Archive for January 6th, 2010

Best jobs survey: Better to be a teacher or a sewer plant operator?

January 6, 2010

Oh, come on … obviously teacher.  I was just having some fun with you.

According to a newly released study from job site CareerCast.com —  teacher ranked #116 out of 200 of the best and worst jobs in the U.S. —  based on five criteria — environment, income, employment outlook, physical demands and stress.

Sewer plant operator came in a distant #117. 

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The best and worst are displayed below … with the link to the full survey.

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Top Jobs

Ken’s favorite: Philosopher … know any ?

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Worst Jobs

Where’s toll collector?

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Full list:
http://online.wsj.com/public/resources/documents/st_BESTJOBS2010_20100105.html

Thanks to Coop for stringing the lead.

How many gallons of soda do YOU drink in a year? How much time in a car each day?

January 6, 2010

Some interesting stats from WHAT AMERICANS REALLY WANT by Dr. Frank I. Luntz

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Americans say they average of 87 minutes a day behind the wheel. For car commuters, it’s an average of 100 minutes.

More than one-third of working Americans are awake by 6:00 a.m. and out the door by 7:00 a.m.  … for a commute to work that is an hour or longer.

More than 3 million Americans travel 50 miles or more one-way to work.

Less than 5 percent of the population takes public transportation to work, and only 12 percent carpool.

About 100 million people drive alone to work each day.

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Americans drink an average of more than 50 gallons of soda per person per year.

Put another way, people drink more soda than coffee, milk, and
fruit drinks combined.

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Three-quarters of Americans are overweight, meaning they weigh more than the recommended weight for their height … 25 years ago, 50% were overweight.

One-third are obese, meaning they weigh at least 20 percent more than their ideal weight … that’s doubled over the past 25 years. 

Bottom line: All-you-can-eat is no longer just an occasional trip to the buffet line — it’s now a way of life.

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From: WHAT AMERICANS REALLY WANT. . . REALLY – The Truth About Our Hopes, Dreams, and Fears
by Dr. Frank I. Luntz

Shaking up the movie industry’s distribution mojo: Sony bypassing intermediaries

January 6, 2010

TakeAway:  Sony is taking the bull by the horns.  The movie industry has been wrestling with its distribution challenges for a few years but no effective solutions have surfaced. 

Now, Sony, with an eye on the future, is leveraging its suite of movie assets to create new channels of distribution for its movies.  Interesting story of product, place, and price optimization.

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Excerpted from NYTimes, “Sony to Offer Film on Internet TV, Then DVD,” By Tim Arango, November 10, 2009

The latest experiment in Hollywood’s effort to find a way to compensate for the steep decline in profits from home entertainment … Sony will make its animated hit “Cloudy With a Chance of Meatballs” available to consumers directly through Internet-enabled televisions and Blu-ray players BEFORE the movie is released on DVD.

The move is significant because it represents the latest tinkering with the movie industry’s release windows, something Hollywood has long been reluctant to do out of fear of upsetting the profitability of DVD sales and angering its most important retailer, Wal-Mart. But with the decline in DVD sales, off as much as 25 percent at some studios, finding new ways to distribute movies has become a necessity.

The price of the film, $24.95, is high enough not to alienate retailers, Sony said … “It will make televisions more valuable, and that’s a good thing.”

Sony, the only Hollywood studio tethered to a major hardware manufacturer, is in a unique position to experiment with selling movies directly to consumers through television sets … The experiment is part of a search in Hollywood for ways to capitalize on the Internet’s potential for film distribution.

“The time when a majority of consumers have Internet-enabled TVs is a long way off,” said an analyst at Pali Capital. “But it’s moving the ball in the right direction” …

In addition to the industry ramifications, the experiment is important to Sony’s vision of its two pillars — hardware and content — to work together profitably …

Sony hopes later to entice other studios to make their films available to owners of Sony televisions, bypassing cable and satellite companies that offer their own video-on-demand services …

Mindful of the music industry’s contraction after the collapse of compact disc sales, Hollywood is frantically trying to develop new sources of home entertainment revenue …

Edit by TJS

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Full Article
http://www.nytimes.com/2009/11/10/business/media/10sony.html?ref=media

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Funding ObamaCare … taxes going up, up, up

January 6, 2010

Based on the CBO scoring (before discovery of double-counting the Medicare savings):

Almost $1 trillion in additional government spending over 10 years … funded roughly half from Medicare cuts and half from tax increases … with the tax increases on a sorry trajectory.

Draw your own conclusions.

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