Comcast Interactive owns Plaxo, Fandango, Fancast, Daily Candy, and Comcast.net. Comcast runs what the company calls five "significant programming networks." Its most popular is E! Entertainment Television, which has 85 million subscribers; the Golf Channel, with 73 million; VERSUS, a sports and leisure programming network, with 66 million; G4 ("gamer lifestyle programming") with 57 million; and Style ("lifestyle-related programming") with 51 million. On top of these there's the Comcast SportsNet system, with branches in the Baltimore/Washington area, California, the Mountain states, Boston, Portland, and Chicago. Comcast owns not only sports content but a range of sports entertainment franchises and businesses under the rubric of Comcast Spectacor. Spectacor runs the Philadelphia Flyers hockey team, the Philadelphia 76ers basketball team, and Philadelphia's Wachovia Center Sports Arena. It also operates the Global Spectrum event management company, which runs events around the United...
- Ben Sheldon
Totally took my half-circle whale, and made it grossly anatomically incorrect. It's like it's got a beard on the front of it's teeth. I guess that's supposed to be baleen, but if they're representing a Blue Whale, those parallel lines are supposed to be the skin folds on its lower jaw.
- Ben Sheldon
From Pictorial Websters (which is awesome): LEVIATHAN: Story of existence sung constantly by whales. The first song a whale memorizes is the whale equivalent of Genesis. Without the ability to write, the complex oral tradition of whales went beyond word millennia ago. In the same way human brains process electrical pulses and charges as thought, whales translate sound patterns as thought. Thus, whales sing reference-laden thoughts to each other. Like the genome, the whale songs are constantly adding new verses, making each individual only part of the whole collective of the great Leviathan. By disrupting their communication, sonar may be obliterating whole chapters of whale knowledge.
- Ben Sheldon
Correlation or causation? and what do they mean "greatest depth and breadth"? Successful organizations that use social media successfully are successful. You heard it here first.
- Ben Sheldon