
Arbitron Inc. (NYSE: ARB) has announced that Richard J. Surratt will be leaving the company for personal reasons. Mr. Surratt will continue as Chief Financial Officer through May 11, 2012 and will remain as an employee of the company through June...
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![]() Arbitron Announces the Departure of Chief Financial Officer Arbitron Inc. (NYSE: ARB) has announced that Richard J. Surratt will be leaving the company for personal reasons. Mr. Surratt will continue as Chief Financial Officer through May 11, 2012 and will remain as an employee ... |
![]() Bloomberg Fires Finance Team Editor Ahearn Jim Romenesko is reporting that Bloomberg News has fired finance team editor William Ahearn. Romenesko writes, “‘As an editor and newsroom manager, Bill is right up there with Abe Rosenthal, Paul Steiger, Harold Hayes and the ... |
![]() Bloomberg Businessweek Launches iPhone, iPod Apps Bloomberg Businessweek announced Wednesday that its magazine is now available on the iPhone and iPod touch. Bloomberg Businessweek also announced that its iPad application, launched in April 2011, has now surpassed 100,000 subscribers. The app has ... |
![]() Modern Technology Cuts Cable Services Prices As technology rapidly develops, more and more companies are entering the playing field of multi-plan or multi-play television, phone and internet services. Technology in the cable services world has indeed massively changed since the days of ... |
Rick Montgomery of the Kansas City Star writes this past weekend about whether media coverage of the economy can make it harder for the economy to recover.
Montgomery writes, “Perhaps none of this relates to anything but simple sense about what makes news: When our economy seems to start correcting itself from freefall — as it did that summer two years back — the scribes and talking heads pivot to hotter issues.
“‘It’s not that consumers are dancing to the beat of pundits and newscasters. I think it’s the other way around,’ said Ken Goldstein, an economist for the Conference Board, which issues reports on consumer confidence.
“People lose faith in their economy only when the media drumbeat coincides with what they see in their lives, he said: Friends out of work, retirement accounts sagging, homes foreclosed down the block. And many are seeing all of those things.
“Are people’s perceptions shaped by what they see on TV or read in the paper? … It used to be, whatever Walter Cronkite said was so — but those days are long gone,”’ Goldstein said. ‘To think that today’s consumer is paying so much attention and trusting what the news media says is, to put it kindly, giving the media way too much credit.’
“Still, financial advisers such as John L. Brown know that clients ‘do get spooked’ by features on job loss or foreclosure, pessimistic opinion columns, experts’ forecasts of no relief in sight.”
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