Monthly Archives: August 2010

Seth on Publishing

I pretty much agree on Seth Godin's assessment of the current state of the publishing industry:

Traditional book publishers use techniques perfected a hundred years ago to help authors reach unknown readers, using a stable technology (books) and an antique and expensive distribution system.

The thing is–now I know who my readers are. Adding layers or faux scarcity doesn't help me or you. As the medium changes, publishers are on the defensive…. I honestly can't think of a single traditional book publisher who has led the development of a successful marketplace/marketing innovation in the last decade. The question asked by the corporate suits always seems to be, "how is this change in the marketplace going to hurt our core business?" To be succinct: I'm not sure that I serve my audience (you) by worrying about how a new approach is going to help or hurt Barnes & Noble.

My audience does things like buy five or ten copies at a time and distribute them to friends and co-workers. They (you) forward blog posts and PDFs. They join online discussion forums. None of these things are supported by the core of the current corporate publishing model.

Saved

Driving home from work on 421 on Friday I saw a guy in an Escalade get cut off by another guy in a Honda. On a scale of 1-10 in crappy driving I’d say the move was a 4, but the guy in the Escalade acted as if the other guy had stolen his man-purse. He tailgated him for a couple of miles and then pulled up next to him and made all kinds of interesting gestures. The guy in the Honda remained blissfully ignorant, or at least he did a great job ignoring the dude in the Escalade.

Eventually they both passed me and I got to see the license plate on the Escalade. It read “Am Saved.”

The HIDC

Is home ownership the American dream or the American nightmare?  (No this isn't another post about my family's homeownership woes.  One can only write so much about buying and living in a lemon).  David Stockman writes about the "Housing Investment & Debt Complex" and posits that we should pull the plug on the government's program of homeowner subsidies. What he proposes, letting all those homeowners go belly up and making the financiers realize losses on all those loans, will never happen but it's fun to think about in a makes-you-sick-to-your-stomach kind of way:

Before Richard Nixon initiated the era of Republican “me-too” Big Government in the early 1970s — including his massive expansion of subsidized housing programs — there was about $475 billion of real estate mortgage debt outstanding, representing a little more than 47% of GDP.

Had sound risk management and financial rectitude, as it had come to be defined under the relatively relaxed standards of post-war America, remained in tact, mortgage debt today would be about $7 trillion at the pre-Nixon GDP ratio. In fact, at $14 trillion or 100% of GDP the current figure is double that, implying that American real estate owners have been induced to shoulder an incremental mortgage burden that amounts to nearly half the nation’s current economic output…

At the end of the day there are upward of 15-20 million American households that can't afford their current mortgages or will be strongly disinclined to service them once housing prices take their next — and unpreventable — leg down. But Pimco’s gold-coast socialism is exactly the wrong answer. Rather than having their mortgages modified or forgiven, these households should be foreclosed upon, and the sooner the better. In that event, there's absolutely no danger that impacted families will go without shelter. The supply of rental units is swelling by the day and rental rates will come down further as speculators buy up REO and recycle back to the rental market.

Stated differently, pulling the plug on HIDC will rescue millions of households from mortgage-payment slavery and put them into a buyer's market for rented-housing services — a social welfare gain under present circumstances. To be sure, they'll loose their credit and probably their credit cards in the process. But the days of living off the housing ATM and bank-issued plastic are over for the American people anyway. Creating an honest financial environment where households are required to rebuild their balance sheets and consume within their means isn't a disservice or injustice to anyone. 

Likewise, millions of additional families that can, in fact, service their mortgages or that own their homes debt-free will face a further shrinkage of their paper wealth. The $16.5 trillion of household real estate value reported by the Fed in its Flow of Funds for the first quarter of this year was already down about 30% from the 2006 peak, and could readily decline by another 20%. But would the implied $3 trillion loss of paper wealth be avoidable in any event? 

Found via Fec

Relevant Advertising

I'm a long time reader of Fred Wilson's blog AVC.  Usually he writes about topics relevant to his venture capital business, but he doesn't hesitate to mix in posts about his personal life as well.  Today he wrote that it's his 49th birthday and how he's beginning to see himself not so much as the 20-something with a chip on his shoulder any more.  I read his piece in my Google Reader and it cracked me up when I saw the ad that Google served up with it:

AgingAd
 

I don't think Fred's feeling quite that mature.

Just Call Us the Murphys

A couple of weeks ago we had to replace our washer and dryer, and they were installed improperly. Then we spent eight days without AC before finally getting the whole system replaced last Friday and spending a small fortune in the process. This week we find ourselves dealing with a car with transmission problems.

I sure hope the old saying that things happen in threes is true.

Red Velvet Cake? Good! Fried Chicken? Good!

One of my kids' favorite Friends episodes is the one where Rachel makes half of an English Trifle and half of a Shepherds Pie.  Whenever we have something interesting to eat at least one of them will say "What's not to love? Custard? Goood! Jam? Goood! Meat? Goooooooood!"

That's what this fried chicken with red velvet cake batter reminds me of:

To make the dish, the brined chicken is first dunked in the red velvet batter before receiving a second coating of toasted red velvet crumbs. Once it's been caked-up properly, it's into the fryer and onto your plate.

And because red velvet cake is incomplete without cream cheese frosting, the chicken is served with a side of cream cheese infused garlic mashed potatoes.