1. Sam: "I Am"
Over the weekend, Missouri All-American defensive lineman Michael Sam "
stated publicly what his teammates and coaches at Mizzou have known since August: 'I am an openly, proud gay man.'" And with that, Sam will soon become the NFL's first active openly gay player. Here's the behind the scenes story of how NFL prospect Michael Sam came out:
The Eagle Has Landed.
+ "I don't think football is ready for [an openly gay player] just yet. In the coming decade or two, it's going to be acceptable, but at this point in time it's still a man's-man game. To call somebody a [gay slur] is still so commonplace. It'd chemically imbalance an NFL locker room and meeting room." That's an NFL player personnel assistant
giving you an idea of how far behind the times some people still are. A decade or two? Thankfully, Michael Sam has helped to move the timetable up a bit. But you can bet his courage will cost him in some ways. According to
CBS' NFL Draft Prospect Board, Michael Sam
has already fallen 70 spots.
+ Is the NFL ready?
Here's one answer from
The Atlantic's Ta-Nehisi Coates: "Powerful interests are rarely
ready for change, so much as they are assaulted by it. We refer to barriers being
broken for a reason.
+
NYT's Frank Bruni: "A news flash for every straight man out there:
You've been naked in front of a gay man."

2. The Everything Store
"Amazon is a global superstore, like Walmart. It's also a hardware manufacturer, like Apple, and a utility, like Con Edison, and a video distributor, like Netflix, and a book publisher, like Random House, and a production studio, like Paramount, and a literary magazine, like The Paris Review, and a grocery deliverer, like FreshDirect, and someday it might be a package service, like U.P.S." But it all started with selling books and Amazon has completely altered that marketplace.
The New Yorker's George Packer provides a brief and interesting history of Amazon and wonders:
Is Amazon bad for books?

6. Family Matters
Over the weekend, the
NYT continued its "coverage" of the Woody Allen/Dylan Farrow story by publishing Woody Allen's self-scripted defense:
Woody Allen Speaks Out. Are these opinion pieces really helpful or are the dueling op-eds journalistically lazy, damaging, and further proof that the news is becoming Twitter? If I have to
go to Vanity Fair to get the facts behind a series of stories published by the
NYT, it might be time to have a meeting.
+ No matter who's telling the truth, there's no doubt that child abuse is a big problem. This is
a very moving and very interesting piece on the topic from
Gawker: "That this darkness is actually woven into and throughout the fabric of our society -- that these abusers are among us -- is simply too much to bear. So the darkness is ignored except for the most distilled, theatrical, and viscerally repellent cases."

7. They'll Never Make It
"Consider the following: At the end of 1963, virtually no one in America had heard of the Beatles. Yet on Feb. 9, 1964, they drew the largest TV audience in history-73 million viewers-when they appeared on
The Ed Sullivan Show. How could such a conquest have occurred so quickly?" Fifty years later,
Billboard's Steve Greenberg
looks back on how the Beatles went viral.
+ "Visually they are a nightmare, tight, dandified Edwardian-Beatnik suits and great pudding bowls of hair. Musically they are a near disaster, guitars and drums slamming out a merciless beat that does away with secondary rhythms, harmony and melody. Their lyrics (punctuated by nutty shouts of "yeah, yeah, yeah") are a catastrophe, a preposterous farrago of Valentine-card romantic sentiments…." Suffice it to say,
not all of the early reviews of the Beatles were positive.

8. That a Baby!
"Late last week, Tim Armstrong, the chief executive officer of AOL, landed himself in a media firestorm when he held a town hall with employees to explain why he was paring their retirement benefits. After initially blaming Obamacare for driving up the company's health care costs, he pointed the finger at an unlikely target: babies.
Specifically, my baby."

9. As Good As New
Teslas are not only pretty cool cars, they might also be good investments. It looks like some Model S sedans
are worth as much used as they are new.

Thanks,
Dave Pell
Managing Editor, Internet