Monthly Archives: April 2004

‘Hellboy’ scares up $23.5 million at the box office


HELLBOY


#1 at the Box Office

Comic-book fugitive Hellboy unleashed its wrath at the box office this past weekend, taking in an estimated $23.5 million, while with $15.3 million in box office receipts, The Rock had to settle for runner-up status with his remake of the vigilante justice flick, Walking Tall .
In the also-ran category: the second weekend of Scooby Doo 2 brought in $15.2 million for a third place finish, just ahead of Disney’s animated Home on the Range, which bowed in fourth spot with a disappointing $14.1 million. Also emerging in the ‘disappointment’ category, Paramount’s quite lovely Julia Stiles film, The Prince and Me, which opened to only $10 million.
Coming up this next weekend to a multiplex near you: the troubled Disney production, The Alamo; Miramax’s fairytale flick for girls, Ella Enchanted; the quite surprising, naughty, and sure-to-be-controversial The Girl Next Door; and the Warner Bros. sequel The Whole Ten Yards.

The Tech Week in Review, Part 1


TECHWEEK


Tech week in review

As last week wore to a close, it was difficult to tell the April Fools’ jokes from the actual news.
File swappers across Canada found some shelter from the Net’s copyright storm, but the ruling by a Canadian federal court judge declaring the download of mp3s for personal use as a legal activity was far from welcome news in other parts of the world.
The International Federation of the Phonographic Industry, a worldwide recording industry association based in London, announced an initial round of 247 suits against alleged file sharers. The IFPI said it plans to bring additional lawsuits in other countries over the coming months, after filing criminal complaints in Italy and Germany, and civil litigation in Denmark and Canada.
Meanwhile, the Recording Industry Association of America continued to pile on lawsuits against our neighbours to the south, filing new litigation against another 532 anonymous individuals just last week.
Interestingly, as published earlier on VanRamblings, a study of file sharing’s effects on music sales says online music trading appears to have played little part in the recent slide of CD sales. According to the report, by researchers at Harvard University and the University of North Carolina, even high levels of file swapping seemed to translate into an effect on album sales that was “statistically indistinguishable from zero,” they wrote. “We find that file sharing has only had a limited effect on record sales. While downloads occur on a vast scale, most users are likely individuals who would not have bought the album even in the absence of file sharing.”

1994: Rock musician Kurt Cobain ‘shoots himself’


COBAIN

With the 10th anniversary of Kurt Cobain’s suicide days away, The Smoking Gun has published an assortment of Seattle Police Department documents compiled during the investigation of the grunge star’s April 1994 death.
The chilling records range from reports from the first officer on the scene to the receipt for the shotgun Cobain, 27, bought a week before his death. A second group of police reports detail previous run-ins Cobain and wife Courtney Love had with the local cops.
The BBC makes this audio available in their story on Cobain’s regrettable passing, first published April 8, 1994.
In their latest issue, Rolling Stone publishes this Nirvana Anthology.

Blog-Bleary? Try (What Else?) a Blog


BLOGGINGTRAFFIC


Blogging statistics bane of a web loggers existence

Earlier in the week, when reading Debra Galant’s blog, she published an article on how “blogs and blogging are also a game. And it’s very easy, at any given time, to see if you’re winning. Or losing. How are your Technorati numbers? How many hits? Who are your referrers? I have quoted Mark Federman on this before: “Blogstats are the crack cocaine of the Internet.”
Turns out the Debra is not the only one kvetching about blogging traffic and links (as for me, I check my Sitemeter stats only, oh say, 15 or 20 times a day). The New York Times’ Catherine Greenman, in an article published in the Times’ Circuits section, ruminates on how “the question of how to attract readers inevitably enters a blogger’s mind.”
Meanwhile, the New York Times’ David Gallagher, writes about “the information glut” that weblogs have begun to cause.

“By pointing readers to the Web’s newest and best bits, Web logs offer a way to cut through online clutter. But now that there are millions of blogs, what was once a solution to the information glut has started to become part of the problem.”

Gallagher points readers to websites, like Kinja.com, which automatically compile digests of blogs covering a range of subject areas. Both Bloglines and Feedster, although somewhat more complex for the average reader to use, perform much the same function as Kinja.
Perhaps, though — links and traffic, Technorati, Sitemeter, Kinja, Blogdex and Feedster aside — the hope that exists for web logs in the journalistic universe of the new millennium lies, at least to some extent, in the assertions made in Jonathan’s Dube’s article, Blogs still rare, but foster community, on CyberJournalist.net. When all is said and done, each and every web log journalist must take a few minutes to reflect on the enterprise in which each one of us have engaged.
Web logs are very much part of the new digital democracy. In the corporate world of journalism, as reader (and broadcast journalist) Michael Eckford recently wrote in an e-mail to VanRamblings, “the media business is starting to be frighteningly homogenized. The voices offering different perspectives and opinions are finally starting to be heard and, as usual, in a forum that the media still doesn’t recognise as being viable. That shortsightedness may be the saving grace!”
“Basically I’m saying ‘keep it up’. People like you make it much easier for people like me to get a fair, balanced, and interesting view of the world both locally and internationally.”
May we all keep up the good work. There is so much more good to come.