MSNBC Interactive News LLC
Jersey's Loss Is New York's Gain--Sort of
New Jersey loses about $8 million in foregone sales taxes from the move, according to the watchdog group New Jersey Policy Perspective, and another $9.6 million in grants and equipment that the network won't give back, according to this article in the Asbury Park Press. Hey, 10 years is long enough, ain't it?
Now, NBC, capitalizing on the return move as well as on plans to expand staff by 1,600, wants more tax breaks from New York City, according to Good Jobs New York.
- Matthew SchuermanElsewhere: Taxes, Blackjack
New York City is the tax capital of the world.
Conservatives don't like Eliot Spitzer's nominee for Environmental Conservation Commissioner.
Alan Hevesi wasn't the only state comptroller who had his wife chauffeured by a state employee.
Assembly members are playing basketball against the City Council this weekend.
Hillary Clinton's favorite game is blackjack.
Tom Daschle will endorse Barack Obama.
Jonathan Stein thinks "John McCain might as well be gay."
A GOP pollster tells Greg Sargent that that poll showing massive support for the war in Iraq is bogus.
A Republican presidential debate in Iowa will air on MSNBC on November 6. And pictured above is a photographic scrum in the Council's Red Room today.
-- Azi PaybarahNorah O'Donnell Sees Israel Lobby Behind Carter Row
O'Donnell made her own point of view clear when she showed footage of Carter, on Hardball, saying that the United States has been deprived (by the lobby) of the vigorous debate about the Occupied Territories that goes on every day in Israel itself. I applaud her for being a tough journalist who knows a smokescreen.
O'Donnell's stance is significant. It demonstrates that, 10 months on, and notwithstanding the inability of the New York Times to cover the matter and the smearing of the authors by the Washington Post, Walt & Mearsheimer have mainstreamed the lobby as an issue in our public life. The battle is on. American attitudes on Israel are changing. More and more Americans recognize a simple truth: the hateful Israeli occupation has undermined our image across the Arab world.
The Abrams Family
The Abrams Family
What We Learned Tonight
We also have no idea which party will control the Senate-- and with the Virginia race now on its way to a recount, it may be several days. The signs, though, point to a reduced Republican majority, with Democrats falling short in Tennessee and Virginia. However, if the Virginia outcome is reversed -- either in the very late returns (13 precincts from Democrat-rich Richmond have apparently not been counted yet) -- and if Democratis then run the table in Missouri and Montana, they'll have their magic six seats.
So for anyone still reading this, the best advise is to head to your living room, flip on MSNBC, keep your finger on the mute button when Chris Matthews comes on the screen, and have some fun watching the rest of the numbers trickle in.
-- Steve KornackiThere Goes the House
Wednesday: A Buyers' Market
- Why are police targetting the red seven-seater tricylcles? (The New York Sun)
- The "purves" in Long Island City can find a cheaper luxury condo from Corcoran. (Curbed)
- The city's may be losing its black population, but Battery Park City is suffering from black-car blight. (The Village Voice)
- The corner of Lexington Avenue and East 86th Street will house a residential/retail building, fitted with an H&M and a Barnes & Noble. (New York Post)
- Liberal authors beg for money at a Barnes & Noble near you. (Free Williamsburg)
- The new Javits Center expansion will be of little use to larger conventions. It will rise up, not out, and the city will end up losing money. (The New York Times)
- Duck pâté, charcuterie plates and brick turns a Lower East Side joint into a bourgeois den. (The Village Voice)
- The average sales price for an Upper East Side townhouse increased by 64 percent in one year. But they're the outliers. (MSNBC)
- A 95-year-old landmark building, also known as the john. (The New York Times)
- A townhouse owners in Durham, England is so desperate to move he's throwing in his Ferrari to sweeten the deal. (House & Ferrari)
- Save Our Parks is not a Yankees fan.
- Deep insights: "The shift we’re seeing is an emphasis on large developers, not small nonprofits who reach those most in need." Duh... (City Limits)
Instapundit Pauses to Reflect On How the Little Guy Can Win
CNN Is Clobbered By Fox On Cable, Revenges On Web
Anthony Targets White Guys
He's planning to spend about $500,000 over the last two weeks on these networks: Comedy Central, CNBC, CNN, ESPN, Fox News Channel, MSNBC, TNT, YES (including 11 Yankees games), and USA. read more »
The buy also includes Lifetime, a regular stop for pols, and -- for some reason -- Nickelodeon!
















