4/29/2008

Arthur Kemp Delivers an Inspiring Speech to the BNP!

Posted under: — @ 12:30 am
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Arthur Kemp author of March of the Titans and The Story of the AWB of South Africa delivers an impressive speech on the danger posed to European nations by unregulated immigration. He draws on his expert knowledge of demographics and explains both logically and objectively how a people must retain majority population control of their living space in order to continue exist as a homogeneous nation. This video will alert, educate and inspire anyone who cares about the survival of the West. — admin

 

BNP- Arthur Kemp - Demographics Is Destiny

 
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IVY-LDL7A3M

Staff

Alien Media Combine losing it’s grip over Americans slowly but surely

Posted under: — @ 12:20 am
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kill-your-television.jpgThe End of Network News as We Know It?

Decreases in Ads and Viewers Mean Change is in the Air

By Brian Steinberg

NEW YORK (AdAge.com) — The big three TV network newscasts lost about 1.2 million viewers last year, and advertising on their three big morning news shows fell to an estimated $1.03 billion. The average viewer is 60 years old, and the demographic marketers most want to reach is more likely to be facing a computer screen than a TV screen when the evening news comes on.

Collectively, ABC, NBC and CBS’s network newscasts lost about 1.2 million viewers in 2007, according to an analysis of Nielsen data by the Project for Excellence in Journalism
Photo Credit: John Paul Filo

Given that rather sobering picture, maybe the discussion shouldn’t be over whether Katie Couric will last at CBS through the election. Maybe it should be whether we need network-TV news at all.

None of the networks was even willing to entertain the suggestion that it wasn’t completely committed to its evening newscasts, so this isn’t a story about how one or the other is about to close down its news division. But the economic incentive to reshape their news departments is pressing.

Collectively, ABC, NBC and CBS’s network newscasts lost about 1.2 million viewers in 2007, according to an analysis of Nielsen data by the Project for Excellence in Journalism, a 5% drop from the year before. Even the audience for the morning news shows — the most successful of the news departments’ endeavors — fell for the third year in a row, the PEJ study said, down 2% from the year before, its lowest point since 1999.

Not surprisingly, ad revenue has followed viewers elsewhere. Spending on the three major morning news shows — ABC’s “Good Morning America,” NBC’s “Today” and CBS’s “Early Show” — fell to about $1.03 billion in 2007 from about $1.05 billion in 2005, according to Nielsen Monitor-Plus. And ad spending on the three major-network evening newscasts tumbled to about $502.8 million from about $538.3 million in 2005.

 
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