MEDIA
LEAD SHEET/MAY 12, 2008 ISSUE (on newsstands Monday, May 5, 2008). To book
correspondents, contact Brenda Velez at 212-445-4078-Brenda.Velez@Newsweek.com,
Grace Huh at 212-445-5831-Grace.Huh@Newsweek.com-or Jan Angilella at
212-445-5638-Jan.Angilella@Newsweek.com. Articles are posted on
www.Newsweek.com.
COVER:
"The Post-American World" (p. 24). Newsweek International Editor
Fareed Zakaria, in an excerpt from his forthcoming book, "The
Post-American World," writes that in America "we are still debating
the nature and extent of anti-Americanism. One side says that the problem is
real and worrying and that we must woo the world back. The other says this is
the inevitable price of power and that many of these countries are envious-and
vaguely French-so we can safely ignore their griping. But while we argue over
why they hate us, 'they' have moved on, and are now far more interested in
other, more dynamic parts of the globe. The world has shifted from
anti-Americanism to post-Americanism." In the excerpt, Zakaria explores
not the decline of America but "the rise of the rest-the rest of the
world."
http://www.newsweek.com/id/135380
POLITICS:
"Obama's New Gospel" (p. 32). Washington Correspondent Eve Conant and
Senior White House Correspondent Richard Wolffe report on the efforts of Barack
Obama's campaign to get the word out to religious voters that the candidate is
serious about their concerns and that his relationship with the Rev. Jeremiah
Wright Jr. is over. Voters in Indiana want to know if Obama believes Wright's
more controversial statements and what is the status of their relationship.
http://www.newsweek.com/id/135384
POLITICS:
"A Turbulent Pastor" (p. 34). White House Correspondent Holly Bailey
reports on Pastor John Hagee, the San Antonio televangelist who has offended
Roman Catholics and other groups, and his endorsement of John McCain. McCain
and his aides draw a sharp distinction between his relationship to Hagee and
Obama's ties to the Rev. Wright. McCain's aides attribute the Hagee controversy
to poor vetting. But even some Republicans (not affiliated with the campaign)
privately wonder how the pastor's extreme views slipped through without notice.
http://www.newsweek.com/id/135385
TRAGEDY:
"She Thought She Could Do Better" (p. 40). Washington Correspondent
Eve Conant reports on the apparent suicide of "the D.C. Madam"
Deborah Jeane Palfrey. During the course of numerous conversations with
Newsweek over the last year, Palfrey portrayed herself as a self-made woman
looking for the American Dream and as a feminist who wanted to
"empower" woman. She made available to Newsweek a half-finished
95-page memoir she described as "my little literary undertaking." Her
story-about her "little cottage industry"-provides a revealing
insight into the motives and lifestyles of high-end prostitutes.
http://www.newsweek.com/id/135387
JUSTICE:
"Look Past Polygamy" (p. 42). Los Angeles Bureau Chief Andrew Murr
reports that for decades, the lessons of the disastrous 1953 raid on the
polygamous community of Short Creek, Arizona, home to the roughly 500 men,
women and children of the Fundamentalist Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day
Saints, had exerted great influence on law enforcement's attitudes toward FLDS.
And now
all are
watching to see what will happen in Eldorado, Texas, following last month's
raid on the Yearning for Zion Ranch.
http://www.newsweek.com/id/135386
TECHNOLOGY:
"The Art of Mayhem and Murder" (p. 43). General Editor N'Gai Croal
reviews Grand Theft Auto IV, after playing it 10 hours or so. He writes that
it's a "much slower burn" than its predecessors, which introduced you
much sooner to the mayhem "that has twisted its critics' knickers."
Croal writes that for the first several hours it's all about the relationships
your alter ego Niko Bellic has, before you even see a gun.
http://www.newsweek.com/id/135372
PROJECT
GREEN: "A Chain That Pigs Would Die For" (p. 45). General Editor Anna
Kuchment reports on Chipotle Mexican Grill CEO Steve Ells's success with his
mission to serve humanely raised, sustainably grown food at his restaurants,
including meat and dairy products that are free of antibiotics and hormones.
Since launching what it calls Food With Integrity, Chipotle has been serving
sour cream and cheese free of the hormone rBGH, organic beans, and naturally
raised pork, chicken and meat. Last month it announced it would buy locally
grown produce whenever possible.
http://www.newsweek.com/id/135376
"Natural
Response" (p. 48). Midwest Bureau
Chief Keith Naughton reports that with food prices rising, sales of organic
food are starting to wane. The healthy-food craze mushroomed this decade,
growing 150 percent since 2001 to reach $19 billion in sales last year. But now
with gas near $4 a gallon, the $7 gallon of organic milk doesn't look as good.
After years of 20 percent annual sales growth, consumers are curtailing their
consumption of organics, according to market researcher the Hartman Group.
http://www.newsweek.com/id/135377
"Empty-Net
Syndrome" (p. 49). Special Correspondent Paul Tolme reports that for the
first time, federal and state fisheries officials have closed the salmon
harvest season in California and in most of Oregon. The reason: Only 90,000
fish returned last fall to the Sacramento River chinook run, down 90 percent
from just a few years ago. Experts blame water diversions for agriculture and
communities, pollution, dams that have cut off salmon from their upstream
spawning grounds and unfavorable ocean conditions that diminished food sources
in the Pacific.
http://www.newsweek.com/id/135378
TELEVISION:
"Legend or Loser: Does 'Seinfeld' Still Hold Up After 10 Years?" (p.
58). Nope. Arts and Entertainment Editor Marc Peyser writes that when
"Seinfeld" went off the air 10 years ago, it was widely considered to
be a classic, and many fans call it the best sitcom ever. "Was it either?
Or neither," he writes. "As someone who doesn't dip into its
bottomless rerun pool very much, I was surprised when I sat down with the show
again by how poorly 'Seinfeld' holds up. What once seemed smart ... feels like
shtik. The pacing-no show had ever packed in so many scenes, some of them
lasting a few seconds-now seems
formulaic and forced."
http://www.newsweek.com/id/135368
"Yep." (p. 59). Senior Editor
David Noonan counters Peyser, and writes that the show is still funny, mostly
because of the supporting cast of characters that play off the four leads, such
as Newman, George's parents and Jerry's parents. "Although it's about four
friends in New York in the '90s, 'Seinfeld's' best jokes have almost nothing to
do with all that, another reason it endures. The contamination of Jerry's car
by a parking valet's lethal BO, Kramer's finding the old Merv Griffin set and
turning his apartment into a talk show, the invention of the Mansiere."
http://www.newsweek.com/id/135368/page/2
TIP
SHEET: "Cutting Back Your Hours"
(p. 60). Chicago Correspondent Karen Springen reports that today more
than 25 million Americans work part time and employers are making it easier to
work fewer hours: 36 percent now give employees the chance to work part time,
according to a survey. Springen offers some guidance on how to work part time
successfully: know how to land the job, set ground rules up front and be
flexible.
http://www.blog.newsweek.com/blogs/tipsheet/default.aspx
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