Thursday, May 7, 2009

The Sad State of Newspapers: Dallas Morning News & Fort Worth Star-Telegram

A couple days ago I blogged about the sad demise of me getting the Dallas Morning News. I'd pre-paid for 3 months. After that 3 months was up, the paper kept coming. I got no bills. And then delivery was stopped. I called to say I'd gotten no paper that morning, which is when I was told it'd been stopped. I was told I could re-start the paper, which would now cost $30.00 a month.

I said send me a bill for what I owe and keep delivery stopped.

I have not yet received a bill, but I have received a "special offer" from the Dallas Morning News. Now, keep in mind the reason I dumped that paper, in addition to the incompetence, was the price increase.

But in this "special offer" it says I can get the paper 7 days a week for $15.75 a month. Which, I believe, pretty much matches what I thought I remembered being told by the guy who originally talked me into subscribing.

So, why did the Dallas Morning News customer service guy pretty much kiss off a subscriber with that $30 a month deal, while they are sending out "special offers" for $15.75?

It's a big mystery why the newspaper business is in rapid decline.

And on that rapid decline line of thought, fresh newspaper weirdness this morning. I opened my front door and what do I find? A Fort Worth Star-Telegram! With a "special offer!"

The Star-Telegram's "special offer" was not as special as the Dallas paper's. I don't remember what it was now.

I had not read the Star-Telegram since I fired them. The paper seems to have shrunk some more. One example was the pathetic editorial pages. The editorial section is 2 pages. 50% of those 2 pages is now taken up by the weather! 12.5% is taken up by editorial cartoons. The paper was so thin it felt flimsy.

And in the Star-Telegram there was no mention made, that I saw, of last night's pre-election event at the Botanic Garden's Moncrief Room. Named, according to one of my sources, after one of the "good" Moncriefs, not the current corrupt mayor, who, incidentally deigned to briefly appear at this event, causing giggles and snickers when he said he could not stay long.

Fort Worth's Parks & Mayor Mike Moncrief's Reign of Craptacularness

Like I said in the previous blogging, here in Fort Worth we are being inundated by a propaganda misinformation campaign by the Ruling Junta seeking to convince those few who vote to keep Mike Moncrief as mayor.

Those singing the praises of Mike Moncrief go on and on about all he has done to make Fort Worth the most celebrated city in America, how he has solved the many problems thrown at Fort Worth, how he has helped make Fort Worth the dynamic wonder that it is.

I beg to differ.

Let's just take one example of something that has happened during Mike Moncrief's reign and how it effects those little people who his supporters claim he cares so much about.

Fort Worth has one of the biggest areas of parkland in the nation. It is called the Fort Worth Nature Center & Refuge. This park has buffalo, prairie dogs, miles of trails, a nature center, boardwalks over a bayou. And very few visitors.

In April of 2006, with very little debate, Fort Worth's city council, with one or two councilmen objecting, voted to begin charging an entrance fee for access to the Nature Preserve.

I have never read any followup as to how this has worked out. Has the fee even been able to raise enough money to pay for the toll booth and pay to man it?

The entry fee is $4 for adults, $3 for seniors, kids 3 and older $2, under 3 free. And residents who meet federal low income guidelines get in free.

This is what I said about the fee and the city council debate on my Eyes on Texas website...

The argument was made that other cities charge for admission to similar parks. However, no argument was made to counter that dubious assertion. Many cities consider their parks to be amenities that add to the overall quality of their communities and to which it is important that the least affluent of their people feel 'free' to visit. Does Central Park in New York City charge an admission? Does Point Defiance Park in Tacoma? Does Stanley Park in Vancouver? Does Golden Gate Park in San Francisco? Does Cameron Park in Waco? Does any city with real aspirations to being a livable community charge an access fee of this sort to a park of this sort? And require the poorest among us to prove they are without means in order to enter?

It's that low income part of this that really bugs me. This is why a great city has parks like this. So those who can't afford to fly to California to go to Yosemite or drive up to Wyoming to go to Yellowstone, can still enjoy the great outdoors.

I mention Point Defiance Park in Tacoma, above. I had an interesting incident at Point Defiance last summer. Point Defiance is one of the biggest urban parks in America. It is huge. There is a zoo and an aquarium in Point Defiance, miles of trails through old growth forest, beaches, picnic areas and other attractions, like Fort Nisqually. You do not pay an admission fee to enter Point Defiance. There is a fee to enter the zoo and the aquarium.

Last summer I was heading back to my car after jogging the trails at Point Defiance. A couple was walking towards me, looking perplexed. The man of the couple said "excuse me, can I ask you a question? Where do you pay to get in this park?" I was perplexed. But I recognized the accent. I asked if you guys are from Texas? Yes, was the reply. To which I explained that in Washington, unlike Texas, there is no entry fee to state parks, nor is there an entry fee to city parks, like Point Defiance. A few years ago, during a budget shortfall period, Washington tried charging an entry fee to the state parks. The public rebelled, like the public in a participatory democracy is prone to do when they don't like something. The fees were removed.

I have other issues regarding Fort Worth's parks during Moncrief's corrupt reign.

Heritage Park in downtown Fort Worth has been turned into an embarrassing, for any city with pretensions of livability, eyesore.

Fort Worth does little to help the Tandy Hills Natural Area, an area the city should embrace and appreciate as being something in Fort Worth that is truly unique. The city should send in crews to clean up the litter, remove the dumped roofing material, remove non-prairie vegetation and cover up no longer needed manhole covers and pipes from a bygone era.

On Boca Raton Boulevard in east Fort Worth, in an area of dense population due to their being a lot of apartment complexes, one of those complexes was condemned and removed, leaving a huge open space in an area with no parks. Has Mayor Moncreif and the Ruling Junta, caring about all the citizens of Fort Worth in that magnificent manner we hear so much about, proposed turning this new open space into a park? No.

Sansom Park near Lake Worth has been allowed to deteriorate during Mike Moncrief's reign, with the rockwork pavilion now closed off by crime scene type tape, just like Heritage Park is closed off.

There are likely many other examples of park deterioration and neglect and wrong-headedness that I am not aware of or currently not remembering.

Fort Worth really deserves better than it is currently getting from the Ruling Junta. The only way to change that is for the people of Fort Worth to have a revolution and throw the bums out. But that won't happen. It's not the Fort Worth way.

Wednesday, May 6, 2009

Fort Worth's Public Library & Mayor Mike Moncrief's Reign of Craptacularness

Preserving scenic areas by establishing National Parks and free to use Public Libraries are 2 of the best ideas America has given the world.

We are getting a daily dumping of Ruling Junta propaganda here in Fort Worth regarding our amazing mayor, Mike Moncrief, and all he has done for the people of Fort Worth during his reign.

The Ruling Junta shill's letters to the editor of the Junta's mouthpiece, the Star-Telegram, are long on meaningless fluff and weak on facts. Facts like pointing out what exactly Moncrief has done for Fort Worth that warrants him remaining in office.

I can think of one specific that has occurred during this ethically challenged man's reign. He cut the number of days and hours the Fort Worth Public Library is open. The reason for the cuts? Not enough money.

Here's another accomplishment of the City of Fort Worth's government under Moncrief's sterling, inspiring, leadership. Millions of dollars have gone missing. Just vanished. Now when I first read of this, my first thought was has anyone checked Moncrief's pockets for the missing money? I mean, this is a guy who operates in an ethics free bubble, doing stuff that would have you under investigation, or in jail, in the parts of America that have opted to live under a system of laws. I forget how much money it is Moncrief and his wife have made during his reign, off the various natural gas drillers he is in cahoots with that he does not recuse himself from voting on when natural gas drilling issues are on the table.

So many of those Ruling Junta shills have mentioned how much Moncrief cares for all the citizens of his city. Has he seen the kids lined up outside the Eastside Regional Library, waiting for it to open, later than it used to? Has he seen all those kids, with no computer at home, eagerly waiting their turn at a terminal?

But, what's got me blogging about this right now is I just returned from the Eastside Regional Library. I needed to get some new books to read, now that I've bailed on all the local papers. Except FW Weekly, this week's copy of which I got at the library.

Anyway, ever since the library cutbacks there has been a line when I go to check out. It can be a long wait. Today it was at least 20 minutes. The first time I experienced a line, between when I walked in and was ready to check out, the line had not moved at all. I waited at the back of that line for maybe 10 minutes, then with a couple people now behind me, I got feisty and started complaining. Another librarian then began checking out books.

I like going to the library. I always have. I've never experienced a library as badly run as they are in Fort Worth. I never waited in a line in the Mount Vernon library, the Bellingham library, the Burlington library, the Seattle library or the Tacoma library. Now, what is the difference between those libraries and the Fort Worth one? They are in Washington. The state with America's highest per capita number of book readers and library users. And trust me, if you tried to pull on people in Washington the stunts pulled in the Fort Worth library, it would not be tolerated. You'd have so many people complaining, demanding it be fixed, that it would get fixed.

But, the bottomline is, this type problem would never have been allowed to even develop up in Washington. Paraphrasing Bart Simpson, Fort Worth is used to things being craptacular. You accept craptacular service in your public library, in your trash pickup service, in your road maintenance. And worst of all, you accept a level of craptacularness in your elected officials that not only, would not, it could not, occur in Washington. Moncrief would be in his 5th or 6th year in prison by now if he'd been mayor of Seattle and tried to do business the Fort Worth way.

At the top I mentioned National Parks. Tomorrow I'll blog my crankiness about the craptacular way Fort Worth has managed its parks under Mayor Mike Moncrief's caring leadership.

Big Brother, Sirens, Signs, Sprouts & Near Misses

If it is Wednesday I probably had to be in Southlake today. Which my one longtime reader might guess likely meant I went to Sprouts Farmers Market when I was up north.

My one longtime reader would be right. I had my camera in my pocket today, so I took a picture of the TEXUS TOMATOES sign I see each week when I walk into Sprouts and get a grocery cart.

I like the signs in Sprouts. There are several of them.

Speaking of which, every single Sprouts shopper that I saw come in today, pulled off one of the sanitizer paper towels and wiped down their grocery cart handle. I've seen a few random instances of this before, but never like this. I am almost easily swayed into a herd mentality, so I wiped my cart down for the first time.

I must back up to what happened before I got into Sprouts. I was heading north on Davis Boulevard. Sprouts is at the northeast corner of Davis & Southlake Boulevards. As I neared that intersection the loudest siren I have ever heard went off. It was loud, with the windows up and with Rush Limbaugh in full loud blowhard mode. It was rock concert from hell loud with the windows down.

The siren was a steady sound, not like a tornado siren, but that is what I thought it might be, the weather being a bit unsettled and T-Storms mentioned as possible. The sound seemed to be coming from every direction. After what seemed like minutes of this ear-piercing noise it finally quieted down to silence.

And then the weird thing happened. A voice, just as loud as the siren, started speaking, "This has been a test of the emergency warning system. This has been a test of the early warning system." And then, finally, silence.

Where were the speakers located that this voice was coming from? How large an area do they have wired in Southlake to broadcast like this? It was such a weird Orwellian Big Brother moment. I asked a few people if they knew where the sound came from. No one knew. It's like it came from everywhere, as if it was broadcast, perfect use of that word, from above.

The siren warning incident and Big Brother speaking had my nerves on edge while I did my hunt for stuff at Sprouts. I was only in there about 20 minutes.

On the way back, heading south on Davis, suddenly it started up again, more sirens, only this was an emergency vehicle, followed by a fire truck. Less than a minute after almost getting hit by a firetruck I saw a longhorn I've long wanted to take a picture of. I started to slow up, saw the driveway entry coming up quicker than I thought, hit the brakes, not realizing there was a car a bit close behind me. That driver seemed to handle it okay and a rear ender was obviously avoided or I would have already mentioned it.

Anyway, that's been some of my day today, up at 4 am, no newspaper, pool closed due to all that rainwater of a couple days ago requiring a shock treatment. Impending doom weather-wise, with ultra-high humidity and temps in the 90s.

Swine Flu Warning From South Central Texas

Scary Swine Flu incoming info from Alma down in Port Aransas on the Texas Gulf Coast. Comal County, referenced in the next paragraph is where New Braunfels is, in south central Texas, just a bit north of San Antonio. The info below seems to be contradicted by news this morning that the Center for Disease Control has relaxed their position on closing schools if a case of Swine Flu in the school is confirmed....

"After I returned from a public health meeting yesterday with community leaders and school officials in Comal County, Heather suggested I send an update to everyone, because what we are hearing privately from the CDC and Health Department is so different from what you are hearing in the media. Some of you know some or maybe all of this, but I will just list what facts I know.

The virus is infectious for about 2 days prior to symptom onset.

Virus sheds more than 7 days after symptom onset (possibly as long as 9 days) (this is unusual).

Since it is such a novel (new) virus, there is no "herd immunity," so the "attack rate" is very high. This is the percentage of people who come down with a virus if exposed. Almost everyone who is exposed to this virus will become infected, though not all will be symptomatc. That is much higher than seasonal flu, which averages 10-15%. The "clinical attack rate" may be around 40-50%. This is the number of people who show symptoms. This is a huge number. It is hard to convey the seriousness of this.

The virulence (deadliness) of this virus is as bad here as in Mexico, and there are folks on ventilators here in the US, right now. This has not been in the media, but a 23 month old near here is fighting for his life, and a pregnant woman just south of San Antonio is fighting for her life. In Mexico, these folks might have died already, but here in the US, folks are getting Tamiflu or Relenza quickly, and we have ready access to ventilators. What this means is that within a couple of weeks, regional hospitals will likely become overwhelmed.

Some of the kids with positive cases in Comal County had more than 70 contacts before diagnosis.

There are 10-25 times more actual cases (not "possible" cases -- actual), than what is being reported in the media. The way they fudge on reporting this is that it takes 3 days to get the confirmatory nod from the CDC on a given viral culture, but based on epidemiological grounds, we know that there are more than 10 cases for each "confirmed" case right now.

During the night, we crossed the threshold for the definition of a WHO, 20 Phase 6 global pandemic. This has not happened in any of our lifetimes so far. We are in uncharted territory.

I expect President Obama will declare an emergency sometime in the next 72-96 hours. This may not happen, but if it doesn't, I will be surprised. When this happens, all public gathering will be cancelled for 10 days.

I suggest all of us avoid public gatherings. Outdoor activities are not as likely to lead to infection. It is contained areas and close contact that are the biggest risk.

Tamiflu is running out. There is a national stockpile, but it will have to be carefully managed, as it is not enough to treat the likely number of infections when this is full-blown. I don't think there is a big supply of Relenza, but I do not know those numbers. If I had to choose, I would take Relenza, as I think it gets more drug to the affected tissue than Tamiflu.

You should avoid going to the ER if you think you have been exposed or are symptomatic. ER's south of here are becoming overwhelmed -- and I mean that -- already. It is coming in waves, but the waves are getting bigger.

It appears that this flu produces a distinctive "hoarseness" in many victims. The symptoms, in general, match other flu's; namely, sore throat, body aches, headache, cough, and fever. Some have all these symptoms, while others may have only one or two.

N-Acetyl-Cysteine -- a nutritional supplement available at the health food store or Wimberley Pharmacy, has been shown to prevent or lessen the severity of influenza. I suggest 1200mg, twice a day for adults, and 600mg twice a day in kids over 12. It would be hard to get kids under 12 to take it, but you could try opening the capsules and putting it on yogurt. For 40 pounds and up, 300-600 mg twice a day, for less than 40 pounds, half that.

Oscillococinum, a homeopathic remedy, has been vindicated as quite effective in a large clinical trial in Europe, with an H1N1 variant. You can buy this at a Natural Foods store, or Pharmacy."

Flushing Out Fort Worth's City Hall

The following is a message from Don Young regarding the upcoming, May 9 elections in Fort Worth.....

Sensitive readers: please read no further.

Only a fool would keep flushing a stopped up toilet, right? Disgusting? Yes. Irresponsible? Definitely. But that's essentially what's happening in Fort Worth, Texas under the watch of the current elected officials.

Fort Worth Mayor, Mike Moncrief, and his city council brown-nosers keep flushing and we keep paying to clean up their mess. Case in point:

Irresponsible Gas Drilling.

The reason that irresponsible gas drilling is allowed in Fort Worth and other north Texas urban centers can be traced directly to Mike Moncrief's and former mayor Ken Barr's dishonorable association with the gas drilling industry. The buck stops with them. Consider the following:

---Moncrief's gas drilling Task Farce was designed to deceive the public and grease the wheels for a dirty industry. Public comments were ignored.

---We now have proof that Barnett Shale drilling has a major impact on the air we depend on for life yet, the City of Fort Worth under Moncrief's watch still issues drilling permits and cozy's up with drillers.

---The Barnett Shale Energy Education Council (BSEEC), Moncrief's brainchild, was founded by gas drillers to counter the negative press they rightly deserve. (see above)

---Moncrief continues to violate respectable ethical standards by voting on controversial gas drilling issues before city council, despite his significant investments in Barnett Shale drilling companies.

---Former FW mayor, Ken Barr, who now works for Chesapeake Energy, represented them on the gas rilling Task Force and, unethically uses his insiders clout to push their filthy agenda at city hall. That's not very sporting of our former mayor.

---For the past year, both men and their lawyers have mercilessly toyed with the people of Carter Avenue whose property and lives have been held hostage.

---Moncrief has so many conflicts of interest it's hard to tell him from a truth-challenged Pinocchio. He deserves a jail term, not another term as mayor.

Voters should stop holding their noses and hoping things will get better. Moncrief's, "Fort Worth Way" is the Wrong Way. It's time to stop the foolishness and flush out city hall.

>>> Vote the gas drilling fanatics out of office on May 9th.
>>> Bring back ethics and a livable city to local government.

Need more reasons to flush out Moncrief & Co.? See my 28 Questions for Mike Moncrief (that he never addressed) first published in 2005, here:

Now it's your turn. Voting Day is May 9, 2009.

Tuesday, May 5, 2009

Fort Worth Gas Price Rises Fast Again

Yesterday a gallon of regular unleaded at my neighborhood QT was $1.92. This morning, when I went to Arlington, I needed gas. So I went to the QT. Overnight gas had gone up to $1.98.

I got gas, but did not call my mom with my usual call to tell her I got gas and how much it cost. It was not convenient at the time. I intended to make a gas call, later, but I forgot, til now, when it is also not convenient to call.

A few minutes ago I had to go to the Post Office. The route there goes by the QT. Now, just a few hours since I bought gas, it has gone up another 7 cents, to $2.05, as you can see in the picture, in which you can also see it is foggy here today in North Texas.

Are we in for another round of fast rising gas prices? If it zooms back up to $4 I think that'll be the blow that totally knocks the current situation into truly being The Great Depression 2.0. That is truly greatly depressing.

HP Webcams, Little Ol' Lady Electric Cart & Darwinian Selection

What I saw today in Arlington is the reason I don't think I want one of those new GM Volt Electric cars that can go only a few miles before running out of power.

I'd been at the Arlington Costco. On the way from Costco to Fry's Electronics I saw this little ol' lady in an electric cart device crossing the Matlock Road overpass over I-30.

As I passed her she was not moving, but was frantically cranking on something.

I was going to Fry's to return the HP Pro Webcam I got there yesterday. I am appalled HP makes such a piece of junk and Fry's sells it. The video was fuzzy, the audio was worse. There was no manual. Just a piece of paper with 3 instructions. 1) Turn on computer. 2) Insert cdrom. 3) Plug in USB cable. That was it.

So I got rid of the HP Pro Piece of Junk Webcam and replaced it with a Logitech Quickcam Pro 9000. The HP Pro Webcam cost $29.99. The Logitech Quickcam Pro 9000 cost $79.99.

You get what you pay for. The video from the Logitech is pretty much high definition. And the audio is also excellent. When I went to Fry's yesterday my intention was to get the Logitech one I got today, as it is top-rated. But then I saw the HP one for 50 bucks less, and figured, HP, they make good stuff, it must be good if it's an HP product. As it so often is, my logic was obviously flawed.

So, with the webcam switch out of the way, it was back on the road. I headed north on Matlock Road, wondering if the little ol' lady had gotten her electric cart moving. Traffic is very bad at this location. I was appalled when I finally got a clear view and could see the little ol' lady and her electric cart were moving again. From her pushing it.

I wanted to stop and help, but there was no way I could easily navigate the 10 or more lanes and get turned around again. It was just way too complicated. However I was able to fumble around and get my camera out and on and snap a picture as I drove by. This was a rather risky move in heavy traffic. I don't know how the little ol' lady was going to get out of that congested zone. What was she thinking? Driving such a thing in such traffic? Is there a chance that that was a Volt? Are they for sale yet?

Prairieland Wildflower Ball This Saturday at Tandy Hills Natural Area

An incoming invitation to the Prairie from Don Young....

Dust off your frock, put on your bonnet, hop in your carriage and head over to Tandy Hills Natural Area this Saturday morning, May 9th at 10:00 am for the Prairieland Wildflower Ball.

Last week at the Prairieland area of Prairie Fest, dozens of children used mud and native wildflower seed to create seed balls for distribution at THNA. The kids had a blast playing in the mud and doing their part to help with the restoration of the prairie. Now they get to celebrate their handiwork by dispersing the seed balls.

Please come out this Saturday to witness and support this beautiful gift to Mother Earth and the people of Fort Worth.

Details:

WHO: Friends of Tandy Hills Natural Area in partnership with the Fort Worth Nature Center and Refuge, the Botanical Research Institute of Texas (BRIT) and dozens of area children.

WHAT: Prairieland Wildflower Ball
(seed ball distribution)

WHEN: Saturday, May 9th. 10:00 - 10:45 am

WHERE: Tandy Hills Natural Area
3400 View Street
Fort Worth, Texas 76103
(meet at the playground)

- Rain or shine.
- Dress for the weather and the terrain.
- Bring water and hat.
- While you're here, take time for a hike and see how the wildflowers have bloomed since Prairie Fest.

PS:

FOTHNA now has a FaceBook page and Tandy Hills Natural Area has a Wikipedia entry.

The Dallas Morning News Has Been Canceled

My one longtime reader may remember that some time back I was at Sprouts Farmers Market when I got talked into subscribing to the Dallas Morning News.

I'd been living fine without a newspaper, after an addiction to reading a morning paper that goes back as far as my memory, but then that sales guy at Sprouts made an offer I just could not refuse.

I got 3 months of the Dallas paper at something like 15 bucks a month and $25 of Sprouts gift cards. I thought I remembered the sales guy saying the monthly rate after the initial period would be somewhere in the $17 range. But that may have been if I pre-paid for a year.

I'd gotten rid of the Star-Telegram when the delivery person annoyed me, but that was just the last straw. The paper had been steadily shrinking, and then when I was in Washington, last summer, they raised the monthly subscription to $17.50. Paying more for a smaller paper seemed wrong.

So, I'd been wondering why I've not seen a bill for the Dallas Morning News, or had the delivery person knock on my door. Or someone call me.

This morning there was no Dallas Morning News on my doorstep. So, about 8 I called customer service. One does not as quickly get a live person when calling the Dallas paper as one does when calling the Fort Worth paper. When I finally got a human on the line he told me the paper had been stopped because the bill had not been paid.

I told the guy I'd gotten no bills. I said I can pay it right now. He said that'd work. Apparently the pre-paid period ended March 21. He told me I owed $27.50 for the period from March 21 til May 4. I said fine.

So, that'll be $57.50 to get the paper started again in the morning, he said.

What? Why's that?

He said to get the paper started I had to pay a month ahead. The paper is $30 a month, I asked?

Yes, he said the rate had recently gone up. So, I'm thinking for the 43 day period between March 21 and May 5 I'm getting charged $27.50. And then for the first 30 day period after re-starting the subscription I'm getting charged $30.00?

That really did not make a lot of sense and seemed a rather steep price increase. And so that's what I said to the customer service guy.

He then told me if I pre-paid by some number of months, I don't remember the number, I could get the paper at $22.50 a month. That had me thinking back to that guy at Sprouts and me thinking he said it'd be something like $17.00 a month.

Anyway, I wasn't liking any of this. And so I told the guy to just send me a bill for the amount I owe and we'll just keep the paper stopped from being delivered.

And now I'm thinking it's pretty dumb on the Dallas Morning News' part to go to the bother and expense of sticking a couple guys in Sprouts to lure new subscribers. They hook one, that being me. And then the follow through is not so good.

The first problem was they had trouble getting delivery started. I got a call thanking me for subscribing, which is when I told the caller I'd not gotten a paper yet. To which she replied that delivery was supposed to have started 3 days prior. The little mistake could easily have had me canceling way back then.

But, I stuck with it. I blogged about thinking the Dallas paper was so much better than the Star-Telegram. So, then they had their new subscriber casting out positive words. Look what they've got their ex-subscriber casting out now.

And then they botch getting a bill to me. And then they stop delivery without ever contacting me. And then the cost of the paper goes up to nearly double what I thought it'd be when I initially subscribed.

It really is not that great a mystery to see why newspapers are in trouble. And in a perfect metaphor for that, Monday night the Fort Worth Star-Telegram building caught fire and had to be evacuated. I really don't know if that's a perfect metaphor, or not. I just like that "perfect metaphor" cliche.

So now I'm back to reading books when I lay on the floor in the morning drinking coffee. And I'll be getting my local news from the online versions of the two local papers. For free. I'll also be getting FW Weekly weekly. For free.

This probably is a change for the good.