"Brown looks toward a possible role on Fox News; Joins board of Mass. paper processing firm" by Stephanie Ebbert | Globe Staff, February 06, 2013
Just days after he stunned the political world by announcing he was bowing out of contention for another Senate seat, Scott Brown made a return to the private sector, joining the board of a Massachusetts-based paper processing company and negotiating a possible deal to appear on Fox News.
A Fox spokesman confirmed Brown is in talks to appear on the network, which recently announced it is not renewing contracts with big-name political commentators Sarah Palin and Dick Morris. It was unclear, however, what role Brown might have on the network. Though Brown has told several Republicans that he will have a gig on Fox, the spokesman said the talks are not final.
Brown would not comment to the Globe. When reached Wednesday night, he said, “I am right in the middle of dinner,” and hung up the phone.
(Blog editor smiles)
Political observers still expect Brown, a lawyer, to land a lucrative full-time job at a Boston law firm. But his potential foray into political commentary has incited strong opinions among viewers who watched Brown become a media sensation during and after his special election upset three years ago.
Former GOP chairwoman Jennifer Nassour, a frequent political commentator on local news stations, was green with envy. “Good for him,” she said. “I think many of us are sitting here saying, ‘I wish I had gotten that job.’ He hasn’t been making money for years.”
But the possibility of a deal was immediately attacked by Media Matters for America, a left-leaning research center that monitors conservative media and that charged Fox is providing skewed analysis from contributors locked in a revolving door of self-promotion....
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Why Am I No Longer Reading the Newspaper?
It's not just Fox, folks.
And what will Brown receive for $itting on the board?
For his board work, Brown will get the same stipend given to other board members — a $50,000 retainer, plus 5,000 shares of restricted stock units valued at about $135,000 at today’s price, said Thomas M. O’Brien, Kadant’s executive vice president and chief financial officer....
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Also see: Brown Betrays GOP
From the number of hits that one received I can only conclude no one gives a s***.
No wonder the Globe is offering free or reduced price access to its pos. Serving elite supremacists is not a very good business model for a newspaper.
Related:
"Without a paper – a journal of some kind– you cannot unite a community. You belong to a very important profession." -- Mahatma Gandhi
It's a community of $orts, folks.