Glazer: Scribe Unleashes Farewell Ode to Dwayne Bowe

UnknownSay it ain’t so Bowe…

Wide receiver Dwayne Bowe was easily the most interesting Chiefs player of the last eight seasons and now he’s gone.

The 30 year old Bowe had a $56 million, five-year deal ending in 2017 and this season he was to receive $14 million. However the Chiefs needed cap space and Bowe was clearly fading in the team’s future plans.

Last season, for example, Bowe had zero touchdown catches.

Bowe leaves the Chiefs with the second most receptions behind Tony Gonzalez and third most receiving yards behind the Chiefs only true super star receiver ever Otis Taylor (and yes, that includes Gonzalez).

Taylor led the Chiefs to playoff wins and two Super Bowls, Tony didn’t, sorry.

Although, yes, Gonzalez will be a first round Hall of Famer, just as Otis Taylor should have been.

Bowe always seemed to always be just one big play away from being The Man. Continue reading

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Hearne: USA Today Rocks Monday’s Lawrence Journal World

tumblr_m4f17gQPNl1r70663Longtime subscribers to the Kansas City Star probably remember its Monday editions as the lightest of the week…

Light in weight and light in content. That’s because the Star fields a skeleton newsroom  crew on weekends and which usually results in precious little meaningful local news content.

However, now that all of the weekday editions of the Star have all shrunk in size owing to cutbacks, it’s gotten far less noticeable because they’re all pretty small as a rule. And while, today’s “A Section” is just eight pages – that includes the national, local, business and opinion sections – the addition of a 10 pages NCAA Tournament special section gives the newspaper the kind of heft it used to have before everything went to heck in 2008.

Ditto for Monday’s Lawrence Journal World  which – ad inserts aside – is mostly light as a feather.

Today’s Journal World though is the first to include a USA Today section.

And just like that, an otherwise mundane Journal World is awash in national, business, travel and feature news – well presented, well written, interesting news. Continue reading

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Hearne: Lawrence Journal World Tosses Hail Mary Via USA Today

Screen Shot 2015-03-15 at 1.42.37 PMTruth in advertising…

Is that expression really even relevant anymore? You have to wonder. Especially when it comes to assertions by newspapers like the Lawrence Journal World which is sporting a full page ad attempting to hitch its fortunes to – of all things – USA Today.

“More,” the ad begins. “More local. More national. More of what matters to you.”

Hold it right there.

While it’s true that the Journal World is pretty much the only game in town in Lawrence, Kansas, it’s a pretty meager game at that. Outside of the odd Karen Dillon investigative piece, the usual KU worship stories, road closings and the odd murder, there’s not a whole lot of local color or in depth local enterprise reporting outside of the shooting-fish-in-a-barrel coverage of the obvious.

For example, they’ve been milking the Rock Chalk Park – aka Sports Pavilion Lawrence – story for like two years. Unfortunately, given the sleepyheaded nature of the local populace and the lack of journalistic teeth, precious little has come of the Journal World coverage in terms of effecting change.

And as for the term, “more national,” it couldn’t get any less.

In today’s edition for example, there’s but a single Associated Press story headlined, “GOP: President sees Iran as legacy builder.”

That and two news shorts about a claim that ISIS “used chemical weapons” and “At least eight people dead after cyclone.”

In other words, if you’re old – and what print newspaper readers aren’t these days? – and rely on the Journal World for national and world news, you’re sunk.

You don’t know Jack about what’s going on around the country or the world.

To that end, the Journal World is throwing a Hail Mary. Continue reading

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Sutherland: Where the Buffaloed Roam; Brilliantly Dishonest

54da1f5201614.preview-300The Lottery, with its weekly pay-out of enormous prizes, was the one public event to which the proles paid serious attention…

“It was probable that there were some millions of proles for whom the Lottery was the principal, if not the only, reason for remaining alive. It was their delight, their folly, their anodyne, their intellectual stimulant. Where the Lottery was concerned, even people who could barely read and write seemed capable of intricate calculations and staggering feats of memory. There was a whole tribe of men who made their living simply by selling systems, forecasts, and luck amulets. Winston had nothing to do with the Lottery, which was managed by the Ministry of Plenty, but he was aware (indeed, everyone in the party was aware) that the prizes were largely imaginary. Only small sums were actually paid off, the winners of the big prizes being nonexistent persons.”

George Orwell, “1984.”

Kansas Lotto? Kansas Powerball?

For years the political and legal establishments – there’s a large overlap in membership – have quietly but effectively screwed the working class and poor of Kansas.

It’s not just that we’ve encouraged gambling through state sponsored lotteries and casinos. It’s that it was done cynically, knowing full well all the social costs attendant with legalizing gambling.

Not only is it a way to prey upon the poor financially, but all the indices of social pathology soar; bankruptcy, embezzlement, and divorce, to name just a few.  (It’s justified “as more money for schools,” forgetting that schools are supposed to serve society’s needs, not society serve the school’s needs.)

Other shameful forms of exploitation of the less affluent include 30 year tax abatements on real estate taxes for big developers. (Home owners have to pick up the tab for the cost of infrastructure.) TIF bonds and STAR bonds are ways to shift the risk to the public while retaining the reward for private corporate interests when big projects like the Kansas Speedway, Cabelas, etc are created.

Finally, special benefit districts are another way to shift the cost of capital spending on roads, sewers, street-lights to surrounding property owners from the business owners who actually benefit from the improvements. (Think the SPRINT campus in Overland Park.)

One particularly egregious program is called “PEAK” (Promoting Employment Across Kansas). It allows businesses which move here to withhold state income tax from their employees and keep the money for themselves.

Talk about corporate welfare!   Continue reading

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Jack Goes Confidential: ‘Cinderella’s’ Once Upon A Time—Is Now!

720x1280The 1950’s CINDERELLA is one of Walt Disney’s most beloved animated fairytales ever…

But that was then and this is now.

And just like with ALICE IN WONDERLAND and MALEFICENT, Disney goes back to the well to bring the story’s original message of “if you keep on believing, the dream will come true” to today’s audiences.

In this new LIFE-action adaptation Disney adds, “have courage and be kind” to the fable.

Bottom line, the studios newest excursion into the vaulted world of fairytales plays delightfully old-fashioned yet refreshingly updated to current short attention span standards. Continue reading

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Hearne: KC Magazine Editor Bows Out Mysteriously

10882097_10152529887377544_4521932903100466066_nA famous local plumber used to spend a zillion dollars a year in Yellow Pages advertising …

He tracked the leads he got off his ads carefully and it was hugely profitable. And then suddenly, a handful of years back, practically overnight the returns on that advertising all but disappeared.

Times change. Sometimes ruthlessly.

I remember when former Kansas City Star editor and publisher Art Brisbane had his hand on the tiller at 18th and Grand and there were more than 2,000 people on the payroll. They’re lucky to have 600 today.

While that drop didn’t go down overnight like the Yellow Pages did, it’s been an exercise in pain and frustration ever since. Painful for the hundreds upon hundreds of staffers that the Star has had to lay off. And frustrating for what’s left of the readership who today are paying far more for far less. Unfortunately that game is still afoot and things will continue to spiral down until somebody kn the print news biz figures out to make display advertising work anything close online to the way it does in print.

Think the publishing business isn’t a tough racket? Think again.

Since the 1st of the year, not only has the daily newspaper axed its Sunday Star Magazine and embattled local alt weekly the Pitch parted company rather suspiciously with longtime publisher Joel Hornbostel, the hits(and musical chairs) at KC Magazine just keep on coming.

The city magazine’s latest casualty?

KC Mag editor Lara Hale. Continue reading

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New Jack City: 2015 Drive-In Season On Track To Break Records

250px-AutokinoWe’re not quite there yet…

The excellent weather of late may be fooling us but Spring doesn’t arrive until the Drive-In Movies are back for the season. And that first date is Friday, March 20—which coincidentally just happens to be the real beginning of Spring.

Kansas City is fortunate to still have seven first-run drive-in screens operating. Four at the I-70 Drive-In, two at the TWIN and one at the BOULEVARD drive-in theatre.

That compares to just two screens in a single complex in greater St. Louis.

All of the Kansas City drive-ins are equipped with digital projection and feature the movie soundtracks through your FM car radio.

But if you still enjoy hanging a speaker on your window, so be it. Continue reading

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Valentine: Kansas City 5th Worst Run City in America

SlyJamesKansas City just made it to another Top Cities in America list…

Wallet Hub has declared KC as the 5th worst run city in the country.

They judged 65 of the most populated U.S. cities on three key expenditures. The good end of the scale was based on who got the highest returns on their money spent for Education, Police and Parks & Recreation.

*** The equation for education was based on money spent per capita vs standardized test scores.

*** The equation for police was a bit more complicated.  The calculation was based on crime rates and per-capita expenditures after normalizing the data by poverty rate, unemployment rate and median household income.

*** The equation for parks and rec was based on total parkland acreage within city limits  vs total Parks & Recreation expenditures.

Kansas City did not fare well in any category. Continue reading

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Sutherland: Dwight D. Administers a Little Corporal Punishment to You-Know-Who

Bibi_Obama

Netanyahu & Obama in their youth

We’ve seen a masterful exposition of expertise on the Middle East in response to my post on George Packer‘s appearance at UMKC re ISIS and Mark Valentine‘s post on Israeli Prime Minister Netanyahu’s speech to Congress…

I’m speaking, of course, of our own favorite public intellectual, Harley of Olathe and his learned treatise on the conflict there, especially the root causes.

It’s all the fault of Bush/Cheney/Powell/Bibi, etc. Continue reading

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Glazer: A Statue for Kay Barnes? No Way!

UnknownTalk about dumb ideas…

The Kansas City Star recently ran a column by Steve Rose about how all that’s missing from downtown is a statue of former KC mayor Kay Barnes.

Hey, I like Steve and it’s true that downtown is better off now than before the Cordish Group built its bar zone and the Sprint arena. However, with what little Barnes actually had to do with it, I couldn’t disagree more with Steve about building her a statue.

And while it’s also true a couple of the bars like McFadden’s have been pretty profitable, most of the others have either closed or not been hits. The Power & Light District is only busy late on weekend nights or during special events.

Weeknights are dead.

There are no retail stores in sight. No Quick Trips. Just one grocery store. And the gas stations downtown still look like shoot ’em up, bang bang.

A statue for Kay Barnes? Really?

Fact is, we have damn few people here that deserve a statue. Continue reading

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Donnelly: Sporting 1-1 Draw With New York Feels Like Consolation Prize

New+York+Red+Bulls+v+Sporting+Kansas+City+JvAC6fbDo3ulWith a drastically different roster than last season, it was fair to assume that there would be an adjustment period for Peter Vermes’ Sporting Kansas City squad as they began the 2015 campaign at home Sunday evening against the New York Red Bulls

New starters included goalkeeper Luis Marin, rookie defender Amadou Dia, returning bulldog midfielder Roger Espinoza, speedy striker Krisztian Nemeth, and Venezuelan midfielder Bernardo Anor.  Not to mention Ike Opara, who sat nearly all of 2014 with a foot injury.

Indeed, the first half of play was disjointed and physical, not a thing of beauty by any means.  Space on the pitch was limited by both squads’ desire to impose their will in this opening match, and combination play was sporadic at best.

None of the newcomers particularly impressed.

Marin had a helluva time just keeping his first few punts and goal kicks in bounds, and received a mock ovation when he finally settled down and kept a long ball in play.

Espinoza covered some ground, but didn’t look quite up to his legendary work rate.  Dia might have been the bright spot among the bunch, especially considering that this was his pro debut after being recently drafted out of Clemson. Continue reading

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Hearne: Investigative Reporter Karen Dillon Shoots Down KU’s $8.1 Million Jet

Bill-Self-Big-12-Coach-Of-The-YearOnce upon a time, this story would have been a front pager in the Sunday Kansas City Star

And frankly, that’s still where it still should have appeared. Instead the newspaper of record in Kansas City laid off its top  investigative reporter in a combination of retaliation for Dillon speaking to the news media about its controversial Hunger Games layoff strategy and saving a few bucks.

So instead, Dillon’s riveting  insightful report about the hypocrisy and folly of the University of Kansas buying a $8,1 million jet for basketball deity Bill Self and it’s sports staffers to impress top athletes to play at KU, appeared in the lowly Lawrence Journal World where a comparative thimble full of reader learned that taxpayers – not KU’s deep pocketed athletics department – are picking up the millions of dollars to operate the pricy plane.

Go figure.

“The Journal World contacted 16 colleges, including the 10 Big 12 schools, the University of Missouri and the University of North Carolina. Only three schools besides KU said they owned planes, and only KU owned a jet.”

More to the point, of the $3.5 million taxpayers spent operating the jet over the past five years, “about two thirds” of that money went for KU coaches and athletics department administrators, Dillon reports. Continue reading

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Lefsetz: Sizing Up the Winners & the Losers

Mark-Zuckerberg.AOL

Makes online easy.

But it turns out online is much more than their walled garden and that cable and telephone companies utilize pricing pressure to get people to sign up for a bundle that includes internet access. Turns out that access is king. All of AOL’s content was no match for high speed access to everything.

AOL survives as a lame portal that gets way too much attention from Wall Street. And if you’ve got AOL e-mail, switch immediately. The truth is you’re missing out on so many messages, with AOL’s spam filters so tight and ever-changing.

GOOGLE

Made search work.

Create comprehension from chaos, make the world understandable and usable for a huge swath of people and you’ll get rich.

But you won’t stay rich. In mobile, search is secondary, it’s all about the app.

But what is most interesting about Google is it got a pass. Utilizing its mantra of “Don’t be evil” to market itself as a new kind of company (that only lasted until earnings faltered), Google’s history is about the public and press giving it a chance when it does not deserve one. Sure, Google gave us Gmail, a slightly better Hotmail, but it makes no money on YouTube, Google Plus is an invasive disaster and Google Glass was a sideshow that got a ton of publicity while WhatsApp and Snapchat got all the glory.

Just because someone is good at one thing, don’t assume they’re good at everything. Furthermore, just because someone is rich, that doesn’t make them smart and indomitable.

EVAN SPIEGEL

Who?

He’s Mr. Snapchat, who’s now a billionaire.

It’s easy to be a one trick pony. But now Spiegel has pivoted Snapchat into a content company, something prognosticators did not foresee, increasing dramatically the value of the enterprise. Like Mark Zuckerberg before him, Spiegel refused to sell out at a low price, he believed in himself and his vision. Those who take the short money, however large, are losers.

MARK ZUCKERBERG

Facebook is an advertising company, not a social network. After his HTML5 mistake, Zuckerberg pivoted and made Facebook the king of mobile advertising. It’s like a klezmer band deciding it’s better to make pop music. Well, a very successful klezmer band. Proving, even if the Winklevosses came up with the idea, they never could have turned Facebook into the juggernaut it has become. Continue reading

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Jack Goes Confidential: Vince Vaughn Disappoints In ‘Unfinished Business’

UnknownYou think it’s easy being a critic?

Think again.

It’s a job that leaves yourself wide open for many a disappointment.

Case in point.

I’ve been a fan of Vince Vaughn’s brand of comedy for quite some time now. Loved him in SWINGERS, WEDDING CRASHERS and OLD SCHOOL.

Heck, I even appreciated him in BREAK-UP and THE INTERNSHIP.

However his latest offering, UNFINISHED BUSINESS, has a major portion of its story line set in Berlin, which just so happens to be my second adopted home town.

So you know I was pumped for it. Continue reading

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Glazer: Q104 Superstar Mike Kennedy to Country Radio Hall of Fame

Mike“I was stunned, thrilled when I got the call from  Toby Keith. Mike, you have been elected to the Country Music Radio Hall of Fame.” 

That’s what veteran Q104 morning show host Mike Kennedy told me Wednesday about how happy he was over this rare honor.

Only four deejays nationally were elected this year and our guy was one of them.

Kennedy was attending the Country Radio Convention in Nashville last week when it all went down. He told me he had no clue he was going to be inducted. But he sure has earned the honor.

Kennedy is one of those rare radio personalities today that enjoys more than two decades of both on the air success as well as being an executive in a very tough industry.

Mike is from Emporia, Kansas where he began his radio career in the 1970’s as a just kid.

“I’d only been in fast food and clean up before radio and stayed in this biz ever since.”

Kennedy told me former 61 Country legend Ted Cramer is also in the Hall of Fame. Cramer is with Q104 sister station KFKF FM today. Kennedy began his career with Q104 in 1991 as a program director working over legendary radio bad boy Randy MillerContinue reading

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Jack Goes Confidential: ‘The Second Best Exotic Marigold Hotel’—Is Just That,

1407154479000-XXX-ABEMH2-13405CRP-662214762011’s BEST EXOTIC MARIGOLD HOTEL was a real charmer!

It brought out the Medicare crowd in droves. It also had what the industry calls legs. Translation: The film didn’t burn out at the box office after just a couple of weeks. Instead it just kept on playing and playing and playing.

And that was something really unusual!

The audience demographics turned younger the longer the movie played and word of mouth was definitely on its side.

Now for the sequel most of the primarily British cast is back including Judi Dench, Bill Nighy, Maggie Smith and Dev Patel as Sonny, the hotel’s proprietor. Adding American flavoring are Richard Gere and David Strathairn.

You’ll recall that the Marigold Hotel had become more or less a retirement home for various Brits who chose the old Indian hotel for its low cost living expenses. The pound obviously went much further there then it did back home. Continue reading

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Lefsetz: Apple has Samsung, Microsoft & Google on the Ropes

290x195mobileentapps9Gartner Report: “Apple overtakes Samsung as world’s top smartphone maker; fueled by iPhone 6 and iPhone 6 Plus.”

Get rid of the removable battery and micro SD card?

That’s like kicking out the drummer and the bass player, hard core fans are not going to like that.

However tech is not like music. In music it’s about establishing a catalogue of hits so you can tour until you die. The future is important, but it’s about the past even more.

In tech if you’re not on the bleeding edge, you’re gonna die, which is what was happening to Apple – it just did not have large enough phones. And it turned out people wanted phablets. Because the whole world is going mobile, that’s where you not only surf and connect, but buy too. It’s like satirist Gary Shteyngart‘s “Super Sad True Love Story” come to life.

And Apple perfected the smartphone.

Let’s not forget, once again, that the Cupertino company was not there first, nor do you have to be – that’s a big story in tech, that the bleeding edge does not often succeed.

MySpace was replaced by Facebook and Rhapsody was overtaken by Spotify and the iPhone kicked the BlackBerry and Treo to the curb. And to win it’s not about marketing so much as functionality. If it just works, people will use it.

Hell, we’re still fighting this war with television remotes. Continue reading

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Valentine: Netanyahu Visit Unmasks Petty Congressional Politics

Original art by Mark Valentine

Original art by Mark Valentine

Who do they really represent ?

Washington was abuzz over Israel prime minister Netanyahu. He came to speak against the deal with Iran. He was invited by the Congress, not the White House. And his speech contained elements that were stark and factual.

Not one person from The White House attended, although CNN showed archival footage that occasionally showed vice president Joe Biden. But don’t be fooled – Biden was nowhere to be found.

The dust up with The White House could have easily been avoided by President Obama, but instead he dug in and made it an issue. That decision made the event one of the most watched speeches ever given in Congress.  The New York Times said that demand for tickets to Netanyahu’s speech before the joint houses of Congress compared to that of a top-class musical concert.

The many Democrats who did not attend allowed us to see that that they no longer represent their districts.

They represent the President. Continue reading

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Donnelly: Strike Still Looms as Sporting Home Opener Approaches

Hamburg-v-Stuttgart-Rafa-van-der-Vaart-celeb_3022108

Rafael van der Vaart

Sporting Kansas City‘s home opener is coming up quick…

It’s scheduled for this Sunday, March 8th at 6:00 p.m. against the New York Red Bulls.

And all signs are pointing to another sold-out season for Sporting, as Kansas City’s soccer madness just continues to boil over – quicker and bigger than most observers ever predicted.  Sunday’s opener is a tough, tough ticket, maybe as tough as I’ve seen over the years, including playoffs.

If you’re lucky enough to have your ticket in hand already, congrats to you.

The weather is supposed to be warm, and the beer should be flowing.  So what to expect from this year’s team?  I’ll get to that in a sec.

But first, let’s talk about that pesky little CBA negotiation that’s ongoing.  And that’s threatening to derail this weekend’s MLS opening games.  The players and owners have been trying to hash out a new deal, and one of the key sticking points is free agency.  I won’t get into it in too much detail, especially since trying to explain the MLS single-entity contract structure is confusing at best, but the players have threatened to strike if their demands are not met. Continue reading

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Steele: Keep the Sewer Flowing but Lower the Fecal Count

screen-shot-2015-01-06-at-9-30-47-amColumnist Tom Friedman of the New York Times once opined, “The Internet is an open sewer of untreated, unfiltered information, left, right, center, up, down, and requires that kind of filtering by anyone.”

And that is its beauty.

In what may be the last days of untreated flow before the FCC puts its filters on, allow me to opine on the ways that the sewer might flow a little bit better.

The advantage that a blog like KC Confidential has over, say, a New York Times is that it creates a community of interested parties all of whom are capable of adding information to the debate.

The advantage that the traditional media have is that they pay their reporters, give them time to develop their stories, and then charge the consumers for that information.

As such, traditional media should have higher standards. They don’t always, but they certainly create higher expectations among their audience. That audience, however, has almost no way to influence the content. Continue reading

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