Entertaining controversies...

Wednesday, August 01, 2007

Mr. Rupert Murdoch has half of TWSJ in the bag now

Money talks when the quintessential deal maker strikes. He made the Bancroft family an offer they could not refuse!

Simply put, $60 for each $30+ share, $5.6billion sale price, and the cost of their own share of any transactional legal costs.

[After months of wooing and schmoozing and pulling out just about every stop imaginable (other than raising his $5 billion offer price) to gain control of Dow Jones & Co., the paper's publisher, Murdoch looks to have finally bagged his prey this afternoon.

Dow Jones and Murdoch's News Corp. haven't made an announcement yet, and the formality of a shareholder vote remains even after that, but News Corp. now appears to have well more than the 50% of Dow Jones's voting shares that it needs.

When Murdoch's bid for Dow Jones became public knowledge in May, it unleashed a national debate of sorts over whether the most controversially hands-on media mogul of our time should be allowed to get those hands on one of the world's journalistic treasures. Both outsiders and members of the far-flung Bancroft family, which has owned a controlling stake in Dow Jones since 1902 but hasn't played an active role in managing it for more than 70 years, debated the pros and cons of selling out to Murdoch in impassioned terms.

But in the end what appears to have turned things in Murdoch's favor was not any pledge of journalistic integrity but a promise by News Corp. to pay the Bancroft trust's deal-related legal fees. That, the Journal reported today, swung a key holdout, a Denver-based family trust that controls 9.1% of Dow Jones voting shares, into Murdoch's camp.

The Bancrofts own just 25% of the company. But thanks to a dual-class voting structure similar to the ones in place at the New York Times Co., the Washington Post Co. and News Corp., they control 64% of the voting shares.

With the Ottaway family, which sold its newspaper chain to Dow Jones in 1970, voting its 7% against the deal and the 29% of voting shares in public hands mostly but not unanimously with Murdoch, News Corp. wanted to be sure of close to half the Bancroft vote before proceeding. By this afternoon it had locked up almost exactly half....

Murdoch's News Corp. owns Fox News Channel, the Fox TV network and movie studio, social networking giant MySpace, Sky TV in the U.K. and Star TV in Asia as well as newspapers and book publishers in the U.S., the United Kingdom, and Australia — where Murdoch was born and where he began building his empire in 1952.

His papers range from the trashy (the London-based Sun, with its bare-breasted Page Three girls, and the New York Post) to the classy (the Times of London), but none have anything like the global reach and clout of the Journal.

Murdoch has promised to invest heavily in the paper, expanding its international and online footprints and combining its resources with his soon-to-be-launched Fox Business Channel. In recent years Dow Jones has struggled with weak ad sales and high costs....]

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Greenville, Rhode Island bakery owned by the Cavanagh family, which uses the plant to produce church communion bread from just water and bread. That business is known to produce about 850 million sacramental wafers annually and to supply 80% of the Holy Communion bread used in American, Australian, Canadian, and British churches. The only middlemen in the supply chain are nuns living in convents! Now they want to expand to West Africa with their Christian sacramental ware for Pentecostal, Catholic, 'New Wave', and Orthodox church offerings. I make reference to the so-called New Wave churches - my term for those churches that broke away from the orthodoxy of the Protestant fold, just as the latter roke off from the Catholic church by virtue of the exploits of Martin Luther centuries ago. Many new-wave and other church goers in the generally undeveloped West African subregion of Africa pay more to religious organizations in monthly tithes and offerings than they do to their government in personal income and value added taxes. Now, that last fact is quite interesting because it is an admission that a bakery in Rhode Island has seen a huge market in the center of Black Africa for small white perfectly laminated and non-crumbly holy wheat bread, reportedly costing "less than a penny" apiece, for the use of both the bible-reading and the bible-believing religious organizations. However, the picture from the Cavanagh's factory floor speaks volumes, in my own opinion, about the need for the company to watch its business ethics and to treat all customers equally irrespective of location, creed, or other discriminatory demographic information or criteria. So, I just hope and pray that the wafers falling off the conveyor belt and by the way side are not destined for West Africa and that the actual wafers delivered will be wheat bread and water, and not just glutamate-free bread and 'pure' water, if you get my point, even if so requested by some shady, greedy, and unethical businessmen over in West Africa. Posted by Okonkwo O. Awa on Sunday, December 28, 2008.

In the summer of 2007, Pope Benedict XVI (BXVI) encouraged The Church to reach out to young people using new technologies, as he himself learned to send out cellphone text messages to the faithful. So in obedience, a tech savvy evangelizing Catholic priest got some help from a Web designer in order to write all the daily books of prayers into a low-cost computer software application downloadable onto the iPhone. Rev. Paolo Padrini's iTunes prayer book was officially approved by The Vatican's Pontifical Council for Social Communications in December 2008. Of course, all proceeds from the electronic prayer book venture will go to charity. Speaking of charitable behavior, The Holy See has seen it fit after 400 years to honor Galileo Galilei in 2009 as the "patron" of the non-mutual exclusivity of the faith versus reason dichotomy. That is very appropriate in this age of new technology, even though The Church still smarts from its error of judgment in calling the famous astronomer a heretic after he publicly embarrassed The Church by reporting that his scientific observations in Astronomy with his unique telescope had led him inexorably to believe that the Earth actually revolved around the sun, in direct opposition to the teaching of The Church at the time that Planet Earth was the center of the universe. In seeking to paint the Church in a new light of worldly knowledge by distancing itself from a past of imbibing pure dogma, The Vatican may have ventured to cross the final frontier and boundary between Science and Christianity by acknowledging recently that there could be life on planets other than the Earth! Posted by O. O. Awa on Wednesday, December 24, 2008.
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