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" ... Maybe the NFL should thank expanded legalized betting. Maybe a portion of the social justice warriors who have fretted over Colin Kaepernick’s situation have returned. Maybe viewers are satisfied with the NFL concussion protocol. Maybe its the emergence of so many running quarterbacks. Who knows? All we do know is that it can’t be the improved play of toothless New York’s Jets and Giants in the country’s biggest television market. ... "
" ... Pettegree: Information overload is not a new problem. At each stage of the Renaissance information revolution people fretted that there was too much to process. Daniel Defoe, writing at the beginning of the 18th century, was one who remarked on an unprecedented flow of pamphlets, state papers, broadsheets and newspapers (though he rather likely it and hoped that it might be a way for him finally to make some money). How to make sense of conflicting reports was a problem that exercised Bernard of Clairvaux in the twelfth century as much as it does contemporary intelligence analysts or news consumers. The news values that have dominated the growth of a commercial news market in the last five centuries were already quite well established in Mediaeval Europe. The privileged groups who needed to obtain news then – merchants, churchmen and princes – were concerned with three main things: how to get news quickly; was it true; and how much of it to share with the wider public. The birth of commercial news in the print era has added only one more major concern: the need for news to be entertaining, if people were to be persuaded to part with hard-won cash. Through all the changing news environments of the five centuries since this has proved the most challenging: how to integrate (and on the part of news professional accept) the entertainment function of news. This won’t change in the 21st century. ... "
" ... Presidents publicly fretted for decades about the loss of energy independence for the U.S. They tried many different approaches to solving this problem—from serious intervention in the energy markets to letting the free market solve the problem. Many billions of dollars were spent on programs with the intent of eliminating dependence on foreign oil. ... "
" ... Retail Reprieve: With news that certain consumer goods won’t face tariffs until December, retailers had a pretty good day on Tuesday, with TJX Companies (TJX), Ross Stores (ROST), and Kohl’s (KSS) all up around 3%. The delay until Dec. 15 means that for most of the holiday shopping season consumers won’t see a rise in price for certain footwear and clothing items they may want to buy. The U.S. consumer has shown strength even as Wall Street has fretted about the trade war. Now, with a reprieve, they may continue showing that strength into the holiday season, which is crucial for retailer performance. ... "
" ... When the shock of the pandemic hit businesses last March, company leaders fretted over what to do with regard to expenses and salaries. Many businesses decided to lay off their employees, while others furloughed their staff and yet others applied for loans to make it as far as possible, with no great guesses about what was to come. At Excelerate, we knew a 50% layoff would be required to downsize and survive. ... "