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NY TIMES’ DAVID CARR TAKES ON FOX: I’m Praying for His Safety!

Click here for the most daring article ever written by David Carr!

Posted by: Mark Pasetsky

BONNIE FULLER’S NEXT PROJECT IS…

In what to many will appear to be a huge puff piece on one of the most scrutinized editors in history, I applaud David Carr for writing such a comprehensive piece on Bonnie Fuller who has often been trashed in the press despite her incredible string of accomplishments.

David Carr takes us through her career and she indeed gets credit for re-inventing the magazine industry. “Through nearly two decades of vision and relentlessness, Fuller created a way of objectifying the A and B list that turned celebrities into not only our “friends,” but also American royals, unelected gods who walk among us,” according to Carr.

So what is she doing next? Russ Pillar, an investor and a former head of the interactive division of Viacom. Mr. Pillar says his company, the 5850 Group, is seeking to raise “tens of millions” to back Fuller as a brand: she has created a company called Bonnie Fuller Media, based in New York. He says the start-up will be heavily digital and offer a variety of femme-friendly products that will include, but not be limited to, gossip, fashion and romance.

Pillar sees Fuller as a reliable cash register. “Everyone who ever did business with her got paid and got paid very well,” he says.

Bonnie Fuller seems invigorated by her new ventured. “I like the idea of blue sky. It will be fun to make something brand new,” she says, unbowed by the fact that the digital space she covets is already crowded with more established players like iVillage and TMZ.

“Every time I have done something in my career, I have been told that the market was too cluttered, and every time my ability to connect with women has allowed me to break through,” Fuller adds.

With friends like these…

There are numerous quotes throughout the article, but perhaps the most memorable is the one from Janice Min who gives Bonnie the biggest compli-sult ever (compliment plus insult equals - you get it.)

“I think the biggest misconception about Bonnie is that she is somehow larger than life,” Min says. “She is quite the opposite, understated and speaking in a voice that is hard to hear. She is the first to tell you what a loser or nerd she is.” (Nice touch Janice.)

MEET THE PRESS REMEMBERS TIM RUSSERT

Click here to see the moving tribute to Tim Russert on Meet the Press.

Check out the L.A. Times recap of Tom Brokaw’s tribute to Tim Russert on Sunday’s Meet the Press, where he said,  “It’s going to be our mantra for this morning…It says, ‘Thou shall not whine.’ And if I can add, I think, anything to that, ‘Thou shall not weep or cry this morning.’ This is a celebration, a time to remember.”

Also check out David Carr’s moving piece in today’s New York Times.

(New York Times)

WIRED’S SURVIVAL STORY

Of all the dot-com publishing franchises, Wired seemed the most likely to end up as road kill on a superhighway it helped create, according to today’s New York Times.

Chris Anderson, then of The Economist, became EIC in 2001.   A few months into his tenure, he and David Carr of the NYT sat in a booth in the Condé Nast cafeteria as he earnestly explained that Wired was not a confection of the digital age, but a magazine about the culture to come.

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