Saturday, March 3, 2012

A world tour of the collision repair industry

Don't have the time or budget to visit your fellow repairers elsewhere in the world? Here's a glimpse of what they face on a daily basis, as well as a look at what trends may make their way to the good ol' U.S.A.

It might not seem like the term "global economy" has a lot of relevance in the collision repair industry. After all, most shop owners' idea of expansion means adding on to their existing building or buying another shop across town. Even consolidators and franchisers are a long way from national or even regional dominance that leads companies to look beyond US. borders for future growth.

But finding out about the collision repair industry in other countries can be …

Lanxess.(Projects & Technology)(Brief article)

Lanxess is investing 30m [euro] in a 50,000t/ year leather chemicals plant to be built in Changzhou, Jiangsu province, China, and …

NORTHWEST CLUB SETTLING IN NICELY.(SPORTS)

Byline: ALAN HART Staff writer -

Hazel9 Harris1 CLIFTON PARK -- Greg Peavey wears uniform No. 3, which happened to be Babe Ruth's number with the New York Yankees.

Peavey was hitting a bit like the Bambino, going 2-for-3 with two RBI and three runs scored Monday afternoon to lift Hazel Dell Metro, Wash., to a 9-1 thrashing of Harris Township, Ind., in the 14-Year-Old Babe Ruth World Series at Clifton Common.

Peavey also stole a base and played steady defense at shortstop as Hazel Dell Metro improved to 2-0 in the national championship tournament.

``I know this was his uniform number,'' Peavey said, referring to Ruth. ``But that's not why I …

German Football Summaries

BERLIN (AP) — Summary of Friday's game in the Bundesliga, the German first-division football league (home team listed first):

BANKS COMBINE OPERATIONS.(Brief Article)(Statistical Data Included)

Barclays Bank PLC and Canadian Imperial Bank of Commerce (CIBC) have signed an agreement to combine their retail, corporate and offshore banking operations in the Caribbean, reports CMC (Oct. 31, 2001). The agreement will result in the creation of First Caribbean International Bank (FirstCaribbean), they said, noting that It is subject to approvals from government and regulatory authorities and shareholders of …

N.J. FIRM BUYING TROY COMPANY.(Business)

Byline: James Denn Business writer

Nearly six months after being forced to lay off most of its workers, a high-technology company last week found a financial guardian angel.

Atantic Energy Inc. of Pleasantville, N.J., said it was acquiring a 50 percent interest in Troy's Geotech Energy Conversion Corp.

The move by Atlantic - a $705 million electric-utility holding company - came at a good time for Geotech, which last October was forced to lay off 60 percent of its work force.

Officials expect the investment in the 8-year-old company, announced Friday, to be completed in two months. It is subject to the conclusion of a study of the firm's …

Friday, March 2, 2012

High on the Blog

Our first and only full-time blogger recalls his career at PW

It was the summer of 2004 and I had one class to take to graduate. I was staying in Philadelphia, and all my friends were moving to New York. I started my personal blog in May to keep up with my writing, but looking back at those early entries they're mainly about how sad I was.

I got happier, I guess, and ended up using the blog for writing exercises, lame jokes and an extended imagining of what the CBS movie Spring Break Slmrk Attack, relentlessly aired during March Madness 2005. would be like. I also wrote a drinking game for Live 8, the concert that was coming up that summer. Eventually, that made its way around the Internet, and the Inquirer wrote about it.

I was working at a small newspaper startup as its arts and entertainment editor, and while waiting for stories to move across the wire at my job, I wrote an email to some friends about a recent weekend in Las Vegas. I stylized it as a gossip column, with bolded names, blind items, et cetera. I was just killing time at work, I thought.

A few weeks later, one of the people I went on the trip with- now a New York Times reporter- was writing a cover story for PW. Tim Whitaker asked the reporter if she knew of anybody who could do some comedy news writing. She forwarded him my email. It went from there.

PWh i red me as a blogger when I was 22. You hear that, kids? My blog was acquired by a media company in twothousand-and-fucking-five, so don't get too excited now that your blog is partnering with Fancy Blog Network No. 472.

We settled on keeping the name of my personal blog, Philadelphia Will Do, because the other names we came up with- Pavement, Sidewalker, Philarious- were stupid or unusable. The title Philadelphia Will Do comes from an old W.C. Fields movie, My Little Chickadee. (Mae West is in it!) Fields' character is about to be hanged. The executioner asks him if he has any last requests. Fields says, "I'd like to see Paris before I die." The executioner tightens the noose. "Philadelphia will do," Fields quips.

At the time, 1 was attempting to leave Philadelphia and move to New York, and I thought it was a pretty cute and appropriate title.

We started the blog in August. It was just as Hurricane Katrina hit, so my first few weeks consisted of me finding my way and attempting to make light jokes about hurricanes without offending anyone. (Later, I'd drop this "not offending anyone" strategy.) The clear inspiration was my favorite blog at the time. Jessica Coen- and Jesse Oxfeld-era Gawker. I wanted to make jokes, keep it light and maybe every once in a while make a point or two. I like to think it worked out. The paper got a lot of traffic. I got a lot of attention; in January of 2006 the Daily News named me one of its "21 to watch." I don't think I've really ever been worthy of watching, unless you like one-man karaoke versions of "Regulate."

When I was in college, every alum came in and said we'd have more editorial freedom at our college newspaper than we'd ever have again in journalism. Bullshit. The best thing about working for PH- is that I had complete editorial freedom. Whitaker backed everything I wrote and warded off calls for my firing from a litany of suspects: Ron Paul fans, Barbaro fans, authority fetishists, state Sen. Mark B. Cohen. Obviously, there was a downside: I wrote some stupid stuff. But that's OK; I think the blog was stronger because I had such freedom. I don't think enough newspapers let their bloggers have free rein.

I wrote a very sympathetic profile of Charlie Manuel in 2005 when Phillies fans hated him. It is one of the few times in life a sports prediction of mine has been correct, so I'd like to gloat.

I'm 28. A lot of the stuff I wrote I now find embarrassing, or lazy, or both. But that's going to happen after more than 10,000 posts over three-and-a-half years. I like to think I was both the best and worst reporter covering the 2007 mayoral election. I look back at some of the things that happened during that election- Milton Street singing a hymn draped over a casket; Dwight Evans doing a "Where's the beef?" campaign event; the press conference by the guy in the shark costume who was following Tom Knox aroundand I wonder if I was just on particularly strong drugs at the time. I hope I let people waste some time.

The best email I ever received while at PWended like this: "Perhaps you should try a different career, like nursing."

[Sidebar]

The best thing about working for PW is that I had complete editorial freedom.

[Author Affiliation]

By Dan McQuade feedback@philadelphiaweekly.com