Apple had strong sales in its product lines. The success of the iPhone helped raise Apple’s net income up 26 percent, to $1.14 billion, or $1.26 a share, from $904 million, or $1.01 cents a share.
Instead of blowing a pile of cash on a music video the usual way, DJ, producer, musician, and left field thinker Moby decided to offer a $10,000 cash carrot to aspiring and upcoming filmmakers. The winning entry was recently unveiled. Moby warns viewers, "if you're watching at work your boss might think it's porn" -- which is reason enough to watch
The Profile of An American President
It was November 1993, and after he spoke to a small group of school administrators, I approached Mr. Bush in the courtyard of the Menger Hotel in San Antonio. When I asked about the workings of the state's education agency, apparently not in his briefing book, Mr. Bush couldn't answer.
A song of truth rarely heard today, and we must ask why?
Scott McClellan, Bush's estranged former press secretary, on what the movie nails and what it screws up: I won’t go as far as to borrow a line from Bush 43 and say, “Heck of a job, Stonie.” But I will borrow one from Bush 41 and say, “It’s good, not bad.”
President George W. Bush is such a popular subject in the entertainment world nowadays. Director Oliver Stone's "W" just barely opened in movie theaters, now, Will Ferrell will make his Broadway debut in January in the new solo comedy "You’re Welcome America. A Final Night With George W Bush."
W. may be less frenzied than the usual Oliver Stone sensory bombardment, but in revisiting the early '00s by way of the late '60s, this psycho-historical portrait of George W. Bush has all the queasy appeal of a strychnine-laced acid flashback.