Normal
0
To book
guests, contact Katherine Barna at 212-445-4859-Katherine.Barna@Newsweek.com-or
Grace Huh at 212-445-5831-Grace.Huh@Newsweek.com. Articles are posted on
www.Newsweek.com.
INTERNATIONAL
EDITIONS: HIGHLIGHTS AND EXCLUSIVES, MAY 4 ISSUE
COVER:
The Culture of Recession (Atlantic and Latin America editions). Contributor
Joshua Levine writes that when it comes to popular entertainment, cheap and
cheerful is the new manifesto. Now that
the entire global economy can be fairly described as grainy, rasping and bleak,
filmmakers are reassessing their business and creating more
"uplifting" films. In the
entertainment business, tough times trigger a return to the familiar and the
formulaic. Experimental and downbeat are out; proven and inspirational are
in. People need an escape from the
reality of recession, so they are fleeing to forms of entertainment that
represent the biggest break from their experiences: crime novels, over-the-top
Broadway musicals, fantasy films, standard sitcoms and perennially popular
operas like "Turandot"-anything that promises laughter and
forgetting. Oddly enough, the one
entertainment medium likely to get grittier as things get worse may be pop
music, as listeners gravitate towards music that speaks to their
experience. To figure out where culture
goes from here, Levine looks back to the Great Depression.
http://www.newsweek.com/id/195097
COVER:
Shanghai: The Next Detroit (Asia edition). Beijing Bureau Chief Melinda Liu
reports that over last three months running, China has surpassed the U.S. in
terms of volume sales of automobiles. No one expected the Middle Kingdom to nab
first place in the global auto market from America for at least another decade,
but the financial crisis has had a sharp dampening effect on U.S. sales. Beijing's 2009 target is 10 million
units, an increase of 10 percent from 2008, and a figure that would cement its
position, with an estimated 1 million more unit sales than the U.S. "No
one expected China to emerge as the leading volume market this fast," says
William Russo, a business consultant who specializes in the automotive sector.
"This will give China a huge say in setting the standards and architecture
for the entire industry." If Beijing gets it way, the future will be small,
green and-of course-made in China. As Liu reports, ultimately, Chinese planners
want to create a new Detroit-a leaner, meaner, cleaner global automotive
hub.
http://www.newsweek.com/id/195095
Sure,
Kidnap the Man. Correspondent Tracy McNicoll reports on factory workers in
France who, facing pay cuts and layoffs at some of the world's biggest
companies, have barricaded executives and human-resources directors in their
offices and held them captive for as many as 36 hours at a time. The tactics are working. The penalty for
holding your boss hostage is five years in jail, but authorities have yet to
prosecute a case. Most companies haven't even pressed charges against the
perpetrators. In fact, the companies targeted have yielded new concessions like
larger severance packages. Popular sentiment is behind the bossnappers, too. In
one poll, 55 percent of those surveyed said "social action that is
radical, even violent like factory or road blockades, even sequestering
executives or bosses," is "justified." Almost two thirds said
these methods shouldn't be punished because "they are often the only means
employees have of being heard."
http://www.newsweek.com/id/195092
Where
Everybody Knows Your Name. White House Correspondent Holly Bailey reports on
President Obama's difficult adjustment to his new life inside the White House
bubble. He is hardly the first president to complain about the change. But he
seems to have had a tougher time adjusting than Bill Clinton or even George W.
Bush, in part because he can still remember what it was like to be a normal
person. His temperament has also made the adjustment difficult. Though outgoing
in public, Obama was an only child and spent a lot of time alone. That hasn't
changed. "He likes solitude, where he can just take a moment and collect
his thoughts and breathe," says a close Obama friend. "And in this
job, there is none of that."
http://www.newsweek.com/id/195086
Medvedev's
Moscow Spring. Moscow Bureau Chief Owen Matthews and Special Correspondent Anna
Nemtsova report that Russia's president, Dmitry Medvedev, a year after being
sworn in, has finally begun to depart from the hardline policies of his
predecessor, Vladimir Putin. He has begun publicly overturning some of Putin's
key policies, rolling back repressive legislation and paying attention to the
government's critics rather than trying to silence them. "We all want to
believe that our ruler is generous, fair and kind," says journalist and
human-rights activist Svetlana Sorokina. "Now we're seeing the first signs
that he is." After a decade of being frozen out, activists say they're
floored by the recent thaw.
http://www.newsweek.com/id/30166
'I Am
Dr. Realist.' Senior Diplomatic Correspondent Lally Weymouth talks to New York
University Professor Nouriel Roubini, who was nicknamed "Dr. Doom"
after a 2006 speech in which he said the global bubble was going to burst.
"Next year, I believe that the growth rate is going to be 0.5 percent for
the U.S. Even if we are technically out of a recession, we are going to feel
like we are in a recession. The bottom of the economy is not going to be in
three months, but rather toward the beginning or middle of next year."
http://www.newsweek.com/id/195053
WORLD
VIEW: The Secret of His Success.
Newsweek International Editor Fareed Zakaria writes that Barack Obama
has faced the steepest learning curve of any president in modern memory. The economy remains weak, yet, by most
measures, President Obama's first 100 days have been successful, with him
putting forward a series of initiatives to stabilize the capital and housing
markets, as well as making adjustments in the key military operations and
beginning to change America's image abroad.
Obama has been successful not only because of his calm leadership style,
his deliberative methods and his tight teamwork, but because he has the read
the country and the political moment correctly. Obama understands that America
in 2009 is in a very different place now.
Polls say the country is more liberal than it was two decades ago.
http://www.newsweek.com/id/195079
THE
LAST WORD: Michelle Bachelet, President of Chile. Bachelet discusses the
criticism of the large gap between Chile's rich and poor. "Chile has done
a lot to rid itself of poverty, especially extreme poverty, since the return to
democracy. But we still have a ways to go toward greater equity. This country
does not have a neoliberal economic model anymore. We have put in place a lot
of policies that will ensure that economic growth goes hand in hand with social
justice. There does not have to be trade-off between growth and social
protection. A democracy does not mean much if it doesn't respond to the needs
and will of its people."
http://www.newsweek.com/id/195098
# # #