The Miami Herald apparently didn't like Katie's news debut. [link]
A couple of my favorite comments:
There were lots of sunny I'm-your-coffee-klatsch-pal-and-not-the-voice-of-God smiles. There was a not-quite-live interview by Couric of New York Times columnist Thomas Friedman for reasons that were not quite apparent. There was lots of use of the name ''Katie'' by everybody who came on camera.
and
Oh, what we didn't see: Mexico's electoral tribunal ruled Tuesday that conservative candidate Felipe Calderón won July's presidential elections, setting the stage for a potentially violent confrontation with supporters of leftist candidate Andrés Manuél Lopez Obrador. Unfortunately, neither Tom Cruise nor Katie Holmes is a member of the tribunal, so it didn't make the cut.
I didn't watch, but I haven't watched network news in many years. I used to watch Walter.
Why was there no House whitefont last night? I wasn't home, but I am alone in my office, and I have headphones. I may whitefont soon.
Kidding!
Fair point. Though London (and everywhere else outside the U.S.) is outside CA, pretty much by definition.
Though London (and everywhere else outside the U.S.) is outside CA, pretty much by definition.
Sure. Just not "in the country."
In terms of single murders, without any focus on the murderer, what ranks? Hoffa? Nicole Simpson? Jon Benet? Still remains to be seen if Nicole and JB will stand the test of time.
I think I would give Jack the Ripper "most notorious unsolved" overall... at least in the English-speaking world.
Still remains to be seen if Nicole and JB will stand the test of time.
I vote no. But who can say?
But who can say?
Some guy with a time machine?
Some guy with a time machine?
Where is that guy? Damn!
Hey, have you people seen the Suri Cruise pictures? They're out.
I vote JonBenet. That's the Great Unsolved Crime of our day -- look at the headlines Karr got 10 years later. I suspect she'll go the way of the JtR -- lots of literature, and everybody with a different theory. Unless the real killer confesses.
Hoffa was 30 years ago. He seems to have stood the test of time to some degree, probably because he was well-known when alive. But he falls into the "semi-solved" category. Let's face it, does anyone really believe it wasn't a Mob hit?
Simpson will be a footnote, remembered largely because of O.J.'s celebrity and the complete and utter mess the trial became. Where JonBenet is a whodunit, O.J. is a police procedural -- what should the law have done differently?
Actually, JonBenet was a pretty bad procedural screw-up too.
Fred Pete, I'll be back in 50 years, and I think you'll owe me $5.