18 October 2010: Morning By The Morning News — 18 Oct 2010 It's time to ruin the miners story with reports that they're charging up to $25K--and as little as $40--for interviews. How a crew nursed its 1945 B-29 back to health to tour air shows--30-minute rides start at $595. When a Queens juror blogs, the court investigates, law professors deliberate. From the attic: Gary Jones is an alternate juror; Matthew Baldwin serves twice in two years. Mexico watches California's pot vote--some wonder if it's the gateway to legalization and if the cartels will suffer. From exposing immigrant mistreatment to debunking vitamin myths, John Ionnidis is on a mission to reveal shady science. Canon debuts document system that refuses to print documents if they contain specific keywords. HIV case shuts down five porn studios. Op: Blame robots and the rise of efficiency for unemployment. With corporations now able to finance support and attack ads on candidates, it's like 1972 all over again. Watch: TMN's Paul Ford on The Big Web Show. Linguists find the King James Bible isn't so influential after all--it spawned only 257 phrases. Simon Schama investigates five centuries of artistic obsession with taxidermy. New survey questions the "natural selection" theory of sex differences and relationships.