May 9, 2024

Archives for November 2020

The King of Trump TV Thinks You’re Dumb Enough to Buy It

Newsmax has inverted the usual media business dynamic. The company is losing money on television, and making it on the internet, though Mr. Ruddy told me he expects that “revenues on cable and OTT television will be more robust and consistent than the online business for the next 10 years.”

Newsmax has built a solid, and unusual, business by catering to the 50-and-older demographic it described in the document shared with investors as “Boomers and Beyond.” The website’s voice, its big and lucrative email lists, and its products, from books to magazines to vitamin supplements, have the tone of conservative direct mail. And it’s working: The company projected its 2018 revenues at more than $59 million, divided among advertising, subscriptions and e-commerce. (One sponsor on the app last week was selling health advice, asking “Is the ‘Pandemic’ a Lie?”)

Newsmax has been raising money to finance its TV ambitions. Private equity from “a couple of investors,” Mr. Ruddy said, has paid to upgrade studios and hire figures like Mr. Kelly and the former White House press secretary Sean Spicer as the hosts of shows that replaced hours of World War II documentaries, and carry conservative radio talkers including Howie Carr from Boston. The investors, he said, are domestic, despite a Politico report (picked up on Breitbart) indicating he was in talks to raise money from Qatar. Mr. Ruddy said he sent proposals to many sovereign wealth funds, among others, but has not taken foreign investment. He blames his former rival, Stephen Bannon, for pushing the Qatar story, but such grudges are fleeting in the often-shifting alliances of the new right: Mr. Bannon’s podcast, “War Room,” is now also broadcast on Newsmax late at night on weekdays.

Newsmax now needs to raise more money, or sell fast, if it’s going to keep upgrading its talent and production quality to press its advantage with Fox News — which has begun nervously trying to block guests from appearing on the network.

When I pressed Mr. Ruddy on why he was stringing along his audience with a story he can’t, really, himself believe — that Mr. Trump won the election — he didn’t really defend it. Instead, he countered that he wasn’t the only one. “For two years, the liberal media pushed this Russian hoax theory, and there didn’t seem to be any substantiation at the end of the day and it was a pretty compelling, gripping story — controversial personalities, things happened, sparks were flying,” he said.

Newsmax continues to tell a gripping story. On Friday night, Mr. Kelly referred to Joe Biden’s “alleged victory,” hosted a long interview with Rudy Giuliani and later turned to an analyst who gave Mr. Trump a “35 to 40 percent chance that he wins this.” The 8 p.m. host, Grant Stinchfield, announced that “the momentum seems to be shifting back to the president’s favor,” and interviewed a lawyer for Mr. Trump, Jenna Ellis, and a Pennsylvania state senator trying to take back the state’s election certification.

Mr. Ruddy’s cynicism brings me back to the most trenchant attack from conservative media on the mainstream media: that journalists think conservatives are stupid. Tucker Carlson regularly tells his audience that the college-educated snobs in New York who preside over the major outlets view conservatives as unsophisticated rubes, misled by misinformation, not as people who actually believe in the ideas pushed by Mr. Trump, like immigration should be sharply curtailed. Those attacks on the media are often false, but the coastal media sometimes does fail to understand people who aren’t like them, left and right, and sometimes they patronize their audiences.

Article source: https://www.nytimes.com/2020/11/29/business/media/newsmax-chris-ruddy-trump.html

Biden Expected to Name Top Economic Officials This Week

Mr. Deese, 42, is not an academic economist but a veteran of economic policymaking, having served as the acting head of the Office of Management and Budget and the deputy director of the Economic Council under Mr. Obama. He was also a special adviser on climate change to Mr. Obama, a role that could signal Mr. Biden’s commitment to fashioning an infrastructure bill for his legislative agenda that heavily features spending on clean energy initiatives.

Mr. Biden on Sunday announced an all-female White House communications staff, with Jennifer Psaki, a veteran of the Obama administration, in the most visible role as White House press secretary.

Kate Bedingfield, 39, who served as a deputy campaign manager for Mr. Biden, will serve as the White House communications director. Karine Jean Pierre, who previously served as the chief public affairs officer for MoveOn.org, will be the principal deputy press secretary. Pili Tobar, a former immigrant advocate with the group America’s Voice, will serve as the deputy White House communications director.

Symone Sanders, a senior adviser to Mr. Biden on the campaign, will serve as the senior adviser and chief spokeswoman for Vice President-elect Kamala Harris. Ashley Etienne, a former senior adviser to Speaker Nancy Pelosi, will serve as the communications director for Ms. Harris.

The appointments indicate Mr. Biden’s plan to include racial, gender and ideological diversity in top roles, fulfilling a campaign pledge to ensure that a broad swath of America is represented in policymaking decisions.

But they could fall short of hopes within the progressive wing of the Democratic Party, which has been frustrated that their views are not being sufficiently represented in early personnel decisions. In particular, the decision to select Ms. Tanden, a divisive and partisan figure in the Democratic Party, could culminate in an intraparty fight, as well as a confirmation battle.

Republicans, who are expected to retain control of the Senate, are unlikely to easily pass Ms. Tanden, who advised Hillary Clinton’s 2016 presidential campaign and has been one of the most outspoken critics of President Trump.

Article source: https://www.nytimes.com/2020/11/29/us/politics/biden-cabinet-tanden-rouse-adeyemo.html

Covering ‘The Crown’ on Both Sides of the Atlantic

What do you think of Gillian Anderson’s portrayal of Margaret Thatcher, the first female prime minister of Britain?

If you’re not super familiar with Margaret Thatcher, it reads really strangely and is a bit of a caricature. But if you watch Thatcher’s speeches and look at the way she talked in public, it’s remarkably accurate. She was a very strange — to my mind, unpleasant — woman, and Gillian Anderson does a good job of capturing that.

How far ahead did you start planning your coverage?

The Netflix team sent out screeners at the end of September, which was helpful because we had some lead time to work on our story about the historical accuracy of the series. It was very much a cross-desk effort — it takes a village to pull off coverage like this.

What are some of the more offbeat stories you tackled?

We talked to Gillian Anderson for a piece that included all the people who have played Thatcher in England over the decades. And people kept mentioning the music in the season to me, so we have a piece on the ’80s pop music that went up. And we have a story about how African women of Diana’s generation and older have this strong emotional bond with her, and what it’s been like for them to watch her on this season.

What will you be watching for in the fifth season, which is slated for a 2022 release?

They haven’t disclosed the exact period the season will cover, but I imagine it will probably be the next 10 years, so the 1990s. We’ll get to see William and Harry as boys, as well as Diana’s death, so it feels more interesting in terms of connections with the present-day royal family.

How are things going in the television world in England right now?

We’re in a second national lockdown that’s supposed to end Dec. 2 — we’ll see whether that happens. A lot of shows were going back over the summer with social distancing and bubbling. “The Great British Baking Show” managed to film a season. But it’s been a monthlong lockdown right now, and things are kind of on hold again.

Would people still be going crazy for streaming series like “The Crown” if we weren’t all stuck at home?

Article source: https://www.nytimes.com/2020/11/29/insider/crown-netflix-stories.html

Nike and Coca-Cola Lobby Against Xinjiang Forced Labor Bill

“Looking for the presence of forced labor is part of every supplier assessment we conduct and any violations of our policies carry immediate consequences, including business termination,” the statement said. “Earlier this year, we conducted a detailed investigation with our suppliers in China and found no evidence of forced labor on Apple production lines and we are continuing to monitor this closely.”

Lobbying disclosures show that companies have spent heavily to sway Congress on Xinjiang-related legislation, though they reveal nothing about their specific requests.

In the first three quarters of 2020, Nike spent $920,000 on in-house lobbying of Congress and other federal agencies. Disclosures do not break down expenditures by topic, but show Nike lobbied on matters including physical education grants, taxes and climate change, as well as the Uyghur Forced Labor Prevention Act.

Nike also paid outside firms like Cornerstone Government Affairs, Ogilvy, Capitol Counsel, GrayRobinson, American Continental Group, DiNino Associates and Empire Consulting Group more than $400,000 this year to lobby on issues including the act.

Mr. Rossiter said that Nike had these firms on retainer long before the Xinjiang legislation was introduced, and that the company actively worked with lobbying firms to engage Congress on a variety of subjects it cares about.

Coca-Cola has also invested heavily, spending $4.68 million in the first three quarters of 2020 on in-house lobbying and hiring Empire Consulting Group and Sidley Austin to lobby on issues including the act.

Coca-Cola said in a statement that it complies with all laws associated with its political activities and has “adopted best-in-class disclosures practices.”

The U.S. Chamber of Commerce declined to comment on lobbying, instead providing a letter it sent to Congress in November with seven other industry groups. The letter said the groups had long been working to combat forced labor, and urged the government to take a comprehensive approach that would mobilize the administration, Congress and foreign governments to address the problem, in addition to industry.

Article source: https://www.nytimes.com/2020/11/29/business/economy/nike-coca-cola-xinjiang-forced-labor-bill.html

How Tony Hsieh Tried to Single-Handedly Transform Downtown Las Vegas

Natalie Young had quit her job as a chef on the Las Vegas Strip just a few months before she was introduced to Mr. Hsieh by a friend who ran a coffee shop in downtown Las Vegas. She recalled on Saturday that he had once asked her, “What size restaurant do you want?” and had later offered her a $225,000 loan. With the money, she opened her first restaurant, Eat, in 2012, and it became a hit. As her own business grew, she also saw her downtown neighborhood change.

“I remember standing on the corner at Eat and looking both ways and seeing nothing — like, nothing,” she said of the time before she opened her restaurant. But after it opened, and as Mr. Hsieh’s investments attracted more businesses and people, downtown became a destination, she said, and suddenly parents and children were arriving on bicycles at her restaurant’s front door.

As much as she loves the new downtown, Ms. Young acknowledged that it had come with trade-offs; the coffee shop that her friend owned closed in 2016 and was replaced by a restaurant that is part of a California-based chain, exactly the kind of business Mr. Hsieh once said he wanted to avoid in favor of unique shops.

“That kind of stuff made you sad, but it’s also a part of growth,” Ms. Young said.

In recent years, as Mr. Hsieh became less involved in the Downtown Project, it was increasingly run “like a traditional urban planning project,” focusing on real estate and investing in more lucrative projects, Aimee Groth, who penned a book about Mr. Hsieh and the project, wrote for Quartz in 2017.

Leah Meisterlin, an assistant professor of urban planning at Columbia University, said on Saturday that Mr. Hsieh’s project was an early attempt to bring a fast-moving Silicon Valley approach to city planning. Despite his generous investment, Ms. Meisterlin said, the project may have been slowed in its ambition because cities can benefit more from slower, careful changes.

“They didn’t have any experience in urban planning, but what he had was over $300 million of his own wealth that he was ready to invest,” Ms. Meisterlin said. “What he chose as his subject — a city — necessarily slowed him down, whereas many endeavors might not have, and I think that was ultimately for the best.”

Mayor Carolyn Goodman of Las Vegas, whose city boundaries do not include the Las Vegas Strip and its many landmarks, wrote on Twitter on Saturday that Mr. Hsieh had been a visionary for the city’s downtown.

Article source: https://www.nytimes.com/2020/11/28/us/tony-hsieh-las-vegas.html

Air passenger traffic won’t return to pre-pandemic levels until 2024 at earliest, IATA warns

“This crisis is devastating and unrelenting. Airlines have cut costs by 45.8 percent, but revenues are down 60.9 percent. The result is that airlines will lose $66 for every passenger carried this year for a total net loss of $118.5 billion. This loss will be reduced sharply by $80 billion in 2021. But the prospect of losing $38.7 billion next year is nothing to celebrate,” said IATA Director General and CEO Alexandre de Juniac.

He added: “We need to get borders safely re-opened without quarantine so that people will fly again. And with airlines expected to bleed cash at least until the fourth quarter of 2021, there is no time to lose.”

According to the IATA, in the face of a half-trillion-dollar revenue drop (from $838 billion in 2019 to $328 billion), airlines cut costs by $365 billion (from $795 billion in 2019 to $430 billion in 2020).

“The history books will record 2020 as the industry’s worst financial year, bar none. Airlines cut expenses by an average of a billion dollars a day over 2020 and will still rack-up unprecedented losses. Were it not for the $173 billion in financial support by governments, we would have seen bankruptcies on a massive scale,” said de Juniac.

While the industry will see an improved performance in 2021 compared to 2020, “the road to recovery is expected to be long and difficult.” The association warned that passenger volumes are not expected to return to 2019 levels until 2024 at the earliest, with domestic markets recovering faster than international services.

READ MORE: Ryanair boss blasts government lockdowns as ‘FAILURE’ after air traffic plummets 80%

“The financial damage of this crisis is severe. Government support has kept airlines alive to this point. More is likely needed as the crisis is lasting longer than anyone could have anticipated. And it must come in forms that do not increase the already high debt load which has ballooned to $651 billion,” de Juniac said.

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

Article source: https://www.rt.com/business/507898-air-passenger-traffic-pandemic/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=RSS

Iraq does not want to be exempt from OPEC+ deal as oil exporters close to keeping output curbs

Iraq did not ask for exemption from the accord, fearing that an increase in production might cause crude prices to tumble again, state-run newspaper Al-Sabah quoted Oil Minister Ihsan Abdul Jabbar as saying. The statement refutes previous reports that claimed that OPEC’s second largest oil producer, which has often been criticized for exceeding its output limits, wants to be free from OPEC quotas.

The minister expects that oil prices can reach about $50 at the beginning of next year while the global demand for the commodity will see a mild recovery, Al-Sabah reported on Sunday.

Also on rt.com OPEC+ likely to prolong existing oil cuts despite rising prices – media

The statement comes as the group known as OPEC+ is holding informal talks to decide on the future of crude output cuts. The signatories were set to ease the curbs starting in January, but now they are expected to keep limiting global output by 7.7 million barrels per day for another two or three months. The group is set to announce the final decision next week. 

The largest producers of the OPEC+ deal, Russia and Saudi Arabia, have already agreed that the accord should be prolonged for the first quarter of 2021, TASS reported citing two sources in the organization. The sides now reportedly need to work on certain details and the mechanism of the extension.

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

Article source: https://www.rt.com/business/508144-iraq-opec-deal-exemption/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=RSS

Australia vows to drag China to WTO over barley tariffs amid mounting trade tensions between the two nations

“I expect that will be the outcome,” Trade Minister Simon Birmingham said in an interview with broadcaster ABC on Sunday when asked whether a WTO case over barley is possible. “We are working through exactly when and making sure we have the evidence lined up.”

Also on rt.com Beijing slaps up to 212% tariffs on Australian wine in response to price-dumping

China, which is the largest export market for Australian barley, imposed over 80 percent in duties on the product in May over findings that it was being dumped in China, hurting domestic producers. The sweeping tariffs were estimated to cost the Australian economy up to AU$500 (US$369) million per year.

The trade minister said that Australia has already voiced concerns over the “accumulation of instances from China of adverse trade decisions” at the meeting of the WTO’s trading goods committee last week.

China looks to Mongolia for coking coal after banning Australian imports China looks to Mongolia for coking coal after banning Australian imports

“We do see those as a very concerning development. We are calling them out through the WTO, while also still using all of those processes in the Chinese system to try to resolve them,” Birmingham noted. 

Barley is not the only product caught in the simmering conflict between Canberra and Beijing. Beijing previously halted shipments of Australian coal, with imports worth AU$700 (US$516) million believed to be blocked from Chinese ports. China also banned some beef shipments from Australia and slapped duties of over 200 percent on Australian wines citing dumping as the reason. The move is set to hit Australian wine exporters hard with their biggest market at stake.

However, other curbs such as on wine will not be subject to a possible WTO case, yet anyway, Birmingham said. He called China’s move on wine an “interim application of tariffs” and said that it could be still worked through China’s domestic processes.

Tensions between the two nations have been escalating for the past three years, especially after Canberra banned China’s Huawei and ZTE from its 5G rollout. The situation worsened after Australia called for an international inquiry into the origins of the coronavirus outbreak. 

Canberra hoped tensions with Beijing would ease after the two countries became part of one of the world’s biggest free trade zones. On November 15, ten ASEAN nations and five other Asia-Pacific countries signed a massive trade deal called the Regional Comprehensive Economic Partnership (RCEP). The accord covers some 2.2 billion people with a combined market size of $26.2 trillion or 30 percent of the world’s gross domestic product (GDP).

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

Article source: https://www.rt.com/business/508137-australia-china-wto-barley/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=RSS

Construction of Russia’s Nord Stream 2 gas pipeline to restart next month

“We are planning to resume pipe-laying work using an anchor-positioned vessel in Germany’s exclusive economic zone this year,” the operator of the project confirmed to Russian media.

The company did not reveal the name of the ship it will use, but promised to announce it later.

Two Russian-flagged ships – the Akademik Cherskiy and Fortuna – could be the main candidates for this job. The former was considered the only vessel to meet all the necessary technical requirements to complete the construction of the pipeline, before the Danish Energy Agency (DEA) greenlighted the use of ships with anchor positioning, which had been banned from the works under previous rules.

Also on rt.com ‘Like mafia’: US tramples over European sovereignty in bid to stop Nord Stream 2, EU must FIGHT BACK, German MP tells RT

According to MarineTraffic data, the Akademik Cherskiy departed from the German port of Mukran on Thursday and is currently under “restricted maneuverability” status in the Baltic Sea off the coast of Russia’s Kaliningrad region. Meanwhile, Fortuna was spotted in German waters near Wismar Port.

Before the operator of the Nord Stream 2 confirmed its plans, German broadcaster NDR reported that construction of the final short stretch of the pipeline will resume as early as on December 5. The report cited an announcement by the Baltic Sea Waterways and Shipping Office in Stralsund. The agency noted that some 75 kilometers of the 1,224-km long gas link remain unfinished, with some 16 kilometers lying within the German exclusive economic zone and the rest in Danish waters.

Also on rt.com European firm withdraws from Russia’s Nord Stream 2 gas pipeline project in face of US sanctions

Construction on the multibillion-dollar project was abruptly halted at the end of last year, when Swiss-Dutch pipelaying firm Allseas withdrew its vessels over the threat of US sanctions. While Russia has assured its partners that it can finish the project on its own, though with a delay, Washington is still trying to prevent the completion of Nord Stream 2, with the Trump administration threatening new sanctions for companies linked to it.

Norwegian-German certification company Det Norske Veritas – Germanischer Lloyd (DNV GL) has become the recent firm to cave into pressure from Washington. Earlier this week, the firm said it had to stop working for the project under the threat of US sanctions.

Nord Stream 2 was designed to boost supplies of cheaper Russian natural gas to Germany and other European states by 55 billion cubic meters per year. With the link nearing completion, it could be launched before the end of the first quarter of 2021, Dmitry Marinchenko, a senior director in Fitch Ratings’ Natural Resources and Commodities team, told TASS.

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

Article source: https://www.rt.com/business/508130-nord-stream-2-construction-resumes/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=RSS

Indian’s appetite for gold grows as price for metal hangs near multi-month low

Indian jewelers have been rushing to replenish stocks after witnessing good demand during the Diwali festival, that took place in mid-November this year, Reuters reported, citing a Mumbai-based dealer with a bullion importing bank.  

The positive trend might have also been driven by the deferred demand effect. Another bullion dealer told Reuters that customers were making purchases for weddings after postponing them in the last few months as the country imposed strict lockdowns to contain Covid-19. 

Also on rt.com Indian economy roars back to life following coronavirus blow

While gold demand usually increases during the Diwali festival and a busy wedding season, consumers’ interest was also driven by current attractive prices.

Bullion futures suffered the biggest weekly losses for the commodity since late September, with February contracts falling from nearly $1,850 per ounce on Monday to close at $1,788.10 on Friday. Spot gold also finished lower despite a drop in the US dollar. As the yellow metal has been traditionally considered a safe haven asset, the greenback’s weakness usually boosted bullion prices. 

Also on rt.com Gold demand plunges to 11-year low – World Gold Council

“We have seen an increase in activity this week primarily because of the significant drop in metal prices. So, we have seen drive towards retail interest,” product manager at LPM Group Ltd., Keanan Brackenridge, was quoted as saying by Reuters. He added than some people opted to sell gold and take profits, fearing that the price could fall further.

Jewelry demand in India dwindled by half in the July-September quarter compared to the same period last year, while overall gold demand tumbled by a third, according to the World Gold Council. Meanwhile, global demand for the precious metal dropped by 19 percent to 892 tonnes, hitting the lowest quarterly total in more than a decade.

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

Article source: https://www.rt.com/business/508104-india-gold-demand-grows/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=RSS