General Chaos

Church and State, Edit and Advertising

The Washington Blade reports that the Baltimore Sun first declined to run the announcement of a lesbian “life commitment” ceremony between two local gay rights activists on its “Celebrations” page, and then ran finally ran it–in the classified ads. The exchange of e-mails between Ingrid Ackerson, who submitted the announcement, and the Baltimore Sun advertising staff is documented here.

The root of the problem is that the responsibility for the content of the announcements section of “Celebrations” was moved in 2002 from the Sun's news staff to the advertising department–and, in the process, the editorial policy decision in favor of running same-sex “union” announcements was thrown out. Apparently, the folks in advertising and marketing felt that a ghetto in the classified section was “separate but equal” enough for gays, who they would rather not have sully the otherwise very vanilla pages of the Sun.

The Sun is currently the monopoly daily newspaper in Baltimore; however, the Washington Post is apparently starting home delivery here. Perhaps there will be some changes in circulation as a result.

Standard
buzzword compliance, General Chaos

Darl is an anagram for lard

…and that, apparently, is what SCO CEO Darl McBride is building his company's long term strategy on–rendered pig fat.

McBride, who a just a year ago was pimping for UnitedLinux and hoping to use SCO's installed base to push Linux into the small and medium business markets in earnest, is now claiming that all his former friends in the Linux community of being orchestrated by IBM in their attacks on his “poison pill” strategy for profits from Linux.

As the “evidence” presented by SCO of infringement on its intellectual property starts to fall apart slowly in the light of day, McBride has resorted to dumping piles of press clippings on stage at SCOForum to prove how relevant the lawsuit has made SCO. And rumor has it that some customers are considering filing racketeering charges against SCO for extortion of licensing fees prior to proof of their case.

So the question is, just who is going to have to use that lard that Darl's throwing around to grease up and bend over?

Standard