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Ex-MTV and CBS Radio exec Rob Barnett created MyDamnChannel because he believes online audiences "want to see professionally produced shows other than network TV fare." Tell that to the cat poop auteurs and all those pugs on skateboards. Harry Shearer, David Wain, and Don Was are among the creative participants mentioned. Link to AP item, here's the company's press release. Laguna Beach-based Okapi Venture Capital is listed as a backer.
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I don't grok it yet, but it looks like Ashton Kutcher is doing some kind of alternate reality game. Perhaps he just loves bees. Here are some relevant urls: Link to www.401wtf.com, and video link. In related news: A VOIP startup just launched with Mr. Kutcher as celebrity endorser, presume this is unrelated to the ARG (or whatever that is): Link to ooma.com.
Turns out that Johnny Ryan -- creator of the amazingly absurd and fantastically offensive Angry Youth Comix that tosses political correctness right into a filthy toilet -- is also a contributor to Nickelodeon's Nick Magazine for kids. Nick is now uploading every one of Ryan's gag cartoons that appeared in the magazine. Belly laffs for the whole family!
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An employee had placed a putty-like substance around the box to make it weather proof.Link (Thanks, Paul Saffo!)
The investigation is concluded and no criminal charges will be filed.
Previously on BoingBoing:

BoingBoing reader Ehsan writes in with a correction to this previous BoingBoing post:
You guys made a mistake about naming Homer Simpson a pioneer of "drunk astronauts". Captain Haddock of the Tin Tin series was drunk and flying in space in 1954. Give him some credit! This link is to a scan of page 5 of the TinTin book "Explorers on the Moon" (1976), showing Haddock calling his flying whisky bubble back into his glass.
The agency voted to approve rules for an auction of broadcast spectrum that the F.C.C. chairman, Kevin J. Martin, had said would promote new consumer services. The F.C.C. rules will allow customers to use whatever phone and software they want on networks using about one-third of the spectrum to be auctioned.Link to NYT story.The F.C.C. did not approve a provision that would have required the winner of the auction to sell access to its network on a wholesale basis to other companies.
In recent weeks Google and other technology interests pressed the commission to create an open-access wireless network — in contrast to today’s closed cellular networks — and to allow owners of the spectrum to sell portions of it wholesale to other companies. That would loosen the carriers’ grip on service offerings and might also open the door to new entrants like Google.
In the model proposed by Google and new entrants to the market, consumers would be able to buy a wireless phone at a store, but instead of being forced to use a specific carrier, they would be free to pick any carrier. Moreover, instead of wireless carriers’ choosing what software goes on their phones, users would be free to put any software they want on them.
"What this means is we won't likely have new companies enter the wireless market -- we'll be stuck with AT&T and Verizon," writes Farhad Manjoo of Salon.com. His blog post about the ruling is here.
More analysis around the web: Ars Technica, Google's Public Policy Blog, Glenn Fleishman, O'Reilly Emerging Telephony, Public Knowledge.
Previously on BoingBoing:
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