Your credit can determine interest rates for loans, as well as whether or not you'll qualify for credit in the first place. Employers also ask you to let them run credit checks on you to see if you're reliable. So it's in your best interests to avoid making mistakes that will ruin your credit rating.
Posting at Financial Edge, personal finance blogger Fabulously Broke puts you at ease by identifying several blunders that won't torpedo your credit score. Here are a few of our favorites:
*Making too much or too little money. Income does not affect credit ratings.
*Late payments to utilities and phone companies. You'll want to check with the laws and procedures in your own state, but in general utilities don't report your payment history to credit agencies. On the other hand, if your bills go to collections, a collections agent will tattle on you.
*Checking your own credit. Credit checks from outside sources make it seem as though you may be applying for more credit, but checks of your own credit won't draw red flags.
*Having loans with high interest rates. It's your credit rating that affects your interest rates and not the other way around.
Check out the rest of the post at the link below for other mistakes that won't damage your credit.
For more information about free credit reports, go to the FTC at FTC.gov/freereports
8 Slipups That Won't Hurt Your Credit Score [Financial Edge]
This was probably inevitable: the minute that Dodd-Frank cracked down on the fees charged by credit cards aimed at students, some other bright financial innovation would crop up. This time, a debit card aimed at students. Which carries lots of fees. Ylan Mui reports that a company called Higher One has started signing up colleges around the country, taking on the burden of providing cash to students. In return, it gets lots of fees:
Students say several of the fees associated with Higher One’s card are particularly irksome, including the $19 inactivity fee, a 50-cent charge for using a PIN to make a purchase rather than a signature, and a $2.50 fee for using other banks’ ATMs…
Higher One said that only 1 percent of customers have been charged an inactivity fee and that more than half are charged the 50-cent fee only once. All fees are listed on Higher One’s Web site, along with tips on avoiding them.
“We have a big effort with educating students on how to use the account,” Smith said. “We’re very passionate about financial literacy.”
If the fees are listed on Higher One’s website, they’re not exactly prominent. I did find this page, eventually, via this blog entry, but it just says that “when you swipe & sign, you won’t be charged the PIN-based transaction fee”. I haven’t been able to find a page showing a 50-cent transaction fee anywhere*, although I did manage to find this page, showing a $25 fee for domestic wire transfers and a $50 fee for international wire transfers. “Higher One offers less costly alternatives for transferring funds”, it says, without giving any indication what they might be; I suspect that what they’re talking about is transfers to or from people who have already registered somehow with Higher One.
It should go without saying that any firm which is “very passionate about financial literacy” would encourage, rather than penalize, simple, cheap and safe PIN-debit transactions. It would not give students a debit card and then tell them that if they want to avoid fees they should select the “credit” option rather than the “debit” option when they come to pay.
And I can’t think of any good reason to charge a $19 inactivity fee to people who haven’t used their cards in 9 months.
The fact is that students are often very naive when it comes to money, and it’s easy to gouge them once or twice before they learn that banks are not necessarily on their side. If you can get your card accepted by a majority of freshmen every year, and then come up with all manner of weird fees to hit them with, that’s a great way of making money out of ignorance.
Meanwhile, all students should have a bank account: giving them a debit card instead only serves to maximize the number of unbanked students. So while I’m sure cards like this are attractive to colleges, it would be great if either the colleges or else the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau started being a lot more critical of them. Prepaid cards only ever make sense if the alternative is being completely unbanked; that should not ever be the case for students.
*At Southern Oregon University, Higher One agreed to waive the 50-cent PIN-debit charge, but only if there was a simultaneous “swipe-and-sign” campaign. If the campaign is unsuccessful and students do the sensible thing by using PIN debit, then the university can be charged $2 per student for “PIN fee elimination”.
Update: Higher One’s Donald Smith responds:
Higher One was founded 10 years ago by three college students (undergraduates at the time) who were looking for streamlining the way financial aid refunds were distributed to students. Today we work with more than 675 campuses across the country, have a 97% client retention rating, and an A+ rating with the BBB.
The OneAccount is Higher One’s optional, no minimum balance, no monthly fee, FDIC-Insured checking account created by students for students. We do not offer a stored value card. We are very open with our fee schedule. We post it on every program website for all to access, explain each fee, discuss how to avoid each fee, and provide students with a web page that tells them how to use the account for free (which you’ve already found). Because of this, we believe that our customers pay less than half the amount in fees that the average bank checking account customer pays per year.
Two of the fees you referenced in your blog are the PIN fee and the Abandoned Account Fee. The PIN fee is easily avoided by choosing a signature based transaction at the checkout. The majority of students uses it in this manner and is in turn protected by MasterCard’s Zero Liability Policy against fraudulent charges (a safer way of purchasing than a PIN based transaction). We do not have an inactivity fee on our fee schedule – we don’t penalize students who do not use their accounts. We do have an Abandoned Account Fee of up to $19, for those who have abandoned their accounts, but this has been charged to less than 1% of all OneAccount holders in our company’s history because of our proactive outreach plan.
Higher One offers no instruments of credit. As a matter of fact, we’re generally in favor of initiatives restricting students’ access to credit cards and promoting financial literacy. This is why we offer a full range of financial literacy resources along with the services we provide.
I particularly dislike the implication, here, that PIN-based transactions are unsafe. They’re not; they’re just less lucrative, in terms of interchange fees, than signature-based transactions.
benchcraft company portland or
<b>News</b> - Joy Behar, Bill O'Reilly Continue Trading Insults <b>...</b>
She accuses him of making "hate speech"; he says he refuses to sugar coat "harsh realities"
Fox <b>News</b> Remains Far Ahead Of Cable <b>News</b> Competition During Pre <b>...</b>
Fox News Channel finished #4 in prime time on all of cable (total viewers) last week - the week before their ratings are likely to increase even further thanks to the miner rescue coverage. Here's a look at the rest of cable news:
Public Address | Hard <b>News</b>
If Len Brown – cleverly claiming the mantle of Mayor Robbie – can help make that experience possible across more of the big news, city, he'll have done a good thing. View Gallery � View Printable � Link to this Post � Send Feedback to ...
benchcraft company scam
Your credit can determine interest rates for loans, as well as whether or not you'll qualify for credit in the first place. Employers also ask you to let them run credit checks on you to see if you're reliable. So it's in your best interests to avoid making mistakes that will ruin your credit rating.
Posting at Financial Edge, personal finance blogger Fabulously Broke puts you at ease by identifying several blunders that won't torpedo your credit score. Here are a few of our favorites:
*Making too much or too little money. Income does not affect credit ratings.
*Late payments to utilities and phone companies. You'll want to check with the laws and procedures in your own state, but in general utilities don't report your payment history to credit agencies. On the other hand, if your bills go to collections, a collections agent will tattle on you.
*Checking your own credit. Credit checks from outside sources make it seem as though you may be applying for more credit, but checks of your own credit won't draw red flags.
*Having loans with high interest rates. It's your credit rating that affects your interest rates and not the other way around.
Check out the rest of the post at the link below for other mistakes that won't damage your credit.
For more information about free credit reports, go to the FTC at FTC.gov/freereports
8 Slipups That Won't Hurt Your Credit Score [Financial Edge]
This was probably inevitable: the minute that Dodd-Frank cracked down on the fees charged by credit cards aimed at students, some other bright financial innovation would crop up. This time, a debit card aimed at students. Which carries lots of fees. Ylan Mui reports that a company called Higher One has started signing up colleges around the country, taking on the burden of providing cash to students. In return, it gets lots of fees:
Students say several of the fees associated with Higher One’s card are particularly irksome, including the $19 inactivity fee, a 50-cent charge for using a PIN to make a purchase rather than a signature, and a $2.50 fee for using other banks’ ATMs…
Higher One said that only 1 percent of customers have been charged an inactivity fee and that more than half are charged the 50-cent fee only once. All fees are listed on Higher One’s Web site, along with tips on avoiding them.
“We have a big effort with educating students on how to use the account,” Smith said. “We’re very passionate about financial literacy.”
If the fees are listed on Higher One’s website, they’re not exactly prominent. I did find this page, eventually, via this blog entry, but it just says that “when you swipe & sign, you won’t be charged the PIN-based transaction fee”. I haven’t been able to find a page showing a 50-cent transaction fee anywhere*, although I did manage to find this page, showing a $25 fee for domestic wire transfers and a $50 fee for international wire transfers. “Higher One offers less costly alternatives for transferring funds”, it says, without giving any indication what they might be; I suspect that what they’re talking about is transfers to or from people who have already registered somehow with Higher One.
It should go without saying that any firm which is “very passionate about financial literacy” would encourage, rather than penalize, simple, cheap and safe PIN-debit transactions. It would not give students a debit card and then tell them that if they want to avoid fees they should select the “credit” option rather than the “debit” option when they come to pay.
And I can’t think of any good reason to charge a $19 inactivity fee to people who haven’t used their cards in 9 months.
The fact is that students are often very naive when it comes to money, and it’s easy to gouge them once or twice before they learn that banks are not necessarily on their side. If you can get your card accepted by a majority of freshmen every year, and then come up with all manner of weird fees to hit them with, that’s a great way of making money out of ignorance.
Meanwhile, all students should have a bank account: giving them a debit card instead only serves to maximize the number of unbanked students. So while I’m sure cards like this are attractive to colleges, it would be great if either the colleges or else the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau started being a lot more critical of them. Prepaid cards only ever make sense if the alternative is being completely unbanked; that should not ever be the case for students.
*At Southern Oregon University, Higher One agreed to waive the 50-cent PIN-debit charge, but only if there was a simultaneous “swipe-and-sign” campaign. If the campaign is unsuccessful and students do the sensible thing by using PIN debit, then the university can be charged $2 per student for “PIN fee elimination”.
Update: Higher One’s Donald Smith responds:
Higher One was founded 10 years ago by three college students (undergraduates at the time) who were looking for streamlining the way financial aid refunds were distributed to students. Today we work with more than 675 campuses across the country, have a 97% client retention rating, and an A+ rating with the BBB.
The OneAccount is Higher One’s optional, no minimum balance, no monthly fee, FDIC-Insured checking account created by students for students. We do not offer a stored value card. We are very open with our fee schedule. We post it on every program website for all to access, explain each fee, discuss how to avoid each fee, and provide students with a web page that tells them how to use the account for free (which you’ve already found). Because of this, we believe that our customers pay less than half the amount in fees that the average bank checking account customer pays per year.
Two of the fees you referenced in your blog are the PIN fee and the Abandoned Account Fee. The PIN fee is easily avoided by choosing a signature based transaction at the checkout. The majority of students uses it in this manner and is in turn protected by MasterCard’s Zero Liability Policy against fraudulent charges (a safer way of purchasing than a PIN based transaction). We do not have an inactivity fee on our fee schedule – we don’t penalize students who do not use their accounts. We do have an Abandoned Account Fee of up to $19, for those who have abandoned their accounts, but this has been charged to less than 1% of all OneAccount holders in our company’s history because of our proactive outreach plan.
Higher One offers no instruments of credit. As a matter of fact, we’re generally in favor of initiatives restricting students’ access to credit cards and promoting financial literacy. This is why we offer a full range of financial literacy resources along with the services we provide.
I particularly dislike the implication, here, that PIN-based transactions are unsafe. They’re not; they’re just less lucrative, in terms of interchange fees, than signature-based transactions.
benchcraft company scam
<b>News</b> - Joy Behar, Bill O'Reilly Continue Trading Insults <b>...</b>
She accuses him of making "hate speech"; he says he refuses to sugar coat "harsh realities"
Fox <b>News</b> Remains Far Ahead Of Cable <b>News</b> Competition During Pre <b>...</b>
Fox News Channel finished #4 in prime time on all of cable (total viewers) last week - the week before their ratings are likely to increase even further thanks to the miner rescue coverage. Here's a look at the rest of cable news:
Public Address | Hard <b>News</b>
If Len Brown – cleverly claiming the mantle of Mayor Robbie – can help make that experience possible across more of the big news, city, he'll have done a good thing. View Gallery � View Printable � Link to this Post � Send Feedback to ...
bench craft company reviews
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benchcraft company scam
<b>News</b> - Joy Behar, Bill O'Reilly Continue Trading Insults <b>...</b>
She accuses him of making "hate speech"; he says he refuses to sugar coat "harsh realities"
Fox <b>News</b> Remains Far Ahead Of Cable <b>News</b> Competition During Pre <b>...</b>
Fox News Channel finished #4 in prime time on all of cable (total viewers) last week - the week before their ratings are likely to increase even further thanks to the miner rescue coverage. Here's a look at the rest of cable news:
Public Address | Hard <b>News</b>
If Len Brown – cleverly claiming the mantle of Mayor Robbie – can help make that experience possible across more of the big news, city, he'll have done a good thing. View Gallery � View Printable � Link to this Post � Send Feedback to ...
benchcraft company portland or
Your credit can determine interest rates for loans, as well as whether or not you'll qualify for credit in the first place. Employers also ask you to let them run credit checks on you to see if you're reliable. So it's in your best interests to avoid making mistakes that will ruin your credit rating.
Posting at Financial Edge, personal finance blogger Fabulously Broke puts you at ease by identifying several blunders that won't torpedo your credit score. Here are a few of our favorites:
*Making too much or too little money. Income does not affect credit ratings.
*Late payments to utilities and phone companies. You'll want to check with the laws and procedures in your own state, but in general utilities don't report your payment history to credit agencies. On the other hand, if your bills go to collections, a collections agent will tattle on you.
*Checking your own credit. Credit checks from outside sources make it seem as though you may be applying for more credit, but checks of your own credit won't draw red flags.
*Having loans with high interest rates. It's your credit rating that affects your interest rates and not the other way around.
Check out the rest of the post at the link below for other mistakes that won't damage your credit.
For more information about free credit reports, go to the FTC at FTC.gov/freereports
8 Slipups That Won't Hurt Your Credit Score [Financial Edge]
This was probably inevitable: the minute that Dodd-Frank cracked down on the fees charged by credit cards aimed at students, some other bright financial innovation would crop up. This time, a debit card aimed at students. Which carries lots of fees. Ylan Mui reports that a company called Higher One has started signing up colleges around the country, taking on the burden of providing cash to students. In return, it gets lots of fees:
Students say several of the fees associated with Higher One’s card are particularly irksome, including the $19 inactivity fee, a 50-cent charge for using a PIN to make a purchase rather than a signature, and a $2.50 fee for using other banks’ ATMs…
Higher One said that only 1 percent of customers have been charged an inactivity fee and that more than half are charged the 50-cent fee only once. All fees are listed on Higher One’s Web site, along with tips on avoiding them.
“We have a big effort with educating students on how to use the account,” Smith said. “We’re very passionate about financial literacy.”
If the fees are listed on Higher One’s website, they’re not exactly prominent. I did find this page, eventually, via this blog entry, but it just says that “when you swipe & sign, you won’t be charged the PIN-based transaction fee”. I haven’t been able to find a page showing a 50-cent transaction fee anywhere*, although I did manage to find this page, showing a $25 fee for domestic wire transfers and a $50 fee for international wire transfers. “Higher One offers less costly alternatives for transferring funds”, it says, without giving any indication what they might be; I suspect that what they’re talking about is transfers to or from people who have already registered somehow with Higher One.
It should go without saying that any firm which is “very passionate about financial literacy” would encourage, rather than penalize, simple, cheap and safe PIN-debit transactions. It would not give students a debit card and then tell them that if they want to avoid fees they should select the “credit” option rather than the “debit” option when they come to pay.
And I can’t think of any good reason to charge a $19 inactivity fee to people who haven’t used their cards in 9 months.
The fact is that students are often very naive when it comes to money, and it’s easy to gouge them once or twice before they learn that banks are not necessarily on their side. If you can get your card accepted by a majority of freshmen every year, and then come up with all manner of weird fees to hit them with, that’s a great way of making money out of ignorance.
Meanwhile, all students should have a bank account: giving them a debit card instead only serves to maximize the number of unbanked students. So while I’m sure cards like this are attractive to colleges, it would be great if either the colleges or else the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau started being a lot more critical of them. Prepaid cards only ever make sense if the alternative is being completely unbanked; that should not ever be the case for students.
*At Southern Oregon University, Higher One agreed to waive the 50-cent PIN-debit charge, but only if there was a simultaneous “swipe-and-sign” campaign. If the campaign is unsuccessful and students do the sensible thing by using PIN debit, then the university can be charged $2 per student for “PIN fee elimination”.
Update: Higher One’s Donald Smith responds:
Higher One was founded 10 years ago by three college students (undergraduates at the time) who were looking for streamlining the way financial aid refunds were distributed to students. Today we work with more than 675 campuses across the country, have a 97% client retention rating, and an A+ rating with the BBB.
The OneAccount is Higher One’s optional, no minimum balance, no monthly fee, FDIC-Insured checking account created by students for students. We do not offer a stored value card. We are very open with our fee schedule. We post it on every program website for all to access, explain each fee, discuss how to avoid each fee, and provide students with a web page that tells them how to use the account for free (which you’ve already found). Because of this, we believe that our customers pay less than half the amount in fees that the average bank checking account customer pays per year.
Two of the fees you referenced in your blog are the PIN fee and the Abandoned Account Fee. The PIN fee is easily avoided by choosing a signature based transaction at the checkout. The majority of students uses it in this manner and is in turn protected by MasterCard’s Zero Liability Policy against fraudulent charges (a safer way of purchasing than a PIN based transaction). We do not have an inactivity fee on our fee schedule – we don’t penalize students who do not use their accounts. We do have an Abandoned Account Fee of up to $19, for those who have abandoned their accounts, but this has been charged to less than 1% of all OneAccount holders in our company’s history because of our proactive outreach plan.
Higher One offers no instruments of credit. As a matter of fact, we’re generally in favor of initiatives restricting students’ access to credit cards and promoting financial literacy. This is why we offer a full range of financial literacy resources along with the services we provide.
I particularly dislike the implication, here, that PIN-based transactions are unsafe. They’re not; they’re just less lucrative, in terms of interchange fees, than signature-based transactions.
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<b>News</b> - Joy Behar, Bill O'Reilly Continue Trading Insults <b>...</b>
She accuses him of making "hate speech"; he says he refuses to sugar coat "harsh realities"
Fox <b>News</b> Remains Far Ahead Of Cable <b>News</b> Competition During Pre <b>...</b>
Fox News Channel finished #4 in prime time on all of cable (total viewers) last week - the week before their ratings are likely to increase even further thanks to the miner rescue coverage. Here's a look at the rest of cable news:
Public Address | Hard <b>News</b>
If Len Brown – cleverly claiming the mantle of Mayor Robbie – can help make that experience possible across more of the big news, city, he'll have done a good thing. View Gallery � View Printable � Link to this Post � Send Feedback to ...
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<b>News</b> - Joy Behar, Bill O'Reilly Continue Trading Insults <b>...</b>
She accuses him of making "hate speech"; he says he refuses to sugar coat "harsh realities"
Fox <b>News</b> Remains Far Ahead Of Cable <b>News</b> Competition During Pre <b>...</b>
Fox News Channel finished #4 in prime time on all of cable (total viewers) last week - the week before their ratings are likely to increase even further thanks to the miner rescue coverage. Here's a look at the rest of cable news:
Public Address | Hard <b>News</b>
If Len Brown – cleverly claiming the mantle of Mayor Robbie – can help make that experience possible across more of the big news, city, he'll have done a good thing. View Gallery � View Printable � Link to this Post � Send Feedback to ...
bench craft company reviews
<b>News</b> - Joy Behar, Bill O'Reilly Continue Trading Insults <b>...</b>
She accuses him of making "hate speech"; he says he refuses to sugar coat "harsh realities"
Fox <b>News</b> Remains Far Ahead Of Cable <b>News</b> Competition During Pre <b>...</b>
Fox News Channel finished #4 in prime time on all of cable (total viewers) last week - the week before their ratings are likely to increase even further thanks to the miner rescue coverage. Here's a look at the rest of cable news:
Public Address | Hard <b>News</b>
If Len Brown – cleverly claiming the mantle of Mayor Robbie – can help make that experience possible across more of the big news, city, he'll have done a good thing. View Gallery � View Printable � Link to this Post � Send Feedback to ...
bench craft company reviews
<b>News</b> - Joy Behar, Bill O'Reilly Continue Trading Insults <b>...</b>
She accuses him of making "hate speech"; he says he refuses to sugar coat "harsh realities"
Fox <b>News</b> Remains Far Ahead Of Cable <b>News</b> Competition During Pre <b>...</b>
Fox News Channel finished #4 in prime time on all of cable (total viewers) last week - the week before their ratings are likely to increase even further thanks to the miner rescue coverage. Here's a look at the rest of cable news:
Public Address | Hard <b>News</b>
If Len Brown – cleverly claiming the mantle of Mayor Robbie – can help make that experience possible across more of the big news, city, he'll have done a good thing. View Gallery � View Printable � Link to this Post � Send Feedback to ...
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bench craft company reviews
benchcraft company portland or
benchcraft company scam
<b>News</b> - Joy Behar, Bill O'Reilly Continue Trading Insults <b>...</b>
She accuses him of making "hate speech"; he says he refuses to sugar coat "harsh realities"
Fox <b>News</b> Remains Far Ahead Of Cable <b>News</b> Competition During Pre <b>...</b>
Fox News Channel finished #4 in prime time on all of cable (total viewers) last week - the week before their ratings are likely to increase even further thanks to the miner rescue coverage. Here's a look at the rest of cable news:
Public Address | Hard <b>News</b>
If Len Brown – cleverly claiming the mantle of Mayor Robbie – can help make that experience possible across more of the big news, city, he'll have done a good thing. View Gallery � View Printable � Link to this Post � Send Feedback to ...
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Public Domain books are a gold mine if done correctly. There are so many ways to use them that a publisher could be making money all the time. The concept is simple, redistribute works in public domain, but the key is how you do it. This article will focus on creating E-books and print-on-demand books. We will walk step-by-step on how to do it without it costing you a fortune.
Step 1
Locate Public Domain Source. Most people use Gutenberg, which has the largest collection with over 30,000 books in the public domain. The U.S. government is a big source of public domain materials that cover just about any topic. A smart move is to make sure that the material you are using is not saturating the market online for free. But, there is a way around that; by changing the content to fit your niche, it makes it a new peace. For example, The Art of War has been published with all kinds of niches like business. By reducing the target audience, it helps the cause.
Step 2
Research how to present the book. The least expensive way is through an E-book. But it, you use online print-on-demand services; there should be no problem with costs.
Step 3
Make a good design for the book. Depending on the size of the book, you could use LuLu, Create Space (in partnership with Amazon), or your own program to design the book.
Step 4
Price the book to the market: You could issue it for free, if it is a book that a lot of people have republished, but it is recommended that you have something waiting in the wings to sell to that group of buyers. The rule is , the more technical the book, the more expensive. But regular books are being sold for around $25 for around 300 pages.
Step5
Distribute the book. If you have a mailing list, or know how to market, you can sell the book. By having an ISBN, you can list it with the major bookstores online, such as Barnes and Noble and Amazon. CreateSpace issues an ISBN, but does not work off Amazon. Lulu charges about $99 for one, so if you plan on publishing more than one book, you might want to get a publisher's ISBN. A publisher's ISBN costs around $275 for ten. Single ISBNs are not sold. Also, for each title being published, a bar code may be needed. Those run around $25. The benefit to getting a publisher's ISBN is that you own the numbers. Plan ahead, because it takes about two weeks to get ISBN's unless you pay extra..
ResourcesGutenberg
- Lulu Publishing
- How to Obtain Public Domain Books
- ISBN
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<b>News</b> - Joy Behar, Bill O'Reilly Continue Trading Insults <b>...</b>
She accuses him of making "hate speech"; he says he refuses to sugar coat "harsh realities"
Fox <b>News</b> Remains Far Ahead Of Cable <b>News</b> Competition During Pre <b>...</b>
Fox News Channel finished #4 in prime time on all of cable (total viewers) last week - the week before their ratings are likely to increase even further thanks to the miner rescue coverage. Here's a look at the rest of cable news:
Public Address | Hard <b>News</b>
If Len Brown – cleverly claiming the mantle of Mayor Robbie – can help make that experience possible across more of the big news, city, he'll have done a good thing. View Gallery � View Printable � Link to this Post � Send Feedback to ...
big seminar 14
<b>News</b> - Joy Behar, Bill O'Reilly Continue Trading Insults <b>...</b>
She accuses him of making "hate speech"; he says he refuses to sugar coat "harsh realities"
Fox <b>News</b> Remains Far Ahead Of Cable <b>News</b> Competition During Pre <b>...</b>
Fox News Channel finished #4 in prime time on all of cable (total viewers) last week - the week before their ratings are likely to increase even further thanks to the miner rescue coverage. Here's a look at the rest of cable news:
Public Address | Hard <b>News</b>
If Len Brown – cleverly claiming the mantle of Mayor Robbie – can help make that experience possible across more of the big news, city, he'll have done a good thing. View Gallery � View Printable � Link to this Post � Send Feedback to ...
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