(As you may have seen from
John's post, we lost several days worth of material yesterday and couldn't get this posted promptly. So forgive me for posting what is literally yesterday's news. And hopefully I will be able to get back or reconstruct the other posts.)
So the day has come. Martin has
crossed the ownership Rubicon, and we now move on to the campaign to force Congress to over-rule the FCC vote while simultaneously fighting in the courts. (And if you want to see us stay in the fight and have a chance of winning, I highly recommend making a
tax deductible contribution to my employer (and lead counsel for the case)
Media Access Project).
First, a hearty congratulations to the Commissioners, and Kevin Martin in particular, for starting only an hour late from the announced time! This is quite the improvement from the last meeting. Who says FCC reform doesn't work? Second, if it is going to take 2 hours for everyone to read their statements, please let us know so we can use the bathroom first. Third, if the FCC is going to make a habit of this, I recommend putting in a concession stand so we can buy snacks during the intermission.
That out of the way, a few more serious reflections below....
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Every now and then, my hobbies and my professional life intersect. Indeed, my involvement in this blog comes from the chance meeting of myself and John Sundman at a science fiction convention in Boston called
Arisia some years back. He was on a panel right before me, so I saw him in action and he stuck around and saw me. Curiously we both had the same reaction “Hey, that guy is the only one on the panel who makes sense or seems to know what he's talking about. I should talk to him after the panel.”
So I was thrilled and delighted beyond measure to see that
The Harry Potter Alliance, an organization that tries to organize Harry Potter fans for social/political causes, has joined with
StopBigMedia.com to create the “Rock Against Voldemedia” campaign at
PotterWatch. (We will also savor the irony that Kevin Martin looks amazingly like Harry Potter, but without the scar.)
No shocker that, as I have
remarked on occasion, I am a huge Potter fan. So I wish I could pretend I had something to do with fortuitous and felicitous combination of my interests. Alas, however, I can't. All the credit goes to the folks at
Free Press and the Harry Potter Alliance.
I can, however, take credit for having made the connection between the media ownership fight and Harry Potter when
Harry Potter And The Order of the Phoenix came out in 2003 and the media ownership issue was hot. I even wrote an op ed on the subject (which, alas, never saw print). But I did include it in a footnote in
an article I wrote with
Cheryl Leanza (footnote 37 for them what cares, although I recommend reading the entire article).
So while I can't take credit for any activism, I can follow in the footsteps of our Glorious Leader, Stephen Colbert, and give a great big
I CALLED IT!!!!
Lets hope my prognostications for the 700 MHz auction come off as well.
Stay tuned . . . .