music was because there wasn’t a kind of music that I related to. I grew up with Patti Smith, Bruce Springsteen, John Lennon. When Neil Young’s “Ohio” came out, I was 17 years old. I was a year from being drafted. My instincts said that this war is wrong. And here was a guy whose music I loved, and all of a sudden, I was part of, “We don’t agree with this.” And Neil Young had one-tenth of one percent of the platform that some of these artists have now.

These days I am getting that from the art world and not the music world.

So I call up Ed Ruscha, and I said, “Could you make me an American flag?” And he said, “Only if I can make it the way I feel about America today.” And I said, “Absolutely.”

When I got that painting, I knew that Ed had hit on something. And I said, “Where are the musicians that are doing this?”

There are some clues. Have we entered into an age of music where artists are afraid to alienate people? Since the country is so polarized, am I afraid to alienate the other audience? Am I afraid to alienate a sponsor from my Instagram? I don’t know. I’m asking the question.

But you do have artists like Eilish who are talking about climate change.

There are a few. But not nearly enough.

Article source: https://www.nytimes.com/2019/12/30/arts/music/jimmy-iovine-pop-decade.html?emc=rss&partner=rss

‘Flow of global capital impossible to stop’: Foreign investments in Russia expected to jump 70% this year despite sanctions

According to Dmitriev, EU states played a significant role in driving overall foreign investment into Russia, which has also increased significantly during the year.

“At the start of this year, I forecasted that foreign direct investments [FDI] to Russia would increase by over 50 percent [in 2019]; many raised questions about this figure​​​. Now we see that by the end of this year FDI will grow by around 70 percent. It is a very significant growth,” Dmitriev told Sputnik news agency.

Also on rt.com Hungary lost $8.5 BILLION due to EU sanctions against Russia – foreign minister

The head of the national wealth fund pointed out that such growth in investment demonstrates that economic sanctions imposed on Russia in 2014 in the aftermath of the Ukrainian conflict are not having their intended effect.

Dmitriev added that EU political leaders cannot prevent European companies from conducting mutually beneficial business.

“Economic sanctions are an outdated instrument which contradicts the logic of the global economy’s development. Nevertheless, the global capital still needs opportunities for investment, and the flow of global capital is impossible to stop.”

Also on rt.com EU extends sanctions against Russia for another 6 months

The head of RDIF noted that economic sanctions were in fact having a negative impact on the European economy. “Countries of the European Union lost almost $240 billion because of sanctions and are de facto losing the Russian market.”

For more stories on economy finance visit RT’s business section

Article source: https://www.rt.com/business/477107-russia-eu-investments-sanctions/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=RSS