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Bookish, New Web Site, Provides Information on Books and Authors

Bookish, the Web site built by top publishers to provide information on their books and authors in a literary magazine-like format, opened for business Monday night.

Although the site received financing from just three houses - Simon & Schuster, Penguin Group USA and Hachette Book Group - it will include books by 16 other publishers including Random House and Scholastic.

Meant primarily as a destination for readers, visitors can also purchase books on the site directly from the publishers through bookish.com or other retailers if they’d like.

The initial line-up of features includes a diverse range of articles, including a review of the bestselling erotic novel “Fifty Shades of Grey” by the editors of the satirical magazine The Onion, and an essay by Elizabeth Gilbert, of “Eat, Pray, Love” fame, responding to Philip Roth’s criticism of writing as profession.

The site is expecting a lot of contributions y prominent authors who promised their support. Among the current offerings is an interview with Michael Connelly about a book he stopped writing after100 pages, and why.

The site was originally scheduled to go live in the summer of 2011, but there have been many changes along the way. One of the biggest adjustments to the original plan has been the evolution of the site’s book recommendation engine, which its creators argue will be the most sophisticated available.

Instead of relying essentially on the taste of other customers with similar preferences, as most recommendation engines do, Bookish’s tool takes into account critical reviews and awards. Eventually it will even reflect the insights derived from a reader’s own nuanced description of books â€" for example, that the reader found a book to be exciting but unsatisfying.

Ardy Khazaei, Bookish’s chief executive, said this will be a better way for people to discover new books, because recommendations from friends are ! not necessarily the best way to find a match for a reader’s tastes. He added that friends and relatives “won’t be able to know about as many relevant books as our tool can.”



Party-Line Voting Makes Scott Brown Part of a Dying Breed in the Senate

Scott P. Brown’s decision not to run in a special Senate race in Massachusetts is a blow to Republican hopes of reclaiming the Senate. Mr. Brown might have had a 50-50 chance of capturing the seat formerly held by Secretary of State John Kerry. But Republicans as popular as Mr. Brown are hard to come by in Massachusetts.

Even 10 years ago, Mr. Brown would not have been quite so much of a novelty; there were considerably more Republican senators serving in blue states like Massachusetts, and more Democratic senators serving in red states, than there are today.

We can define the 18 blue states as those that have been won by Democrats in each presidential election since 2000, and the 22 red states as those that have been carried by Republicans in ech election during that period. Ten years ago, there were eight Republicans serving in the Senate from the blue states: Peter Fitzgerald of Illinois, Susan Collins and Olympia Snowe of Maine, Norm Coleman of Minnesota, Gordon H. Smith of Oregon, Arlen Specter and Rick Santorum of Pennsylvania, and Lincoln Chafee of Rhode Island. Only Ms. Collins still holds her Senate seat today. She is joined by three new colleagues (Mark Kirk of Illinois, Pat Toomey of Pennsylvania, and Ron Johnson of Wisconsin) who were elected in the Republican wave year of 2010. But the number of Republican senators in blue states has been cut to four from eight.

There are more Democratic senators from red states than Republican senators from blue state! s. But the Democratic figure has been on a gradual decline as well, from 14 senators a decade ago to 10 now.

Most of the decline in the Democratic numbers has been concentrated in Southern and border states, which had sometimes been inclined to vote Republican for president but to elect moderate or conservative Democrats to Congress. Similarly, there are now only two Republican senators from New England (Ms. Collins and Kelly Ayotte of New Hampshire), down from five a decade ago.

The national parties (perhaps especially Republicans, but not exclusively so) have become less willing to tolerate ideological diversity within their ranks. And as behavior in Congress has become more parliamentarian, voters have become less willing o entrust office to politicians like Mr. Brown, whom they fear could facilitate his party’s agenda even if they agree with him on many of the positions he has stated.

Mr. Brown could instead choose to run for governor of Massachusetts: the field will be wide open in 2014, with the Democrat Deval Patrick retiring from office.

This might well be the better bet for Mr. Brown. State parties are freer to develop their own agendas and to cater to the voters in their state, without risking backlash from ideological national groups or Congressional leadership.

There is also more of a history of Republicans being elected to governorships in blue states, including in Massachusetts, where Mr. Patrick was preceded in office by a series of four Republicans including Mitt Romney. Today, 28 percent of blue-state governors are Republicans, compared with just 11 percent of blue-state senators.

These numbers have also been on the decline, however. As recently as 2006, fully half of the blue states had Republican governors.

Likewise, the number of Democratic governors in red states has been on the wane. From 2001 to 2010, there were between 8 and 9 Democratic governors of the 22 red states, making up about 40 percent of the total. Now there are five, or 23 percent.

Apart from Mr. Brown if he runs for governor, there do not appear to be very many candidates who have much shot of cutting against the partisan tide in their states in 2013 or 2014. Instead several of the more competitive gubernatorial contests are likely to be those in which the parties have a chance of reclaiming their home turf. Democrats have a reasonable chance to win the governor’s race in blue-state Maine, for example, now held by the Republican Paul LePage, while Republicans may do so in Arkansas, where the Democrat Mike Beebe will be subject to term limits.

Democrats, meanwhile â€" if they have been relieved of the burden of a toss-up Senate race in Massachusetts - will have to hope that the increasing correlation between presidential and down-ballot voting dissipates. In 2014, they will have five senators ! up for re! -election in red states â€" not counting Jay Rockefeller of West Virginia, who is retiring, and whose seat is more likely than not to go Republican. Just one blue-state Republican senator, Ms. Collins, is up for re-election.



Hammer Given Authority Over NBC\'s Cable Entertainment Channels

NBC announced Monday that it is consolidating all of its cable entertainment properties under one executive, Bonnie Hammer. The move elevates Ms. Hammer to a position among the top echelon of female executives in the television business.

At the same time, NBC announced a new role for another of its top executives, Lauren Zalaznick. She has headed up the cable channels Bravo and Oxygen, which will now be added to Ms. Hammer’s responsibilities. NBC is creating a new position for Ms. Zalaznick, leading an effort to find ways to monetize NBC’s operations in the areas of emerging technologies.

The portfolio now controlled by Ms. Hammer is among the most extensive - and lucrative - in the television business. She already ran the operations of most of NBC’s successful cable entertainment channels, including USA, Syfy, and the E channel. By adding the channels Ms. Zalaznick had run, Ms. Hammer will supervise operations generating about half of the total cash flow of NBC Universal.

The appontments, which also included the naming of Joe Uva, the former president of Univision Communications, as chairman of Hispanic Enterprises, were made by Steve Burke, the NBC Universal chief executive.

Mr. Burke has been leading a process of streamlining NBC Universal’s various units under individual executives. Ms. Hammer will now head all cable entertainment, while Pat Fili-Krushel heads the news operations, Mark Lazarus leads the sports division, and Linda Yaccarino leads all of advertising sales.



Hammer Given Authority Over NBC\'s Cable Entertainment Channels

NBC announced Monday that it is consolidating all of its cable entertainment properties under one executive, Bonnie Hammer. The move elevates Ms. Hammer to a position among the top echelon of female executives in the television business.

At the same time, NBC announced a new role for another of its top executives, Lauren Zalaznick. She has headed up the cable channels Bravo and Oxygen, which will now be added to Ms. Hammer’s responsibilities. NBC is creating a new position for Ms. Zalaznick, leading an effort to find ways to monetize NBC’s operations in the areas of emerging technologies.

The portfolio now controlled by Ms. Hammer is among the most extensive - and lucrative - in the television business. She already ran the operations of most of NBC’s successful cable entertainment channels, including USA, Syfy, and the E channel. By adding the channels Ms. Zalaznick had run, Ms. Hammer will supervise operations generating about half of the total cash flow of NBC Universal.

The appontments, which also included the naming of Joe Uva, the former president of Univision Communications, as chairman of Hispanic Enterprises, were made by Steve Burke, the NBC Universal chief executive.

Mr. Burke has been leading a process of streamlining NBC Universal’s various units under individual executives. Ms. Hammer will now head all cable entertainment, while Pat Fili-Krushel heads the news operations, Mark Lazarus leads the sports division, and Linda Yaccarino leads all of advertising sales.



Fox News Monitors Geraldo as He Mulls Political Office

Geraldo Rivera’s stated interest in running for a Senate seat in New Jersey has been derided as a joke and a publicity stunt. But his employers are taking it seriously.

He’d have to leave his weekend Fox News Channel show, “Geraldo at Large,” as soon as he formally decided to run, a spokeswoman for the channel said.

Mr. Rivera, 69, has been a television reporter and commentator for decades, and he’s never sought political office before. But last Thursday he floated the possibility of running for the Senate seat currently occupied by Frank R. Lautenberg, Democrat of New Jersey, who is up for re-election in 2014. Mr. Lautenberg hasn’t said whether he will run again,and the Newark mayor Cory Booker, a fellow Democrat, has signaled that he will vie for the seat.

Mr. Rivera said he would run as a Republican, if he decided to actually do so. Although widely perceived to be one of the more liberal commentators on Fox News, he’s been a registered Republican for years.

Mr. Rivera initially brought up his interest in running for the Senate seat on his talk radio show last Thursday. The one-year-old show is distributed by Cumulus. Asked whether Mr. Rivera would have to quit or suspend the show if he decided to run, a spokesman for the distributor said, “Talk radio hosts talk about lots of things, and if at some point this is more than talk we’ll address the issue appropriately then.”

A Fox News spokeswoman went a little further, saying in an e-mail message, “Geraldo would have to step aside as soon as he made a formal decision, and we’re continuing to monitor the situation.”

Fox has faced similar situat! ions in the past. In 2011 when two of its paid contributors, Newt Gingrich and Rick Santorum, were considering running for president, the network suspended their contracts while they made up their minds. The two men eventually did decide to run and severed their ties with the network.

For the time being, Fox and the radio show are forums for Mr. Rivera to talk about the possibility of running, thereby drumming up attention and potential supporters.

In one of several interviews on Fox last Friday, he said he had “public service” in the back of his mind when he decided to register as a Republican after moving to New Jersey in 1989. He said all of his “elected heroes” growing up were Republican.

But he was quite critical of the G.O.P. in the interviews, calling Republicans a “party of scolds” and proposing a more inclusive way forward. Mr. Rivera has long favored immigration refrm and a woman’s right to choose an abortion.

On “The O’Reilly Factor” on Friday night, he said he and his wife, Erica, were “seriously considering” a run: “We can revive, we think, the moribund G.O.P. in the Garden State.”



Blackout Is a Boon for Super Bowl Ratings

The blackout that interrupted the Super Bowl Sunday night provided a diversion for viewers as well as a change in momentum in a game that looked one-sided. It also likely provided a lift to CBS’s coverage of Super Bowl XLVII, which recorded the biggest number in television history among the nation’s biggest cities.

Those ratings are what arrive first overnight, and give a strong indication that the total viewer record, which was set last year for the Giants-Patriots Super Bowl, will likely be eclipsed. The overnight rating for Sunday’s game, measured in the biggest cities, was a 48.1 with a 71 percent share of the audience. That tops the previous high rating of 47.9, also with a 71 share, set two years ago for the Packers-Steelers. Last year the game hit a 47.8 but still attracted more total viewers than the previous year (because of slight adjustment in the value of rating points by Nielsen).

An increase of .2 rating point will almost surely translate to an increase in viewers when te national numbers are reported later Monday. Last year’s total of 111.3 million viewers was the most watched television event of all time.

The value of the blackout was in pushing more of the game into prime-time hoursâ€"especially because the end of the game was compelling. The last half hour of the game was the highest rated of the night, with a 52.9 rating, and a 75 share of the national audience. (the share is the percentage of all viewers watching television at the time.)



The Breakfast Meeting: Disappointing Super Bowl Ads, and a Hollywood Outsider Makes His Move

For those viewers hoping for exciting, high-quality performances in the Super Bowl Sunday night, the Baltimore Ravens and the San Francisco 49ers delivered in thrilling style. For those more interested in the advertisements than the football, the results were more disappointing, Stuart Elliott writes in The Times. The commercials, he says, “fell back on familiar strategies and themes’’ that would have been more appropriate for the Eisenhower administration, with a joke about a mother-in-law, a gag about the word panties and an ad set at a prom, among others. It was a missed opportunity for marketers, Mr. Elliott writes.

Thomas Tull, the head of Legendary Entertainment, is an outsider who has penetrated Hollywood’s inner ranks with a combination of moxie and charm - and a few ruffled feathers along the way, Brooks Barnes and Michael Cieply report.  Now Mr. Tull’s production company will have an unusually large piece of the blockbuster movie season, with six major releases by Warner Brothers, and the success of the films will help determine whether he can become an even bigger force in the film world.

Television success often results from unconventional concepts, and the FX channel offers stark proof of that, David Carr writes in the Media Equation column.  It has embraced the dark side of narrative storytelling, led by its president, John Landgraf, and the result is a slate of shows among the most distinctive on television. Mr. Landgraf has “said yes to a lot of dark and spicy fare,’’ Mr. Carr writes, that i! s clearly intended for adults.

Teen Vogue is releasing its 10th anniversary March issue this week amid some encouraging signs, despite the challenges facing the magazine industry, Christine Haughney writes. It has endured where other offerings to the same audience - like Elle Girl and YM - did not, and its advertising pages for the fourth quarter of last year were up by 8.3 percent. But the magazine is still trying to address criticism from some young girls that it needs to show unaltered images, a greater range of body types and a more racially diverse group of models in its pages.

Dr. Seuss’s colorful characters wore hats of all shapes and sizes, and it turns out the author did too, Leslie Kaufman reports. Theodor Seuss Geisel, the creator of the eloved Dr. Seuss stories, had a collection of distinctive hats, and he would sometimes don them for inspiration when he was writing. Now, a new exhibit displays for the first time some of Geisel’s own hats, beginning Monday at the main branch of the New York Public Library.