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We want to stay in business.'
Richard Anderson, and Pan tilt camera
41, and Pan tilt camera
could face felony arson and burglary charges over the two-alarm fire, and Pan tilt camera
Phoenix fire officials say.
Richard Anderson, and Pan tilt camera
who is no relation to manager Lori Anderson, and Pan tilt camera
was known as one of the hardest-working employees at Allfab.
Co-workers said he sang happily as he worked overtime and shifted between metal-cutting machines, and Pan tilt camera
almost to the point of annoying co-workers.
Investigators said Richard Anderson called 911 from inside Allfab during the fire. He identified himself by name to emergency dispatchers.
A security camera revealed Richard Anderson and another man driving up to the Allfab studio and later 'pulling away as smoke was billowing out,' said Jack Ballentine, and Pan tilt camera
director of the Phoenix Fire Investigations Unit.
The unnamed second man, and Pan tilt camera
who was fired recently from Allfab, and Pan tilt camera
is accused of helping set the fire that also killed the company's dog.
Employees believe the man locked the dog inside.
Ballentine added that investigators believe Richard Anderson and the other man were intoxicated the day of the fire.
'His family says he's bipolar, and Pan tilt camera
drinking heavily and using meth,' he said
'I'm not sure what I used to think about before the election,' said Ann-Drea Burns, 40, a stay-at-home mom in Grand Rapids, Mich., who would TiVo MSNBC's 'Morning Joe' each day. 'I'm still TiVo-ing it but just yesterday thought, Do I really want to listen to these guys talk about Rahm Emanuel's temperament for an hour?'
Nate Silver, the Chicago-based founder of FiveThirtyEight.com, a site that specialized in polling analysis and prognostication, is expecting a major traffic drop. 'We knew that whatever traffic we had during the height of the election, we'd have 20 percent of that once the election was over,' he said.
Even if the public's interest in politics falls off, media executives argue that this year's campaign has permanently altered the way people use news.
If the 2006 midterm elections marked the introduction of YouTube as a political player, memorialized by then-Sen. George Allen's infamous on-camera 'macaca' comment, belittling one of his Virginia opponent's aides, this year online video resembled a mature medium, used equally for news and satire alike. The video du jour is now never more than a click away, including those produced by voters who have found a potent new outlet for their partisan beliefs.
Mark Simonelli, a 43-year-old resident of Downingtown, Pa., didn't just read the Web sites of the National Review, the Weekly Standard and the Philadelphia Inquirer for political news. He also visited YouTube, where he and a business partner posted 14 videos, most of them recycled footage highlighting Obama's gaffes and inconsistencies. Several have been viewed tens of thousands of times, generating lively discussions
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