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Strategies & Market Trends : ahhaha's ahs -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: ahhaha who wrote (1629)3/19/2001 7:17:06 PM
From: AhdaRead Replies (1) | Respond to of 24758
 
There is good news going on in net. I ever got ticked as to which program allowed the best video and why didn't one do it all instead of two or three. Frustrated me to no end like moving rabbit ears for reception absolutely ridiculous that there is not a universal standard and the pleasure would be mine.

There are many more vivid programs being used by realators. They realism helps you decide if you want to look at the house or not. I see the growth in this type of business as it sure can save hours of driving.


From the Hollywood entertainment end, not good news and so too will caterers and associated fields find their earnings decrease with the a cap placed on grandeur.

calendarlive.com!ArticleDetail-25445,00.html


Monday, March 19, 2001

OSCARS PREVIEW
The Year of a Humbled Hollywood
Labor contract impasses and pending corporate mergers put the film industry in a less than festive mood.

By RACHEL ABRAMOWITZ, Times Staff Writer

En route to the academy's annual nominee luncheon last week, "Gladiator" producer Doug Wick was surprised to hear his driver turn and ask, "If there is a strike, what will that do to the limo business?"
"Then one of the other nominees at the table said their driver had brought up the same subject," recalls Wick, whose film is up for best picture. "Everyone was talking about the same slowdown in the business, although the people in the post-production side of the business--editors, sound people--got to walk a lot taller, because they won't feel any impact from a strike for almost a year."
While nominees jet from award show to award show, the mood for the rest of Hollywood remains glum. Indeed, for those not directly involved in the festivities, the hubbub of the Oscar season sounds much like the band playing as the Titanic went down, so palpable is the sense of foreboding that has begun to circle the industry. They must not only contend with strike woes, but with the uncertain impact of mega-mergers such as Time Warner-AOL and Universal-Vivendi, and the recent stock market collapse.



To: ahhaha who wrote (1629)3/22/2001 8:48:19 PM
From: YamakitaRespond to of 24758
 
ahhaha might like this one:

markpoyser.com



To: ahhaha who wrote (1629)3/27/2001 11:15:07 PM
From: ahhahaRead Replies (2) | Respond to of 24758
 
Sure hope Att gives us another choice. I'd love to dump @Home and get my old service, ELNK, back:

biz.yahoo.com