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who employs me
I am a staff writer with CTV.ca News. That operation is part of CTV News, which is of course nestled into CTV Inc. and CTVglobemedia.

I don't speak for my employer on this blog. I don't comment about the internal affairs of my employer.

Any views expressed here are my own.
View Article  'Borat' reviews from the UK

The Guardian: Five stars

Peter Bradshaw writes: "Borat is the hero of this extraordinary mocu-reality adventure: a film so funny, so breathtakingly offensive, so suicidally discourteous, that strictly speaking it shouldn't be legal at all."

The Daily Mail

Baz Bamigboye writes: "Sacha Baron Cohen and his director Larry Charles shot over 400 hours of footage for their film Borat: Cultural Learnings Of America For Make Benefit Glorious Nation of Kazakhstan and then spent months finely editing it to just under two hours. It boils down to the funniest 120 minutes to hit the big screen this year. The movie's going to offend just about every living soul on the planet. No one escapes Borat's razor-sharp wit."

The Telegraph

Sukhdev Sandhu writes: "Perhaps you'll laugh at the subtitle: Cultural Learnings of America For Make Benefit Glorious Nation of Kazakhstan. Perhaps you'll laugh at the opening credits: a grab-bag of public-information-film graphics and sputtering newsreels from an inept cable-network show. The only guarantee for anyone who sees Borat is that once you start laughing, it will be impossible to stop. Kids who can't recite a line of poetry will be reeling off the entire script within days. ...

"Seeing a Barbie doll at a yard sale of a woman whom he's convinced is a gipsy, Borat demands: 'Who is this lady you have shrunk?' Seeing a couple of cockroaches on the floor of a Jewish-run guesthouse, he shrieks: 'Look! The Jews have shifted their shapes!'"

The Times: Three stars out of five

Larry Charles's big-screen account of Borat's cockeyed adventures is a squirming joy and a film to cherish.  It begins in a muddy village in Kazakhstan. This, explains Borat, is home. He is a cool and confident narrator. He introduces neighbours and hugs the local rapists, criminals and psychopaths. There is a cow in his state-of-the-art living room. This is rural bliss. Women are inherently stupid; incest is normal; bestiality is best. It’s a civic duty to butcher gypsies and Jews. It’s good, clean, normal fun.

Some U.S. reviews are available at rottentomatoes.com.

View Article  Meanwhile, outside Hipsterville, it's 'Borat who?'

Twentieth Century Fox has cut down the number of theatres in which Borat will open from 2,000 down to 800. This is apparently not very precedented.

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View Article  Paris banlieues still seething one year later

The Paris suburb of Clichy-sous-Bois still doesn't know how two youths came to die in a transformer a year ago -- an incident that triggered weeks of rioting and vandalism. And despite promises made at the time, nothing much has been done to alleviate the conditions that helped raise frustration to a fever pitch.

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View Article  'Muhammad cartoon' lawsuit tossed in Denmark

A Danish judge has denied the libel claim of a group of Muslims, filed over the cartoons published in the newspaper Jyllands-Posten that satirized the Prophet Muhammad.

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View Article  Travis Fox, video journalist ... for a newspaper website

The Washington Post hired Travis Fox as a photo editor back in 1999. He picked up a video camera on his own and started doing some video pieces for the newspaper's website, washingtonpost.com.

Now he's a full-time video journalist -- actually, one of seven -- and has filed from major world news hotspots, earning Emmy nominations in the process.

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View Article  Do newspaper editors still need to be reminded to embrace the Web?

According to this AP story, yes they do.

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View Article  Baseball's big online win

MLB Advanced Media, Major League Baseball's online presence, has 1.3 million subscribers, yearly revenues of US$200 million and is valued at US$5 billion. That is a very nice little spin-off from the core content produced on the field, reports The Globe and Mail.

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View Article  60 Afghan civilians killed Tuesday by NATO fire: report

NATO is investigating claims that clashes between its troops and the Taliban in the volatile Panjwaii district of Afghanistan's Kandahar province claimed at least 60 civilian lives.

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View Article  Taliban row at the Beeb

The British Conservative Party is furious with the Beeb for running interviews with the Taliban in Afghanistan's Helmand province. British army troops are fiercely battling the Taliban there.

But government Commons leader Jack Straw said the UK is a democracy, and the Beeb had every right to air the interview. The Beeb itself weighs in at the Editor's Blog.

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View Article  Artist's agency gears up to find online video talent

United Talent Agency, one of the five biggest in Hollywood, has set up a unit to find creators of video and other types of online content.

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