Sunday | July 08, 2007

The Journal Fire Sale

The Wall Street Journal is one of America ’s great newspapers.  Granted, its editorial board is composed entirely by Martians, regularly adopting legal and economic theories that have no noticeable connection to reality.  But their journalism is impeccable, both well-researched and well-written.  People fear selling that paper to Rupert Murdoch for much the same reason they would dislike the notion of selling the Statue of Liberty to a known grafitti artist:  His track record does not inspire confidence. 

It is no secret that Mr. Murdoch wants to buy the WSJ so he can use its brand name to launch a new business cable TV network, to compete with CNBC and Bloomberg TV.  This is the only reason why paying $5 billion makes sense:  Because there are billions to be made by a successful business network, and a Wall Street Journal network would be extremely unlikely to fail.  What confuses me is why the Bancrofts, the family who owns a controlling share of the paper, would rather Murdoch reap those billions, rather than themselves.

My best guess is this:  The family that controls America ’s great business paper is just no good at business.
Posted by Balphagor at 11:07:52 | Permanent Link | Comments (0) |

Friday | June 22, 2007

The Coolness Factor

There's a billionaire who ought to run for President.  Everything he touches seems to turn to gold.  He has an instinct for what people like, and he seems to be able to make people like whatever his companies make.  I'm not talking about Mike Bloomberg, of course.  I mean Steve Jobs. the CEO of Apple and Pixar.  Pixar has done a better job of making movies than any film studio, and has grown into a multi-billion dollar operation from when he bought it for $10 million in 1986.  And Jobs co-founded Apple Computers, which made the first "cool" personal computers, and then returned to transform Apple into whoat's not primarily a consumer electronics company, with the unassailably cool iPods and now the iPhone.

Yes, he has no track record in politics, but he has a way of identifying needs, and finding a way to fulfill them, and to do a better job of it than anyone else.  No one who's seen the rollout of iProducts and the advertising campaigns for Pixar films can doubt Steve Jobs could run an effective campaign for President.  And if there's one guy out there who could make public service look cool, as John F. Kennedy once did, it would be Steve Jobs.
 

Posted by Balphagor at 17:03:38 | Permanent Link | Comments (0) |