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...something far more dangerous than a rival show and way deadlier than any serial killer dreamed up in a script meeting: the digital revolution that's wreaking global havoc in industries as diverse as broadcasting, newspapers, magazines, film and music. Challenged by technologies that allow anyone to read news, watch TV or listen to music on a bedroom computer (or to make these things oneself for consumption by other people on the same computer), these businesses are frantically scrambling to reinvent themselves. EastEnders must now fight for an audience not just with other terrestrial channels but with cable and satellite...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Bad News at the BBC | 10/25/2007 | See Source »

...politics. In Pakistan, political strength is often measured by crowd counts, and no other party has been able to match the PPP's draw. "In our part of the world, politicians have to take their campaigns to the street," says political analyst Nusrat Javed. "Bhutto's base doesn't watch TV. They need rallies, cavalcades. Unless you do it this way, you cannot survive as a populist party. Unfortunately, that is no longer possible." Bhutto had planned to launch her election campaign with a procession to her hometown of Larkana, the source of her most fervent support...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: A Tough Mission | 10/25/2007 | See Source »

People wrote about the lessons they will carry in their heads. The kind of advice that doesn't fit in a suitcase but will almost certainly matter more than Band-Aids: Learn how to text-message, do not let your kids watch TV news, and never depend on the government. And "as you drive away from a house and possessions you may never enjoy again," wrote a survivor, "remember the song about how you can't drag a U-Haul behind your hearse...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: What to Save From a Fire | 10/25/2007 | See Source »

Rumors of freshmen burning bed sheets en masse while mites burrow through their skin has the undergraduate population on the watch for any itch that might mean they’ve fallen prey to the scabies epidemic. But does everyone need to lock their doors and hide under as-of-yet uninfected blankets? Not quite yet. According to Dr. Soheyla Gharib, Chief of Medicine at UHS, a grand total of 3 students were diagnosed as of the 13th. For the panic-stricken feeling ghost-itches everywhere, FM introduces the Scabies Watch, a weekly warning of exactly how worried you need...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Scabies Watch! | 10/24/2007 | See Source »

...well, freshmen are certainly up to something. On Sunday night, Steven A. Franklin ’10 found himself in the thick of this heady brew. I caught up with him around midnight, on Mt. Auburn Street, as he sauntered home after a punch event. Steve—whoa, watch it buddy, careful where you walk! How did it go? “I dunno man. I’m just going to enjoy the free beer while it lasts. I don’t have high hopes about all of this.” It sounds like you?...

Author: By Daniel J. Mandel, CRIMSON STAFF WRITER | Title: The Bystander: Red Sox Nation’s Transplant Citizens | 10/24/2007 | See Source »

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