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After 16-Year Absence, Olbermann Is Said to Be Returning to ESPN to Host Show

After 16-Year Absence, Olbermann Is Said to Be Returning to ESPN to Host Show

ESPN is expected to announce on Wednesday that the former network mainstay Keith Olbermann, who contentiously departed in 1997, will return to host a one-hour, nightly show for ESPN2 later this year, according to three executives with knowledge of the deal but not authorized to speak about it publicly.

Olbermann, 54, became renowned for co-anchoring ESPN’s “SportsCenter” with Dan Patrick â€" arguably the most auspicious pairing in the history of the show or the network. He left the show briefly to help launch ESPN2 in October 1993.

The move to bring Olbermann back after a 16-year absence was the result of 14 months of intense discussion within ESPN and its parent, the Walt Disney Company.

Within ESPN, there was concern about asking Olbermann back because he left the network under emotionally charged circumstances and because it was feared by some that Olbermann had become too politicized as the host of his interim MSNBC program “Countdown,” which aired from 2003 through January 2011.

 On his new show, Olbermann will be free to discuss matters other than sports, including pop culture and current events, but not politics, the two-year pact specifies.

While some ESPN insiders reportedly voiced the opinion that Olbermann was part of the network’s past, not its future, his star quality is almost unmatched in the sports television arena; he seems to draw a crowd. Rumors had been bubbling for weeks that ESPN would put aside the difficulties of the past and invite Olbermann back.

Some of Olbermann’s years since leaving ESPN have been professionally stormy, but controversy has always been part of his public persona. While some of his other network tenures had rocky periods, and some ended badly, his sports knowledge and on-air charisma have never been questioned.

ESPN executives said Olbermann will help it face the challenge presented by the launch of Fox Sports 1, a rival all-sports network that just announced plans for a potentially similar series to star Regis Philbin, 82.

Olbermann’s show will originate from the studios formerly occupied by the ABC News program “Nightline” on Times Square.

Last month, TBS hired Olbermann to host its studio coverage of Major League Baseball this fall. The initial conversations to rejoin ESPN predated Olbermann’s talks with TBS and the announcement of the start-up of Fox Sports 1.

Richard Sandomir contributed reporting.

A version of this article appeared in print on July 17, 2013, on page B13 of the New York edition with the headline: After 16-Year Absence, Olbermann Is Said to Be Returning to ESPN to Host Show.

From Sundance Institute, a New Minifestival for L.A.

From Sundance Institute, a New Minifestival for Los Angeles

New pictures about lesbian hookers and cancer. A short film about a guilt-ridden young adult. A panel discussion about guerrilla movie marketing.

Yep, Sundance is Sundance regardless of geography.

The lineup at Next Weekend, the Sundance Institute’s coming minifestival in Los Angeles, includes 10 features, the organization said on Tuesday, two of them world premieres: “The Foxy Merkins,” a prostitution buddy comedy directed and co-written by Madeleine Olnek; and a cancer drama called “How to Be a Man,” directed and co-written by Chadd Harbold.

The remaining eight films will mix past entries from Sundance’s flagship Utah festival (“Blue Caprice”) with pictures first shown at competing festivals (“Stand Clear of the Closing Doors,” which played Tribeca last spring). The inaugural Next Weekend, which runs from Aug. 8 to 11, will also present 10 short films and organized discussions aimed at fans of independent films.

As an offshoot of the Next section of Sundance’s Utah festival, Next Weekend is intended to highlight cinema that is particularly adventurous with boundary-pushing films from mostly first-time directors. Since the mission of Robert Redford’s nonprofit Sundance Institute is to help new cinematic voices be heard, a spokesman said, the organization decided to try bringing a few to the movie industry’s home base.

Next Weekend will begin with an outdoor screening of Chris Smith’s cult documentary “American Movie” at Hollywood Forever Cemetery, which is adjacent to Paramount Pictures and operates a popular movie series in warmer months. Mr. Redford’s new Sundance Sunset Cinemas in West Hollywood, Calif., will serve as Next Weekend’s headquarters.



Rowling Book Skyrockets to Instant Hit

Rowling Book Skyrockets to Instant Hit

‘The Cuckoo’s Calling’ Soars When Writer Is Revealed

By the end of last week, “The Cuckoo’s Calling,” by the debut mystery novelist Robert Galbraith, was as good as dead.

Bookstores with unsold copies on hand were contemplating shipping them back to the publisher. Reviews, while generally positive, had tapered off. According to Nielsen BookScan, which tracks about 85 percent of print sales, only about 500 copies had sold in the United States since the book went on sale in April.

Then J. K. Rowling, easily one of the most bankable authors on the planet, admitted over the weekend to The Sunday Times of London that she â€" and not a male military veteran, as initial information from the publisher claimed â€" was the real author.

That has left the publisher and bookstores with an entirely different problem: getting copies of what has suddenly become the hottest book of the summer into the hands of Ms. Rowling’s impatient fans.

The publisher has also had to contend with the suspicion that Ms. Rowling’s camp was secretly responsible for leaking her identity. Speculation was rampant in the publishing world that the revelation was part of a big publicity ploy to help sell books â€" so much so that Ms. Rowling’s spokeswoman, Nicky Stonehill, was compelled to release a tightly worded statement denying it.

“We can confirm the story in The Sunday Times was correct, and it was not a leak or elaborate marketing campaign to boost sales,” she said in an e-mail on Tuesday. “We are not commenting any further.”

The story of “The Cuckoo’s Calling” began to unravel last week when The Sunday Times of London received a tip via Twitter that it was Ms. Rowling, the author of the hugely popular Harry Potter series, who had written the book, and not Robert Galbraith, who was identified in publicity materials as a military veteran writing about his own experiences. Ms. Rowling confirmed the paper’s suspicion, saying that writing the book under a pseudonym was a “liberating” act.

“It has been wonderful to publish without hype or expectation, and pure pleasure to get feedback under a different name,” she said.

Since then, Little, Brown & Company, her publisher, appears to have been scrambling to meet demand. Nicole Dewey, a spokeswoman for Little, Brown, said that on Monday the publisher began to print an additional 300,000 copies, a huge undertaking that takes several days. Ms. Dewey said the books are expected to start shipping some time this week. That isn’t soon enough for many bookstores, which are locked in a fierce competition with Amazon, and with the e-book, which, compared with hardcovers, is inexpensive and instantly available. (The hardcover list price of “The Cuckoo’s Calling” is $26; a Kindle or Nook edition is $9.99.)

In Austin, Tex., customers have stopped by the BookPeople store asking for the title, only to be told that it is out of stock. Forty copies are on order, said a bookseller there, Carolyn Tracy, adding that at least eight people had asked to reserve copies.

“What I think will be interesting is whether this is going to be a flash in the pan,” said Cathy Langer, the lead buyer at the Tattered Cover in Denver. “Are people going to want it now and then forget about it later?”

Gayle Shanks, an owner of Changing Hands bookstore in Tempe, Ariz., said that after learning Ms. Rowling was the book’s author, she quickly ordered 25 copies, but was told not to expect them to arrive for at least 10 to 14 days.

“People who can’t get it as a book are going to run and get it as an e-book,” Ms. Shanks said. “By the time the books are back, two weeks from now, most people are going to have read it on some device. That really concerns me.”

Amazon, which sells more books than any other retailer in the country, is also out of stock of print books, telling customers online that “The Cuckoo’s Calling” will ship in one to three weeks.

In the meantime, the book has risen to No. 1 on Amazon’s best-seller list. And copies of the first edition of “The Cuckoo’s Calling” in hardcover are floating around eBay at considerable markups: on Tuesday afternoon one copy in Britain had risen to more than $2,300, with 67 bids. Another copy in the United States was available for a more modest $41, with shipping costing $3.99.

Robert McDonald, a bookseller at the Book Stall in Winnetka, Ill., said this act of literary deception was reminiscent of the days when Stephen King, yearning to step away temporarily from his own celebrity, wrote books pseudonymously as Richard Bachman.

Publishing executives harboring suspicions about the timing of the leak pointed to several bits of striking synchronicity. The paperback edition of “The Casual Vacancy,” Ms. Rowling’s first adult novel, which was published last year, is to be released next week and will benefit from the attention paid to Ms. Rowling’s new book. (“The Casual Vacancy” was panned by some critics but emerged a commercial success, selling more than 2.5 million copies.)

In addition, the news that Ms. Rowling wrote “The Cuckoo’s Calling” broke over the weekend, ensuring that the subsequent rush of sales would occur in the same calendar week â€" ideal for the purposes of best-seller lists, which typically collect numbers from Sunday through Saturday.

Exhibit A Books, a crime fiction imprint, tweeted on Monday: “I wonder what evil spell was used to out J K Rowling at the real author behind The Cuckoo’s Calling? Maybe publicitystuntiarmus?!”

Some people involved with the publicity windup for “The Cuckoo’s Calling” said they saw nothing amiss.

Owen Laukkanen, an author asked to provide a blurb for the book, said he had no idea Ms. Rowling was involved.

“The book was such an unflinching portrayal of British celebrity culture,” he said in an interview. “It was clearly written by a talented writer. But I’m gobsmacked that it was J. K. Rowling.”

A version of this article appeared in print on July 17, 2013, on page C1 of the New York edition with the headline: Rowling Book Skyrockets To Instant Hit.

Google is Said to Mull Internet Cable Service

Google is Said to Mull Internet Cable Service

Foreshadowing what could someday be a new challenge to cable and satellite television providers, Google has begun talks with major media companies about licensing TV channels for an Internet cable service, according to people with direct knowledge of the meetings.

No deals appear imminent. But Google’s discussions with channel owners are a sign of the newfound race to sell cable-like services via the Internet, creating an alternative to the current cable packages that 100 million American households receive from companies like Comcast and Time Warner Cable.

Intel is working on one such service, and companies like Sony and Google have previously shown interest in the same idea, colloquially called an “over the top” service because the television channels would ride on top of existing broadband lines.

Google’s renewed push was first reported by The Wall Street Journal on Tuesday afternoon. A Google spokesperson did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

The people with direct knowledge of the meetings between Google and the channel owners said the talks were preliminary in nature. The people spoke on condition of anonymity because they were not authorized by their employers to speak.

In Kansas City, Google already sells a traditional package of cable channels as part of Google Fiber, its superfast broadband service. The company has plans to expand Google Fiber to other cities, but what it is proposing in its talks with channel owners is something different: an easy-to-use subscription service that would stream a bundle of live channels and on-demand shows, replacing the cable bundles that most households pay for.

Intel is trying to create something similar, but it has run into roadblocks set up by Time Warner Cable and other incumbent television distributors.

Some contracts between existing distributors and channel owners include clauses that expressly prohibit the channels to be sold to an Internet distributor like Intel or Google, while other contracts merely discourage such competition by including financial incentives or penalties.

Another challenge involves channel owners like The Walt Disney Company and Viacom, who could stand to benefit or suffer greatly from “over the top,” depending on how it all shakes out. Some owners doubt that there is much of a market for cable via the Internet in the first place.

If a market for it does develop, existing distributors could suddenly compete directly in markets all across the country. Comcast has quietly been working on an “over the top” service for well over a year.



Beautiful Minds

In The Times’s Sunday Book Review, FiveThirtyEight’s Nate Silver reviewed “The Boy Who Loved Math” by Deborah Heiligman and “On a Beam of Light” by Jennifer Berne, two children’s books about youth and mathematics. “Together,” he wrote, “the books constitute something of an It Gets Better Project for mathematically precocious children, offering the same sort of affirmation that is now being given to gay and lesbian adolescents.”
Read more.



Advertising: Decades After a Memorable Campaign, Keep America Beautiful Returns

Decades After a Memorable Campaign, Keep America Beautiful Returns

More than 40 years after teaming up to create the iconic “crying Indian” advertising campaign, Keep America Beautiful and the Advertising Council have joined forces to promote the benefits of recycling.

The new campaign by Keep America Beautiful and the Advertising Council promotes recycling.

The new public service campaign, created by Pereira & O’Dell, uses a plastic bottle and aluminum cans â€" recycled, respectively, into a bench and sports stadium â€" to illustrate how recyclable materials can be given a second, useful life.

Established 60 years ago, Keep America Beautiful began collaborating with the Ad Council in 1960, initially using a character named Susan Spotless to promote anti-littering efforts with taglines like “Every litter bit hurts” and “Don’t be a litterbug.”

On Earth Day in 1971, the two organizations introduced the “crying Indian” commercial, which was created by Marsteller Advertising and featured the actor Iron Eyes Cody paddling a canoe through polluted waters and crying at the spectacle. Ad Age named the advertising â€" which was designed to promote individual responsibility in protecting the environment and ran until 1983 â€" one of the top 100 campaigns of the 20th century.

Until the announcement of the new campaign last week, the Ad Council and Keep America Beautiful had not worked together since 1983.

Keep America Beautiful established a recycling department four years ago, and today focuses its efforts on waste diversion. It partners with state recycling organizations, government officials, trade associations and businesses to advance its recycling agenda.

According to data recently released by the Environmental Protection Agency, in 2011 the average American produced 4.4 pounds of trash per day, while the United States produced more than 250 million tons of trash that year. However, the E.P.A. also found that only about 35 percent of this trash was recycled. In addition, research conducted by the Ad Council earlier this summer found that just 52 percent of Americans said they were “very” or “extremely” knowledgeable about properly recycling, while only 38 percent identified themselves as “avid” recyclers.

Brenda Pulley, senior vice president for recycling of Keep America Beautiful, called the new public service campaign “the emotional push needed to raise awareness and positively change people’s behavior to recycle more. Our intent is to increase recycling rates, which translates into measurable benefits including waste reduction, energy savings, natural resource conservation and job creation.”

The new campaign â€" by the San Francisco-based Pereira & O’Dell, which is controlled by the São Paulo-based Grupo ABC â€" uses television, radio, outdoor and online advertising to promote Keep America Beautiful’s recycling agenda.

A radio spot begins with a child’s voice, saying, “When I grow up, I want to be a new pair of blue jeans.” Other children chime in with things like “a kid’s first computer,” “a glass countertop in a new home” and “a warm fleece on a cold day.” The spot concludes with a child saying: “When I grow up, I don’t want to be a piece of garbage. And if you recycle me, I won’t be.” The announcer then urges listeners to “give your garbage another life. Recycle. Learn how at IWanttoBeRecycled.org,” a new Web site that lets visitors search for local recycling centers by ZIP code.

Similarly, a TV spot, in 30- and 60-second versions, follows the journey of an empty plastic bottle as it tumbles from city to city and is placed by a passer-by into a recycling bin. Both spots end with a shot of a bench â€" made, in part, from the plastic bottle, now recycled â€" on a cliff overlooking the sea. The voice-over, representing the bottle, says: “Everybody has a dream. Mine was to see the ocean. With a little help, I made it.” The spots conclude with the tagline, “Give your garbage another life. Recycle.”

P.J. Pereira, chief creative officer of Pereira & O’Dell, said he hoped the metaphor of the journey of the “very delicate” plastic bottle would inspire people to remember to recycle when they threw out their garbage.