Monthly Archives: November 2010

Radio Boston Rundown: Downtown Xing Stalled Again

Published November 8, 2010

Monday at 3 p.m. on Radio Boston:

Downtown Crossing, stalled.The mayor of Boston is counting on downtown businesses to contribute to a fund that will help restore and modernize Downtown Crossing — you know, the area with the gaping hole in the middle. Many property owners now say they won’t contribute to this fund, even though they would benefit from the improvements. We talk to one business owner who declines to contribute and a representative of the Downtown Crossing Partnership.

Margaret Burnham, first black woman to serve in the Massachusetts judiciary. The former judge founded Northeastern University’s Civil Rights and Restorative Justice Project, which investigates crimes committed during the civil rights era. Burnham and her students brought a landmark case against Franklin County, Miss., on behalf of two black teenagers killed by Klansmen.

Drug treatment in the aftermath of Ballot Question 1. Massachusetts voters rescinded the sales tax on alcohol last week. That revenue has been used, in part, for treatment programs. Now many providers wonder where the funds will come from. We talk to someone who runs a treatment clinic and a former client.

My conversation with Monica Gaudio, the blogger whose Cooks Source plagiarism post was heard ’round the worldwide Web.

Lunch Break: What Is The BU ‘Look’?

Published November 8, 2010

Boston University students sum it up in this video: “Trying to look like you don’t have as much money as you actually do.”

Fashion do’s include:

  • Leggings and UGG boots
  • Scarves
  • Large purses

Fashion don’ts:

  • Male belly shirts
  • Vibrant neon colors
  • Mismatched colors (but not “matchy matchy”)
  • Leggings “are not pants”

Their words, not mine.

Continue reading

E Ink, A Cambridge Invention, Goes Color

Published November 8, 2010

E Ink is poised to transform the e-book again —  this time in color.

The Cambridge-based, Taiwan-owned company makes the screens used in 90 percent of e-readers, including Amazon’s Kindle. The technology began as research in the MIT Media Lab in 1997.

IRex iLiad ebook reader outdoors in sunlight (Martouf via Wikimedia Commons)

E Ink is wicked legible, even in direct sunlight. (Martouf via Wikimedia Commons)

E Ink text is highly legible, even in bright sunlight. (Trying to read on an iPad at high noon is an exercise in futility.) But E Ink screens have been limited to shades of gray, until now.

First, a quick primer on how E Ink works: Black and white pigments embedded in the screen are electrified. A reader “flips” a page and the pigments are physically rearranged to form a new image.

The Hanvon e-reader, made in Beijing, will be the first color E Ink device, the New York Times reports. The technology uses the same electirifed pigments but adds a color filter. Colors won’t pop like they do on an iPad or your flat TV, but the battery life remains the same — measured in weeks, not hours.

No word yet on when the tech might be available in the United States.

A new version of the Barnes & Noble e-reader, Nook, will soon be available in color. But that uses liquid crystals, not E Ink.

In other e-book news, the Globe’s Hiawatha Bray reports on a new partnership between a Concord company and Boston publisher Houghton Mifflin Harcourt to sell color e-readers for children. The Fable will be a sort of iPad-Kindle hybrid and run on Google’s Android mobile operating system.

Monday Morning: Wrong Bodies Buried, JFK Elected

Published November 8, 2010

What’s news on this Monday of work-from-home weather in Boston:

New Englanders are waking up to a mix of rain and slushy slow. “The precipitation is expected to turn to all rain as the day moves along but temperatures will stay in the 30s in many areas.” (AP)

More funeral homes are getting sanctioned for funny business. Corners cut, cash diverted, wrong bodies buried — that type of thing. (Herald)

The city honors JFK’s election, which was 50 years ago today. “Menino recalled running after Kennedy’s motorcade, chasing it toward the old Boston Garden after watching him give a rousing speech at Faneuil Hall.” (Globe)

A teenage male was shot to death in Mattapan early Sunday. (BPD)

A 30-year-old man was stabbed to death in Roxbury on Saturday night. (BPD)

The Patriots lost. “Two fumbles — including tight end Rob Gronkowski’s on the goal line — contributed to a 17-7 deficit at halftime that proved insurmountable.” (Herald)

New Internet Celeb Asks Allies: ‘Follow The Golden Rule’

Published November 5, 2010

Monica Gaudio is “flabbergasted” by her sudden fame — and says her story shows the Internet’s tremendous capacity for both goodness and meanness.

Apple pie (hoveringdog/Flickr)

Apple pie (hoveringdog/Flickr)

“I did not want to become an Internet celebrity,” she told me in a phone interview, as Canadian radio waited on the other line. “This is not what I want my life to be.”

Gaudio clarified that she is 40, not a young college student, and lives in Arlington, Va. She is an avid fan of medieval food, fencing, sewing, calligraphy and music.  Her allegedly ripped-off article was about half-century-old recipes for apple pie that she decided to bake at home — an article she won an award for, thank you very much.

As I wrote earlier, Gaudio is crying plagiarism after a small magazine in western Mass. called Cooks Source printed — without permission — an article she wrote about apple pie. Gaudio complained about it on her LiveJournal for an audience of one or two dozen people.

Gaudio received an unbelievable non-apology from the magazine’s editor and published it on her blog. An excerpt:

Monica, the web is considered “public domain” and you should be happy we just didn’t “lift” your whole article and put someone else’s name on it! It happens a lot, clearly more than you are aware of, especially on college campuses, and the workplace. If you took offence [sic] and are unhappy, I am sorry, but you as a professional should know that the article we used written by you was in very bad need of editing, and is much better now than was originally. Now it will work well for your portfolio.

The editor goes on to say that Gaudio should be paying the magazine, not the other way around.

“After that letter, I did not believe there was anything that I could say to her to change her mind,” Gaudio told me. So the correspondence stopped.

Gaudio’s blog post spread like wildfire on Reddit and elsewhere on the Web, and the Justice Seekers of the Internet flooded the Cooks Source Facebook page with numerous other examples of the magazine’s apparent plagiarism.

“I love the Internet. I love the crowdsourcing. I love … how quickly things got done,” Gaudio told me. Without the Internet, that kind of research might have taken months.

“On the other hand, there’s been lots of really harsh things that have been said, and that was not my intention at all,” she said. (“Cooks Source is a cheese fondouchebag,” one commenter writes. “Cooks Source borrows your lawn mower and returns it out of gas,” writes another.)

She is dismayed by reports that people have contacted magazine advertisers to complain.

“That’s not cool. They’re small businesses. They’re doing what they can to promote their businesses. I would ask that people be nice. Follow the golden rule,” she said.

You can listen to my interview with Gaudio at 3 p.m. Monday on Radio Boston.

Bostonians Run More Miles Than Anyone Else

Published November 5, 2010

2008 Boston Marathon (shoothead/Flickr)

2008 Boston Marathon (shoothead/Flickr)

We go the distance.

The Daily Beast analyzed data from hundreds of thousands of runners in 19 cities to determine that Bostonians run more miles per week (7.85, on average) than anyone else.

The Beast partnered with Daily Burn, a popular website and iPhone app that lets runners record stats about their workouts. Boston’s popular running spot? The Charles River, of course.

Baltimore-Washington comes in at No. 2, Los Angeles at 3 and my home town of San Diego at 10.

The Beast article erroneously calls the New York City Marathon “the Super Bowl of competitive running” — I beg to differ. (I would remind you that registration for the 2011 Boston Marathon filled up on Day 1.)

Of course, the Beast’s findings could be skewed by the high density of college students here — younger and perhaps more tech-savvy than runners elsewhere.

If you’re interested in using technology to track your workouts, you might also check out RunKeeper — another popular website and mobile app, coded right here in Boston by developer Jason Jacobs. The app allows you to record your route on a map and even assess your fitness over time.

Where do you like to run in and around Boston? Do you use tech to track your fitness?

What We Know About Flight Instructor Thiago DeJesus

Published November 5, 2010

Thiago DeJesus, the owner of a flight school in Stow, was arrested Friday along with 33 of his students for being in the United States illegally.

Details are sparse and the newsroom is working on it. Here is what we know:

  • DeJesus owns TJ Aviation Flight Academy at Minute Man Air Field.
  • DeJesus has an active FAA pilot certificate and a flight instructor rating,  despite strict security controls put in place after the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks.
  • DeJesus and the students arrested are Brazilian and have no known ties to terrorists.
  • DeJesus was sanctioned for one FAA violation, dated June 26, 2010, but the case is closed and the FAA will not comment on what the violation was.
  • DeJesus and the students arrested are Brazilian.

The federal agencies involved are pointing fingers at one another. The FAA says this is an Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) investigation. ICE says this is a TSA matter, since the TSA performs clears pilots to take flight lessons.

The TSA released this statement:

TSA performs a thorough background check on each applicant at the time of application to include terrorism and other watch list matching, a criminal history check and checks for available disqualifying immigration information. This matter has prompted a review of the process through which foreign nationals obtain clearance to take flight lessons and acquire pilots’ licenses.

As the Boston Globe reports, the case raises new doubts about the effectiveness of the nation’s antiterror net:

In 2008 ABC News reported that thousands of foreign nationals were obtaining pilot’s licenses without the proper paperwork.

Officials at TSA and the Federal Aviation Administration, which issues pilot’s licenses, could not explain this week why alleged illegal immigrants were allowed to take classes and obtain pilot’s licenses in Stow.

DeJesus denies that he is in the United States illegally.

Radio Boston Rundown: Week In Review, A Cooking Controversy

Published November 5, 2010

Friday at 3 on Radio Boston:

The week in review. Boston Globe editorial page editor Peter Canellos and Boston Herald deputy editorial page editor Julie Mehegan look ahead to Gov. Deval Patrick’s agenda, the make-up of the new state Legislature, the high-profile Barney Frank-Boston Herald fight, the flight-school arrests in Stow, and the governor’s nomination of Justice Roderick Ireland as chief justice of the Supreme Judicial Court.

I talk about the overheated controversy about Cooks Source magazine. The small, free cooking magazine is accused of widespread plagiarism — and defending the practice.

The Agbekor Drum and Dance Society. The group performs the music of a West African tribe in advance of a concert this weekend.

WBUR’s Adam Ragusea reads your comments and e-mails.

Western Mass. Recipe Mag Cooks Up An Internet Frenzy

Published November 5, 2010

A college student 40-year-old woman named Monica Gaudio says Cooks Source, a freebie cooking magazine in the western Mass. town of Sunderland, stole her story on apple pie recipes straight from the Web.

On her blog, Gaudio called out the magazine for plagiarism and published a (breathtaking) response she says she received from Judith Griggs, the editor of Cooks Source.

The Internet jumped to Gaudio’s defense, overwhelming the Cooks Source Facebook page with numerous past examples of the magazine’s apparent plagiarism — including an NPR story about ice cream. (See the original and the magazine version.)

Now some Cooks Source advertisers, mostly local businesses, are withdrawing their ads and asking the Internet to be kind to them, say they knew nothing of the magazine’s journalistic malpractice.

The Cooks Source Facebook page as of 1:13 p.m.

The Cooks Source Facebook page as of 1:13 p.m.

Gaudio says the overwhelming publicity (Boing Boing, Reddit, Gawker, NPR…) broke her e-mail.

But here’s where it gets confusing: Gaudio now says she has received “no personal contact from Cooks Source.” (I have since interviewed Gaudio; I misunderstood.)

A person purporting to be Griggs, the magazine editor, responded on Facebook — “Well, here I am with egg on my face!” —  but Gaudio wonders if that’s fake.

Here is an excerpt of the e-mail Gaudio says she received from Griggs, the Cooks Source editor — the e-mail that started the frenzy:

…honestly Monica, the web is considered “public domain” and you should be happy we just didn’t “lift” your whole article and put someone else’s name on it! It happens a lot, clearly more than you are aware of, especially on college campuses, and the workplace. If you took offence [sic] and are unhappy, I am sorry, but you as a professional should know that the article we used written by you was in very bad need of editing, and is much better now than was originally. Now it will work well for your portfolio. For that reason, I have a bit of a difficult time with your requests for monetary gain, albeit for such a fine (and very wealthy!) institution. We put some time into rewrites, you should compensate me! I never charge young writers for advice or rewriting poorly written pieces, and have many who write for me… ALWAYS for free!

In the e-mail, the magazine editor acknowledges it was “my bad” and that she was probably just tired.

I’ve reached out to Monica Gaudio to see if I can get the full story, and my colleague has tried calling Cooks Source. Until then, you can judge for yourself — the Internet already has.

Update: I interviewed Monica Gaudio and wrote about it here.

‘Morning Edition’ At 9? Thousands Sleep In

Published November 5, 2010

If WBUR seriously messed with your head this morning — airing Morning Edition in the 9 o’clock hour — blame the British!

BBC journalists are on strike for 48 hours, which means many programs are either canceled or covered up with “evergreen” material. My bosses opted to air another hour of Morning Edition as a more useful alternative for listeners.

NPR’s Two-Way blog explains:

Both radio and television hosts are walking out with the National Union of Journalists. Management is scrambling to put together a basic news service. Some programs were cancelled, others replaced by recordings. They’ve published the new schedule here.

Listener Sarah Grafman (@sgrafman) tweets:

I’m doped up on cold meds, and I was really, really confused.

Indeed, WBUR is my clock. I know I need to be out the door before I hear ME’s business news. If I hear the BBC, I’m late. (And if I hear On Point, I’m probably sick.)

More from The Guardian.