Feeds:
Posts
Comments

Deck Chairs

Oh, no … say it isn’t so! My favorite local newspaper, the San Francisco Chronicle, is on the ropes.

According to the Hearst Corporation, the Chron lost $50 million last year, and if the company can’t make major cutbacks “within weeks … it will be forced to sell or close the newspaper.”

Of course, I guess I should have seen it coming. After all, plenty of other newspapers are falling by the wayside … most recently, the Philadelphia Inquirer, Baltimore Register, Journal Register chain and the Tucson Citizen. And then the Chronicle‘s management appears to have wasted the past 6-12 months fiddling with fonts and negotiating a 15-year contract for a new printing plant … otherwise known as rearranging deck chairs on the Titanic.

Even if the Chronicle survives, it will be in a significantly reduced form with a decimated reporting staff. Either way, I will miss my daily dose of Chron.

Linking and sharing

As I work on my computer and listen to music on songza.com, I take a moment to read an LA Times article on musician J.J. Cale. Apparently he’s been a source of inspiration for a number of well-known rock ‘n’ rollers, including Eric Clapton … but here’s what I’m wondering: Why doesn’t the LA Times include a link to one of his songs along with the article? Seems like a pretty simple and pretty obvious thing to do … if they want to make their website more useful.

And it’s not like there aren’t plenty of links available … they’re just a Google search away, after all. Really, would it be that hard to include a link to the guy’s web site?

If newspapers want to compete online, they’ve got to pay attention this kind of stuff. It’s not just about “telling” anymore … it’s also about linking and sharing.

P.S. Here’s one more link to a 2004 NPR interview with Cale.

A Grandin suprise

Reading a Philly Inquirer article about Temple Grandin this morning reminded me of my own favorite Temple Grandin story.

Grandin, who is autistic, is a professor of animal science at Colorado State University and noted livestock industry consultant. She is also the author of several books on livestock handling, animal welfare and autism, and an autism advocate. I first met Grandin in the mid-’80s, when she was beginning to become known in the livestock industry.

It was the summer of 1987, as I recall, and I working at the Livestock Industry Congress, an annual conference put on by my employer, Livestock Marketing Association. I’d helped develop the conference program and recruited most of the speakers, including Temple Grandin, who was scheduled to speak on livestock handling, and Ellen Haas, then executive director of Public Voice for Food and Health Policy, representing consumer concerns.

It was an ambitious program for its target audience of leaders in the livestock and meat industry, most of whom had little awareness of (or interest in) the budding animal welfare and consumer movements.

The late Orville Sweet, then president of the National Pork Producers Association, opened the program by bringing out two big cartons full of postcards proclaiming bacon and eggs as the “breakfast of cruelty.” The postcards, all sent to the NPPA, were part of a campaign against factory farming organized by PETA (People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals). PETA had also helped organize the animal rights protest that was going on outside the conference hall that morning.

Haas and Grandin were up next, with Haas speaking first. She was interrupted almost immediately by an animal rights protester who marched up to the stage, shouting, and took over the microphone. After a couple minutes, someone thought to turn off the microphone, and an security guard asked the protester to leave. She did, and Haas resumed her talk.

Then it was Grandin’s turn to speak. Instead of stepping up to the microphone, she strode over to the cartons of postcards, still sitting at the side of the stage, grabbed one and upended it while turning toward the audience. Postcards spewed in an arc across the stage, some showering over the edge to land at the feet of the people in the front row. No one moved. All eyes were on Grandin, astonished, wondering what she’d do next.

What she did was proceed to tell the group, in no uncertain terms, that they needed to clean up their act when it came to livestock handling and production — or they could expect to see a lot more animal rights protests. I like to think that speech helped launch her career.

Afterewards, some conference attendees told me they thought we’d choreographed the whole thing just to get their attention. I didn’t need to choreograph it … not with Grandin as a speaker.

Now, Grandin’s story is headed for a larger stage. HBO is making a movie about her, starring one of my favorite actresses, Claire Danes. I can’t wait.

Tags: Temple Grandin, animal welfare, livestock industry, HBO, LMA

Teacher’s nightmare

I’m having that dream again, the one where I’m rushing around campus after my morning class, talking to students and colleagues and such, when I realize I’ve totally forgotten about my second class, the one that’s at noon.

Of course, it’s mid-afternoon now so it’s too late. And I realize I’ve stood up that whole class of students not just once but twice … because it’s my second day of classes, and I realize I forgot them on the first day of classes too. (What happened to my iCal alarm?)

I look around for a place to set down my bookbag and laptop so I can email my forgotten students to apologize. In this class, we are supposed to produce a play, and I fret that we are now so far behind schedule that we’ll never catch up. Worry, worry.

Too many people, no place for me to sit. I wander the halls, wondering if I should fess up to my department head, or just to my students. Wait a minute … maybe my students have already complained to my department about my absence … why, of course, they must have! I head back to the office. But why didn’t one of them email me? Worry, worry.

Then I wake up. And I realize four things: 1) My second class doesn’t start until tomorrow; 2) my first class is fully online and has no on-campus meetings; 3) I do not teach in the theater department or produce plays; and 4) I’ve had this dream before. Whoa!

Yes, it is the teacher’s nightmare … variation #32, I think … and I am glad to be awake and over it. Thank goodness tomorrow is another day.

So long

We all breathed a sigh of relief when we saw …

… get on that helicopter and fly away.

He’s lucky it was a polite group and he didn’t get a more appropriate farewell salute.

Words fail

Watching the inauguration with friends, I am …

Proud

Relieved

Teary-eyed

Heartened

Grinning

Glad

Hopeful

“Picking out political buzzwords from 2008 is like shooting moose in a pigpen,” say Mark Leibovich and Grant Barrett, authors of The Buzzwords of 2008.

They note, for example, that “the lifespan of Hillary Clinton’s campaign ‘meta-narrative’ could be charted entirely in buzzwords and catch-phrases — ‘inevitability’ to ‘Clinton fatigue’ to ‘Obamamania’ to ‘he can’t win’ to ‘team of rivals.’

What really makes this New York Times piece work are the illustrations — the font and graphics created by Jessica Hische. They’re fabulous.

My favorites: Greyjing, recessionista, edupunk, Plutoid and TBTF (“Too Big To Fail,” replete with cracks). Which ones do you like best?

Tags: nytimes, buzzwords, graphics, typeface, design, slang

Posted from Diigo. The rest of my favorite links are here.

Follow

Get every new post delivered to your Inbox.