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Archive for the ‘Politics’ Category

The Laws of Crisis Management

Sunday, August 15th, 2010

Having reached a point where I thought no-one had anything to learn from whatever Michael Laws said or did, there are a couple of lessons from the sad, squalid, tawdry and downright silly saga of his “relationship” blues.

The first question is, “What was he thinking?” Not “What was he thinking making whoopee with a recovering P addict former prostitute on home detention?” (although those of you with taste may wonder “WTF was she thinking having a fling with him?”).

What was he thinking when he decided to blow the affair in a lengthy, tortured, and largely incomprehensible statement on Radio Live on Friday before there was any mention of the matter in the mainstream media?

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Julia Gillard; The Lady’s Not For Spurning

Thursday, June 24th, 2010

There’s nothing like a political coup, it’s equal parts destablization and exhilaration. The winner suddenly becomes a loser and bows to their challenger.

And there’s nothing like an Australian political coup – especially when it comes to the Australian Labor Party.  The ALP knows how to do the ruthless, rolling maul of backroom politics more than any other political party of the OECD.

Just ask Kevin Rudd – and before him, Bob Hawke.

So, how could an Australian Prime Minister last less than one term when he had come to power on such a wave of popularity 2 ½ years ago?  After all, six months ago Rudd was a man who was one of two of the most popular Prime Ministers in the 40-year history of the Sydney Morning Herald’s Nielsen poll.

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Dr Strange-love; A Modern Media Morality Tale

Wednesday, January 27th, 2010

There comes a time when virtually everyone in business and public life finds themselves in (to use a highly technical term) “deep doggy doo-doos”. This is a moment when the public and the media have, for whatever reason, rounded upon them with a vengeance.

Whether an act of omission or commission the newsmakers generally find themselves embroiled in a crisis, seemingly without warning.

If they are honest with themselves they will probably admit they should have seen the consequences of their action (or inaction) coming and they could have evolved a response plan, put it on the shelf, crossed their fingers they would never need it, and moved on with their activities knowing that, if worst came to worst, they could cope with the crisis.

Every good business has a business continuity plan, what to do if it has an IT failure, a power loss or natural disaster strikes.

Good businesses should also worry about and plan for what happens if the unnatural disaster of a media furore erupts around them.

Which is why I have to ask: What was Dr Patrick Strange and Transpower thinking? Transpower has had more power cuts in this city than Aucklanders have had cold dinners.

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The Soundbite Tribes

Tuesday, January 12th, 2010

In the Silly Season, lists, labels and mock awards reign supreme as columnists, hacks and bloggers scramble to write something, anything, in the news vacuum.

Hey, I know this as much as any other poor sap, I’m one of ‘em.

So, to that end, let’s joyfully enter into the fresh New Year fray and examine who’s who when it comes to The Soundbite Tribes.  These are the men and women who regularly fill newspaper columns with quotes, whose soundbites grace our screens and fill the airwaves.

Like any tribe these media practitioners are defined by what they say, how they deliver it and how they look when they do so.

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Rantings, Ravings & Musings

Tuesday, October 27th, 2009

Ok, ok, here’s the full Mea Culpa; I realise I haven’t been posting nearly enough recently (Note To Self; Must Try Harder) so here are a few Random Rantings and Musings:

Random Thought #1

There’s a disturbing development emerging in newsrooms across the country.  It’s called the De-Balling of News.  As advertising revenues shrink, so vanishes the one quality each news head must have if they’re to be effective in the job  – courage.  The retreat is full and ongoing.  Several news outlets have instructed their journalists not to annoy powerful people in their realm.  For that read those with the ability to sue.

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Corruption; the Dark Enemy in the Sunshine State

Monday, September 14th, 2009

Just returned from some R & R in my old adopted home of Queensland.  Back in the 80’s they used to brag it was the State where the weather was “fine one day, perfect the next” – which is pretty much how you’d also describe corruption in The Sunshine State.

Like the weather, political corruption there seems to stay the same.

Twenty years ago Queenslanders saw the seamy side of their state in a ground breaking Royal Commission of Inquiry into Corruption headed by Tony Fitzgerald QC.

I covered the last 6 months of that Inquiry for the ABC.  Day after day cops turned state’s evidence and politicians squealed in what, for a young journo, was the gig of the century.

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Tell ‘Em What You’re Going To Tell ‘Em…

Monday, August 24th, 2009

Caught the PM on his regular Monday morning slot on TVNZ’s “Breakfast” programme using an old – but effective – trick.  It’s what’s called “Tell ‘Em What You’re Going To Tell ‘Em, Tell ‘Em What You’ve Told ‘Em, Then Tell ‘Em What You’ve Just Told ‘Em Technique ”.

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Politics & Populism; How Sarah Palin Won, Then Lost

Thursday, August 6th, 2009

http://scavenging.wordpress.com/2009/02/

Where to now for Sarah Palin, the beveled beauty and former Governor of Alaska?  The criticisms against her are valid and true but let’s take a step back for a minute and examine how she gained media traction – for a little while at least – in last year’s Presidential campaign, as Senator John McCain’s Vice-Presidential running mate.

Just one year ago Palin was a media darling; she was plucked from the backwoods of that other Pacific Rim wilderness, Alaska.  According to ‘Vanity Fair’ (“It Came From Wasilla” by Todd Purdum, August 2009), McCain had only met her for a couple of hours before choosing her as his Vice-Presidential running mate.  Here was a fresh-faced, ‘hockey-mom’ with a pregnant teenage daughter – the perfect antidote to Hillary Clinton, who was embattled in the Mother of All Primaries.  Clinton was paranoid and media-hating and it showed.  For the Republicans Palin was, as ‘Vanity Fair’ says, “by far the best-looking woman ever to rise to such heights in national politics, the first indisputably fertile female to dare to dance with the big dogs.”

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