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Did You Read Today's Wall Street Journal?

Articles, Ads and other Interesting Things That Caught My Eye In The Wall Street Journal.

NOT an April Fool's Joke: The Wall Street Journal's Sports Section

Monday, April 7, 2008

Is it me or did the Wall Street Journal just start to publish SPORTS news?

The Weekend Journal, which is delivered on Fridays now includes a sports page. And you might find "Game Time" useful, which is a quick summary of various games and sporting events that are on TV. I think it's aiming to be a kind of "What's News" of the front page for busy execs that want to know which games that they can catch on TV coming up.

But wait, that's not it! According to BtoB: The Magazine for Marketing Strategists's April 7, 2008 issue (page 13) the article, "News Corp. starts overhaul of 'WSJ'" details some other changes to the Journal:


"...more WSJ.com content available for free, suach as opinion pieces from the
print Journal. WSJ.com has also expanded free content about travel and
sports, as well as new blogs. Personal finance...are also free on WSJ.com

...Morningstar was providing new investor tools and international investment
funds data to the Web site.

On Sept. 6, Down Jones will debut WSJ., a glossy lifestyle publication that will be delivered...as an insert in the newspaper's "Weekend Edition"

It looks like the WSJ.com is trying to look at some of the NY Times audience and broaden it's appeal...plus, the price for the subscription is deeply discounted for subscribers as well as they throw in a free online WSJ.com subscription these days [see www.getwallstreetjournal.com for the 1 year for $125 + free wsj.com + free 8 weeks + free delivery offer details]

It must be working becuase according to the article, WSJ.com subscriber base increased from 931,000 last May to now over 1.1 Million people. Hey, I ain't complaining about these new, free additions, are you? :-)

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All The News That's Fit For Rupert

Monday, February 4, 2008

Rupert Murdoch is definitely a force to be reckoned with -- especially if you're on the editorial staff at The Wall Street Journal it seems. He's the boss now for 2 months, and there's some major changes come down the line. . .

News Corp. Chairman Rupert Murdoch pledged to broaden news coverage in the Dow Jones & Co. paper and go head-to-head with The New York Times in the battle for national influence....

In the nearly two months that he has been in charge, Mr. Murdoch has worked to deliver on those promises.

Major news stories dominate the front page. The long, offbeat or investigative stories--formerly a page-one centerpiece--have grown scarce. Last week, Journal officials said the paper would add sports coverage. . .

Crain's New York 08.02.03


They recently added Weather to the Journal. Now Sports in the Wall Street Journal? I'm assuming that Dilbert in the back of the Marketplace section isn't that far behind?

Have you noticed any changes in the types of articles the WSJ has been putting out? Do you like it?

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Must NOT See TV

Tuesday, January 22, 2008

It turns out that our hunch was right. TV is an evil thing for humans with ages in the single digits (and probably people with double-digit ages too!).

What makes one show superior to another is almost chilling in its simplicity, given that TV commonly serves as a substitute babysitter. "The closer the product comes to simulating the way a good nursery school teacher or attentive parent talks to a young child, the better," Ms. Guernsey writes.

A stunning number of families with babies and young children--39%, in one study--keep the TV on constantly. And the effect on small children is appalling: "Always on" television has been shown to damage their ability to play imaginatively and to develop language, and it reduces the number of nurturing interactions between parents and children. One researcher told Ms. Guernsey that little children trying to learn words in the presence of constant noise are "devastatingly impaired."

wsj.com


Can you believe that 40% of homes just leave the television on all the time?

I wonder if those same parents would do the same if they knew how damaging it was to their children's development.

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How To Request a Vacation Stop for The Wall Street Journal

Tuesday, December 25, 2007


WSJ.com recently revamped their customer service site. The fresh new design still has the easy feature to log-in and request a vacation stop and resume date.


If you're going on vacation, you just need to visit http://services.wsj.com/ and submit a suspend date online. That's it!
Now go pack for your trip!


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Don't you love the WSJ? Here are some things that caught my eye when reading the Wall Street Journal and some of the other media outlets I consume during the week. There's tons of content out there, and some of the random stuff breaks out on it's own to get my attention. --Kenny



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