Ken Goldstein
Ken Goldstein
Ken Goldstein, also known as Kene G and Jack Dempsey, born June 1969, is an American film and television writer, producer, director and occasional actor. He is a co-founder of Planet illogica and CEO of The Six Shooter Company and the author of the book series, The Way of the Nerd. Goldstein is an active speaker at conferences and festivals, universities and private and public institutions. He has been a featured and Keynote speaker in Brazil, Australia, France and Germany...
creating media relationship
We're really creating an arms-length relationship with Disney. It's a big deal, and the only way to go for a media company.
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I think we are going to get consistent job growth. The signals we're getting suggest we're on the road to better growth. Unless something else happens, then perhaps in a few months, we will finally get some good news in the labor market.
companies people using
People are doing what they want. A lot of the companies that are using these people are doing what they can do profitably.
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Overall economic momentum is no longer firing on all cylinders. And hiring intentions this summer are suggestive that companies may not increase hiring until the economy regains more solid footing.
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Rising business costs and uncertainty in many companies about price hikes is a major consideration now in how fast the domestic economy can grow, especially in the second half of the year.
recession smell taste
It can't just smell like a recession - it has to smell, look and taste like one.
department sales store
Some of the department store sales don't make sense to me,
impact issue prove
To me, that could well prove a more important issue than the impact of Katrina,
august confidence consistent consumer consumers current demand economic effects fact higher holding hurricane january job labor last level number online positive saw seeing seems steady upbeat volume weathered
The fact that the January number is back up to the higher level we saw in August 2005 indicates that the demand for labor is holding steady and seems to have weathered the hurricane and energy-related effects of last fall. The January online help-wanted ad volume is consistent with what we are seeing from the Consumer Confidence Survey. In January, consumers were more upbeat about current economic conditions, and they were especially more positive about the job market.
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Today's conditions are similar to those prevailing in the late 1980s, when there were also widespread reports of jobs available and no one to fill them.
discovered labor matters time
We discovered for the umpteenth time that what matters most for most Americans is the labor market.
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The performance of the leading index is suggestive of continued momentum or growth in the spring.
business consumers factor picking rather run sales start
If all we've had is consumption, not business investment, there could be a self-fulfilling factor here, ... If consumers run out of patience, they start trimming sales a bit, and the economy, rather than picking up, may weaken a bit. Then the consumer says, 'See, I told you it was going to happen.'
april bad best certainly damning employment faint given march month past stable
I don't think we're back to a stable employment level; we're in for another decline, certainly in manufacturing employment. This should be the best month in the past three, but that's damning with faint praise, given how bad March and April were.