วันอังคารที่ 30 พฤศจิกายน พ.ศ. 2553

Why Loan Modification is the Real Deal

There are a lot of myths flying around concerning home loan modification. There are TV commercials, internet advertisements promising lower monthly payments. It sounds enticing, but you are not sure if it true or not. A mortgage modification does lower monthly payments if approved, and approved is the key. Not all mortgage modification applications are approved. If a homeowner was living at their income level and not overspending, and just hit a financial hard patch, they will more likely then not be approved. But if they were overspending, and took a bigger loan than they can afford, the lender will reject the application.

In any case a loan modification is a viable solution for struggling homeowners. A mortgage modification can stop the foreclosure process, prevent the homeowner from entering the foreclosure process, and even readjust adjustable rate mortgages to a fixed rate.

Besides the obvious benefits of lower mortgage payments, a mortgage modification has other advantages over other options. The lender usually does not the credit score in order to make their decisions. That is due to the fact that the homeowner has a loan already and was pre-approved with their lender. A loan modification is also less of a hassle. Refinancing is a new loan, and a lot of paperwork has to be read and signed. A mortgage modification consists of an application, a hardship letter, and a few phone calls to the loss mitigation department.

Many homeowners have modified their loan successfully, during this real estate crisis. Lenders are approving mortgage modifications at an all time high. If you are struggling with your payments you should check out this option and if you are serious you should consider checking out 60 minute loan modification. 60 minute loan modification is an all in one loan modification guide. It was created by a real estate expert who has modified numerous home loans. It includes everything a homeowner needs to modify a home loan. Overall it's a great resource to have.




If you want to learn more about loan modification and 60 minute loan modification click here.

วันเสาร์ที่ 27 พฤศจิกายน พ.ศ. 2553

The Truth About Debt Relief Solutions Everybody Should Know

No matter where you look, you're hit with advertisements and commercials guaranteeing debt relief. According to many of these ads, you can be out of debt in a year or two, without changing your payments, or by paying less every month! Or, even better, you can get your tax return early, and use that to pay off your debt. But why not just go shopping with it instead?
You can buy what you need (want?) with that "free money" and not go further into debt, right? Yeah right!

As you've probably already guessed, it's not exactly guaranteed. There are some big problems with many methods of debt relief you hear advertised. The biggest problem is that they're trying to put a financial band-aid on a behavioral broken limb.

However, don't get me wrong, it can certainly be done. Getting out of debt by yourself may not be as hard as many people and companies want you to believe that it is. Many companies have ads on television and online that tout their abilities to get you out of debt quickly and easily, but getting out on your own can usually be just as convenient, as long as you have a plan.

Getting out of debt is actually the easy part. The problem is, that the majority of people get into debt very quickly and never really learn how to get debt free afterwards. The most basic idea to being without debt is to not en cure it at all. But, the life style that we have chosen and has been bombarded into our minds through media and our parents not fully explaining to the younger generation that it is much wiser to pay for things only if you can afford it!

My advice to you is to START SMALL! Try the cheaper do-it-yourself programs first and work your way up before you go and take out another loan to hire a professional debt relief service.




From my personal experience with escaping debt, I honestly suggest you visit Debt Relief America Learning the techniques found there was the turning point for me, and I think it will be the same for you.

วันอังคารที่ 23 พฤศจิกายน พ.ศ. 2553

Tips on Commercial Loans Refinancing

This article has been written for New Zealand businesses and makes reference to banks in New Zealand.

The amount that banks are prepared to lend depends on a number of factors including the security you have to offer and your capacity to fulfil your repayment obligations.

The more successful your business is, and the stronger your cash flow - the more the bank will be willing to lend.

How much can I BORROW for my business?

1) Generally the banks will lend between 35% and 65% of the purchase price of the business.
2) If you are buying a reputable franchise it could be from 50% to 75%.
3) A stand alone business can be more towards 35% or possibly more.

What BANKS look at when you apply for a business loan:

• Type of business,

• Management systems,

• Past performance trends,

• Cash flows,

• Your experience in running the business,

• Goodwill and fixed assets are also taken into account.

% Interest Rates

It is important to note:

  • Interest rates are lowest for loans secured by residential property,

  • Higher when secured by commercial property, and

  • Possibly even higher when secured by business assets, with no other collateral.

Security

Banks tend to lend 50% - 60% of collateral security to specialist businesses such as hotels etc. The servicing of the debt from business and other resources needs to be to the banks satisfaction.

Your Business Loan VS Your Home Mortgage - being smart with your structures

Businesses that have been running for a number of years would have arranged their banking facilities and securities on day one. As time goes by and the business has progressed, there is a chance of separating business and personal assets by re-structuring the finance between bank and non-bank lenders at the same competitive rates.

Scenario

Bank 'A' had cross collateralised the client's home, investment house, beach and commercial property as security for the business' overdraft, term loan and their personal facilities, including credit cards. Simply, all lending facilities were secured by all available property including the family home.

The clients required further facilities for a business acquisition and the bank declined the request. The clients found an experienced mortgage broker, who reviewed their finances isolating their business loans from their personal debts and refinanced the residential properties with Bank 'B', repaying this current bank in full. This left the commercial property debt free to allow a mortgage to acquire further products.

TOP TIP

Whether you are considering buying a new business or have been in business for many years - find an experienced mortgage broker who deals with business owners, and complete a review of your current loans structures. This may help you with your cash flow and save you money.

Co-Author Gary Hey, Mortgage People, Auckland, New Zealand.



วันอาทิตย์ที่ 21 พฤศจิกายน พ.ศ. 2553

Dodge Sprinter Leads Commercial Vehicle Market

Today, worldwide almost one in five new vehicles sold is a commercial vehicle and Dodge has done an excellent job of providing buyers with plenty of options. Their commercial vehicles are now among the best selling in the world, and a great deal of that success has been due to their Sprinter model.

- Dodge Is an Industry Leader in Commercial Vehicle Sales
During the first half of 2008, the company experienced a 123 percent increase from the first six months of 2007 in commercial sales with 20,177 units sold. That allowed Dodge's share of the total retail market for Class 3-5 vehicles to grow to 21 percent, with sales of its Sprinter also jumping up 21 percent last year. This boost in sales has made them the fourth largest manufacturer of commercial vehicles worldwide.

"While continuing to conquer new territory and set new commercial standards, the commercial car market remains a white-space opportunity for the Dodge brand," said Mike Accavitti, Director - Dodge Brand Marketing in an interview. "Dodge has introduced six all-new cars since 2003 and we will continue to fill this space with bold, powerful and capable commercial-grade vehicles."

- Dodge Offers Best-in-Class Fuel Economy and Price
Since returning to the commercial vehicle market in 2004, they have created several trucks and vans that have earned "best-in-class" awards for fuel economy, including the Dodge Ram 4500 and 5500 Chassis Cab models. Their cars also boast of low maintenance costs, which have resulted in a 16 percent market share of the Class 4-5 segments.

"Delivering maximum uptime, dependability, capability, safety and increased savings, Dodge is continuing its commercial market onslaught with a barrage of product enhancements and upgrades intended to further improve an already great commercial line-up while better serving our business customers' specialized needs," Accavitti added.

- The Dodge Sprinter Provides Exceptional Value
And of course, the Sprinter, introduced in 2003, is one of their crown jewels in its commercial fleet. It has the lowest ownership costs of any van in its class and leads its segment in fuel economy, getting about 25 freeway miles to the gallon. In terms of its specifications, the Sprinter cargo van offers two wheelbases of 144 and 170 inches, as well as three body lengths of 233, 273, or 289 inches.

Consumers may choose from standard, high, or Mega Roof heights. While many features like antilock brakes and automatic climate control come standard, there are lots of great things like rear parking assist, heated front seats, and integrated phone connectivity that can be added as options. The Sprinter has a 3.0-liter turbodiesel V6 engine, with 154 horsepower, but buyers can opt for more horsepower by choosing the 3.5-liter V6 engine instead.

The full-size van continues to be a major hit with consumers. During the first seven months of 2008, the company sold more than 9,500 Sprinters, a 21 percent increase from the previous year. One of the reasons for its long-lived success is that at least three of the world's most recognizable courier services chosen to invest heavily in Sprinter fleets. Its fuel efficiency and practical design make it a great buy as both a passenger and cargo vehicle.




It's no surprise that the Dodge Sprinter is a winner in the commercial vehicle market. Whether you need a vehicle that can be used as a delivery van, chassis cab or a minibus, the Sprinter is the perfect car for you. Find the right one for you at www.sprinterdealer.net.

วันอังคารที่ 16 พฤศจิกายน พ.ศ. 2553

High-Definition Mini-Camcorders Breaking New Ground

As we get closer to the high-definition television standard becoming reality, HD is no longer an option that we look at in awe, or even something that we necessarily pay extra for.

Consumer electronics, probably more than most commercial products, tend to hit rock bottom prices like a lead weight, shortly after being released. If you don't want to pay $500 for that new top-of-the-line, full-featured digital camera, well, wait for a few months and it will probably be half that price.

A short time ago, high-definition was only offered in the best consumer model camcorders, and at a price that usually kept the higher resolution out of reach for many. Now there's more than one manufacturer producing solid-state memory, HD mini-camcorders that are equivalent in price to a mediocre digital still camera. Although the feature list on these cameras is very short, it is supposed to be. These cameras are meant to be fit-in-your-pocket (any pocket), shoot-a-video-by-pushing-a-single-button, convenience cameras. This is a niche they fill very well also.

Having seen the quality of video captured by two of the present offerings, the minoHD (Pure Digital Technologies), and the Vado HD (Creative Labs), I can say that, although they won't replace your larger, full-featured camera, they do offer very good quality at an even better price. They are right at home shooting a quick 2 minute video to quickly be uploaded to YouTube or one of the many similar sites. However, they also allow you to capture video in excellent quality that can be used for enjoyable viewing on a large screen.

Going back to the limited features: these cameras won't be the ones you grab if you need to have up-close-and-personal video capture. Nor will they fill the need if you're going to record something needing other special capabilities. They do what they do, and they do it well, but they are limited.

When you can have this video quality available in such a small, convenient, inexpensive package, it only increases the amount of amazing video clips that will be available online for all to see, and also the amount of quality digital images that most people will be able to capture, archive and enjoy for many years to come.




The minoHD is the most current offering in the quality video products being released by newcomer Pure Digital Technologies.

The Vado HD is a product from Creative Labs, and is very similar in price, performance and features to the MinoHD. As of this writing there were also solid-state memory, mini HD camcorders from Kodak and RCA.

Jeffrey Norris is a freelance writer and amateur digital photographer and videographer.

วันจันทร์ที่ 8 พฤศจิกายน พ.ศ. 2553

Highlight Your Business With the Brightest in Commercial Lighting

To have great products or services is all well and good however if nobody enters your place of business to inquire about or employ your services you'll quickly find yourself out of business. It's also a good bet that there is another business whose services and products are very similar to yours. Furthermore businesses similar to yours may have been in the area longer and will therefore have established repeat business. A business located in an area that's full of activity must do something to draw attention to itself, something that will help it stand out amid the other businesses residing in the same region.

One way to accomplish such a thing is to apply classy decor to the exterior of your business. Things like color, signs, and objects can lure people in off the street and into your business. In addition to these effects a business owner can implement commercial lights into his/her exterior and interior decor.

Commercial lights placed on the outside of a business are almost always eye catching and if nothing else will get passerby's to read your sign. If commercial lights are used creatively however there's a very good chance that people will not only read your sign but will venture through your door. The same can be said about interior commercial lights. If the lighting inside your place of business is used to create a specific or surreal mood people on the street will often stop inside to take a closer look at the lights they see through your window.

Of course once these would be customers enter your store your interior must impress them as well. A layout that is conducive to free moving traffic is always beneficial as it will keep those in your store from feeling crowded or stuffy. Allowing customers easy access to your best products is also a good idea. In business like all other aspects of life you should be putting your best foot forward. Once a customer enters your store the time for teasing is over. Show them your best and make it hard for them to ignore it from the moment they walk through your door. Commercial lighting will help you do just that.

Though there are a large number of things that a business owner must do the aforementioned are basics that if done with careful and creative planning can help a business, especially a new business stand out amongst the crowd. Drawing attention to a business with Commercial lighting is the first ingredient in the recipe for success. Keeping things simple yet imaginative can really help your business hit the ground running.




Kimberly Green is helping businesses put their best foot forward with interior commercial lighting to shed some light on the subject. While exterior commercial lighting will get your customers through the door.

วันอาทิตย์ที่ 7 พฤศจิกายน พ.ศ. 2553

Television Workouts to Do During Commercial Breaks

Watching television is the most common leisure activity along with surfing the internet. Once in awhile (with emphasis on the "Once"), you may watch television especially on shows on the History Channel, National Geographic Channel, or other better channels. You may watch some of these "reality shows" but there does not seem to be any redeemable value on those types of show. But, I digress. You can keep physically active while watching television. Here is a workout routine you can do during commercials.

Do a round of push-ups. You can vary the kinds of push-ups for variety. If you have a pull-up bar available, that would be great. But, if you can do some push-ups, then that is better than doing nothing. Push-ups are great for the chest, shoulders, and triceps. Try to work on getting 100 push-ups in a few sets. Also, try to vary your hand-position. When your hands are closer together, you will be working on the triceps more. Later, try clapping push-ups, plyrometric push-ups, or even one-armed push-ups.

Sprint in place. Sprinting in place will get your metabolism in gear. Sprint in place for 20 seconds then rest for 10 seconds. Then, do this round again until the commercials are over. Sprinting is an excellent anaerobic activity for your body. You will continue to breath hard long after the exercise is over. This is a key for muscle tone and even fat loss.

Do crunches together with back flexor exercises. Do about 25 reps of crunches. Then, flip over and do about 25 reps of back flexors. You will hit the abdominals and lower back at the same time. I am not a big fan of crunches. But, done together with back flexors, it is a good exercise to do during commercial breaks.

In one thirty-minute span, you should be able to go through all three of these routines (push-ups, sprints, crunches/back flexors). Keep active. Now, if you are watching over 2 hours of TV every night, you may want to cut back on your TV and do some quality workouts. Do not watch too much TV. If you do watch some TV, you can do these exercises during commercial breaks:

* Push-ups
* Sprint in place
* Crunches/Back-flexors

Activity is always better than inactivity. It is best to set aside a time and place when you do your exercise routine. On those rare instances where you find yourself watching television, try out this exercise routine.




Learn more about Health, Fitness, and Exercises.
Get free instant access to Health and Fitness reviews and tips!
Visit http://bestbookreviewsbyjr.com now.

วันศุกร์ที่ 5 พฤศจิกายน พ.ศ. 2553

Managing Cash Flow in Tough Economic Times

The global economic recession has hit everyone hard. However, it is the commercial ventures that have taken a harsh blow from the recession. A successful business is a rarity today. The secret to a successful business at any time would be healthy cash flow. Cash flow becomes all the more important in today's environment with economic hardships and credit crunching. The importance of cash flow can be brought into perspective when one considers the scenario with no cash. A lost customer is just that, a customer you have lost and will not get back. This customer can be replaced by another customer whom you will treat properly and ensure he stays a loyal customer. However, a situation where there is no cash leads to a situation where you cannot pay your creditors or suppliers. Some times you cannot even pay your employees. This will mean that you do not have a service to provide and when you are not providing a service you do not have a business.

Thus, proper management of business funding is extremely important to keep your business afloat and make it successful. The most important step in any problem would be the first step, understanding the problem. This is how you must approach your business funding problems. This understanding will lead to you managing your business funding effectively. The word cash flow has more to it than the layman's opinion that it is just a fancy word describing the transfer of money to and from your business account.

To understand cash flow, you need to carefully analyze your business funding . Analyzing business funding will also help you to gain some control over it. While analyzing the cash requirements, you can see the areas which you do not have control of. These are the areas with a problem and need immediate work. To reach this point, you will need to individually inspect each and every component that makes up your business funding cycle and decide whether it is a problem or not.

It would also be a huge advantage if you can draw up a cash flow budget. A cash flow budget is a very effective way to control and manage business funding . In such a budget, we try and predict your company's cash requirements for a specific period of time, usually six months into the future. It is great if you can draw up a budget for a longer time like a year or more.

A big part of managing business funding would be improving it. All that analyzing is of no use if you cannot, some how, improve your cash flow. Increasing your cash flow will ensure your business is running successfully and you do not have much to worry about. Make sure all of your debtors pay on time. Try and make them pay a little before time. This will always help. Also make sure you do not pay your creditors before hand. Paying the creditors only when you have to will ensure good cash flow.

Do not hesitate to fill the business funding gap. This is common for all businesses. Everyone faces cash shortage and you might have to borrow to fill the cash gap. If you have any cash surplus, it is important you handle that efficiently as well. Invest it in the right place and earn some investment income, which can again, ease your cash flow problems.




Managing Cash Flow in tough economic times learn how at http://www.cashflowadvantage.com.au.

วันพุธที่ 3 พฤศจิกายน พ.ศ. 2553

Florida Commercial Real Estate - The Potential Expenses of Owning a Commercial Property

If you have grown weary of putting money into the lease of your existing business space, or if you have thought about buying a Florida commercial real estate property as a long-term investment, you need to know a number of essential factors that can help you get the most of your financial opportunities. To begin with, you have to do some research about the different overheads involved.

Unlike residential realty, a Florida commercial real estate property entails additional fees and expenditure that are not instantaneously apparent. Therefore, you need to see to it that you're able to get the whole picture before making an actual purchase. More often than not, probable property expenses comprise, but are not restricted to, the following:

Property Taxes

When it comes to the costs of a Florida commercial real estate tax, financial backers usually make use of the actual tax numbers rather than its ballpark figure. The latter is only applicable for residential real estate properties and should therefore not be used to compute for commercial property taxes.

Management Costs

The expenses typically differ depending on your chosen arrangement. In case you decide to deal with things like building maintenance and landscaping contracts, you will most likely shell out a minimal flat fee for the management of tenant administration. On the other hand, if you choose to subcontract everything to the company -- for a building that houses several renters, the bill may be derived from a percentage of the RSF (rentable square feet) or USF (usable square feet) per tenant.

Insurance Overheads

In most cases, the insurance requisites of the financial backer are different from what the owner/buyer typically carries. As a rule, the owner/buyer is obliged to conform to the backer's insurance necessities regardless of the costs.

Replacement Funds

These are resources reserved for the operating cost of replacing things such as HVAC, pavement and other essential structures or systems that have an inevitably short lifespan. On numerous deals, replacement funds are instituted with the help of a qualified engineer that conducts the PCA (property condition assessment) on the Florida commercial real estate property. The sum of the funds required is normally ascertained based on the engineer's estimation of the major systems' remaining life.

Know that these operating costs do not include current expenses like managerial fees and upkeep expenditure. You need to factor in such overheads, as well as the expected money flow, when mulling over the total cost of the Florida commercial real estate property. After you've determined the amount of your estimated outlay, it's now time to review your financing options.

Seeing as these overheads may seem heavy on the pocket, you would probably want to be familiar with your funding options. Your financing alternatives typically include business partners, investors, your personal funds, bank loans, and financial assistance from other commercial real estate properties or investments.

With a good credit record and a minimum of 10-20% down payment, you should be capable of securing some type of financing. Your company's present bank is a good place to start given that you already have a relationship with them. If you wish to find better options and more cutthroat rates, consider going to commercial brokerage companies that specialize in matching up commercial lenders with prospective buyers of Florida commercial real estate properties.




http://commercial-realestate-florida.xon.us -- Florida Commercial Real Estate

Vanessa A. Doctor from Jump2Top - SEO Company

วันจันทร์ที่ 1 พฤศจิกายน พ.ศ. 2553

Speed-the-Plow at the Barrymore Theater

We left the Barrymore Theater last Friday evening with a renewed appreciation for David Mamet, but with growing doubts about straight theater on Broadway.

Speed-the-Plow (written in 1988) is one of two Mamet plays currently on Broadway. The other is American Buffalo (written in 1976); each play deals with betrayal of a business partner and a deal that goes bad. Speed-the-Plow is a compact and extremely fast-paced play, three acts without an intermission. Even though our show started ten minutes late (at 8:10 p.m.), its three actors were taking their bows before 9:30 p.m. In fact, Speed-the-Plow is short enough that the producers should have considered making it the first part of a double bill with Mamet's one-act play Bobby Gould in Hell, based on one of the three characters in Speed-the-Plow. We would have liked to have seen it.

David Mamet plays generally leave you with a sinking feeling in the pit of your stomach, so we knew the high spirits in the first act were too good to be true. The first character we meet, Bobby Gould (Jeremy Piven; his picture here is from a movie role he had several years ago), is a Hollywood producer whose job is to identify film projects that will make money, regardless of artistic merit or social value. He's doing well enough to have authority to green-light film projects with budgets under $10 million, but not well enough, apparently, to have a decent office.

Into his office roars Bobby's old friend Charlie Fox (Raul Esperanza), a lower-ranking producer at the same studio, who has, in a manner of speaking, just won the lottery. One of Hollywood's biggest action stars has just read a script Charlie gave him (for a cliche of a prison buddy movie), loved it, and told Charlie he wants to do it with Charlie and his studio. Testosterone struts all over the stage as the two plan to present Charlie's coup to the boss and fantasize about how rich the producing team of Fox and Gould is going to be.

Trouble enters when Bobby calls in his temporary secretary, Karen (Elisabeth Moss) to get them coffee and a lunch reservation. Bobby and Charlie brag to her about how they find projects like the prison film that will put butts in the seats, and how they give the thumbs-down to movie proposals based on artsy books like one that his boss, the head of the studio, has just agreed to give a "courtesy read."

The book, "The Bridge," is in fact a pretentious, oqaque, philosophical novel about radiation and the end of the world. (We know it's unreadable because Charlie and Bobby read passages from time to time; one thinks of Thomas Pynchon.) Bobby and his boss both know that it has no potential as a movie. Looking for a pretext to get Karen into bed, Bobby passes off the job of reading this ghastly abomination to Karen and asks her to bring him a review at his apartment that evening. He fails to anticipate (as the audience does) that she will fall under the book's spell and use her sexual power to persuade him to recommend "The Bridge" to the studio head instead of the sure-hit prison buddy movie.

I suppose Speed-the-Plow is hard to act. I suppose any David Mamet play is hard to act. Mamet doesn't expect actors in his plays to take turns speaking their lines; in Mamet-speak, characters are constantly interrupting each other, speaking in sentence fragments, and talking at the same time -- much like real-life conversation.

Unfortunately these actors, especially Jeremy Piven and Elisabeth Moss, don't quite get it down. They can't seem to get past the notion that they shouldn't trample on one other's lines, even though that's just what Mamet intended them to do. The result is dialogue that's ever so slightly choppy.

A big problem, we think, is television. The program indicates that Jeremy Piven's resume is mostly in television and the movies, even though his pedigree is in stage acting (here's a good piece on Piven in the N.Y. Times); currently, it seems, he's in an HBO show called Entourage (we'd never heard of it), while Elisabeth Moss is apparently in another cable TV show called Mad Men (we hadn't heard of it, either). Not surprisingly, Piven and Moss act like television actors, going for cheap laughs, yelling their lines instead of projecting them, content to be johnny-one-notes, playing to the camera instead of the theater audience. (See this post on why Emsworth doesn't watch television.) Sadly, the audience at our show seemed to like them that way.

Not so with Raul Esparza, a fine actor who shows considerable acting range even within the confines of so manic a character as Charlie Fox. This was the second time we've seen Esparza, who played Lenny in a revival of Harold Pinter's nightmarish The Homecoming that we saw last winter; we liked him even better this time. We were grateful for this chance; we don't get to Broadway often enough to be able to see its best actors in multiple roles.

Fortunately, the play's strong enough to compensate for the shortcomings of this cast. For as long as Emsworth can remember, people have pretended to despise Hollywood's commercialism and its unwillingness to make "meaningful" movies. None of this hypocrisy for Mamet! Who else would have the nerve to write a play in which a character is presented with a choice between a commercial hit and a "art" film -- and in which the moral choice is the commercial hit? Or in which the character who champions the "art film" turns out to be the real "whore"? There's more substance in Spiderman than in a dozen critically praised independent "art" films that we've long since forgotten.

In Speed-the-Play, Bobby and Charlie spend a good of time calling themselves "whores" for commercial Hollywood, reflecting the ambivalence of American society toward capitalism. David Mamet, we think, is not so ambivalent; the published edition of the play begins with a quotation from Thackeray's novel Pendennis: "Which is the most reasonable, and does his duty best: he who stands aloof from the struggle of life, calmly contemplating it, or he who descends to the ground, and takes his part in the contest?" Bobby and Charlie weren't giving themselves enough credit.

Twice during the play Jeremy Piven, as Bobby Gould, turned to the audience to advise us that "there are no mavericks" -- a topical reference to the Republican national ticket and Tuesday's election day. He got his laugh each time (it wasn't especially funny), but at the expense of the play's momentum.

What does "Speed-the-Plow" refer to? There's an explanation from David Mamet himself in the Wikipedia entry for the play...

UPDATE (January 15, 2009): By the unlikeliest of chances (we never, ever watch morning TV), our television came on this morning just as Diane Sawyer of Good Morning America was announcing her next guest, which happened to be Jeremy Piven. Sawyer had Piven on to cross-examine him about his deserting this production of Speed the Plow several weeks ago, with a couple months to go in the run. Piven's people had claimed he was suffering from mercury poisoning from a constant diet of fish and was unable to go on with the show; to our surprise, his departure got publicity not only in the New York tabloids but also in the national press.

Sawyer pointed out to Piven (a) that several medical experts she had consulted found it unlikely that he would suffer any noticeable impairments from the levels of mercury reported, (b) that it was widely rumored that Piven's real problem was late-night partying, and (c) that none of the producers or investors in the show (whose fragile profitability was destroyed when a replacement had to be sought) believed Piven's story for a minute.

But Piven stuck to his guns and said that his "illness" had frustrated a lifelong dream to perform Mamet on Broadway. Like a well-coached politician charged with scandal, he told Sawyer that he'd been frustrated that he hadn't been able to get his story across till now. He warned the audience earnestly about the dangers of eating fish. Uh-huh.

William H. Macy, an actor we greatly admire, has now taken Piven's place in the cast. Wish we'd seen him instead of Piven!




http://emsworth.wordpress.com