Assorted inanity.

 

Danny DeVito as “Larry the Liquidator:” 

“Buggy Whip” speech from Other People’s Money.

I’ve posted this before, and it’s beyond belief that he even needs one within his own field, but if Mitt Romney needs a defense of his tenure at Bain for the upcoming debates, he could hardly do better than the above speech.

Also:

Jim Pethokoukis:

There is a huge net benefit for society from Schumpeterian capitalism, but there are losers, as economist Michael Cox of the Dallas Fed points out in this great article (and table) on creative destruction at the Library of Economics and Liberty:

A society cannot reap the rewards of creative destruction without accepting that some individuals might be worse off, not just in the short term, but perhaps forever. At the same time, attempts to soften the harsher aspects of creative destruction by trying to preserve jobs or protect industries will lead to stagnation and decline, short-circuiting the march of progress. Schumpeter’s enduring term reminds us that capitalism’s pain and gain are inextricably linked. The process of creating new industries does not go forward without sweeping away the preexisting order. … The disruption of lost jobs and shuttered businesses is immediate, while the payoff from creative destruction comes mainly in the long term. As a result, societies will always be tempted to block the process of creative destruction, implementing policies to resist economic change.

Attempts to save jobs almost always backfire. Instead of going out of business, inefficient producers hang on, at a high cost to consumers or taxpayers. The tinkering short circuits market signals that shift resources to emerging industries. It saps the incentives to introduce new products and production methods, leading to stagnation, layoffs, and bankruptcies.

WRXP 101.9 in NYC shifts from contemporary rock to news channel targeting women in their 30's and 40's as it changes hands from Emmis to Merlin Media | NYDN

Bah.

The shift from Smooth Jazz to Rock in 2008 was one of the more exciting things to happen in local NYC radio in years. Matt Pinfield did a great job carving out a more Contemporary niche against the Classic vein of the venerable WAXQ 104.3. 

Anyway, I guess the once-monthly listens when my contemporaries in the area rented a car wasn’t enough to sustain it. And Jersey also has WDHA 105.5, making WRXP somewhat redundant there. For the most part, it’s iPods and iTunes, Satellites, and Pandora-esque streaming for the Gen X tail-end/Millennial set the station was geared toward. Has been for some time now.

Ah, well.

WRXP was one of the “last, and best, g’damn buggy whips” in an era of automobiles.

Fare thee well.