Henry Cragg’s Wonder People: “Starsky & Hutch Syndrome”

I digitized this from a VHS tape awhile back but don’t think I ever posted it (and when you watch it, you’ll see why!)

One of the many highlights of my 1995 semester exchange to York England while in undergrad was taking a Film Production class (which happened to be taught by a guy who worked on The Muppets – how cool is that?)

How the class worked was we all had to write a treatment for a short 5-7 minute film then the class voted on which ones to do and of the five or so selected, you could pick which one you wanted to work on.

Not surprisingly, I wrote a proposal for a film that would be a documentary exploring the rich culture and history of York’s pubs via a pub crawl. Also not surprisingly, my proposal didn’t make the cut. 😉

The treatment I ended up deciding to work on was called “Henry Cragg’s Wonder People”.

The clip below was a part of a larger series of vignettes which was supposed to be a sketch comedy show in the vein of Monty Python. We had a couple other segments – two pregnant women getting high and listening to the Beatles while philosophizing, two farmers in a pub (in a pub and I didn’t even get to work on that clip as an actor or a tech!) rambling back and forth and finally, a madcap monologue by an eccentric housewife (played by the woman whose proposal it was and easily the funniest, best acted, most professional of all the different segments.)

Our films were supposed to be 5-7 minutes but ours came out at 20 minutes.  In my self-assessment for the professor, I admitted we’d blown away the guideline but that I was also really impressed that we’d basically produced a full-length television program.

My acting was pretty bad (okay, really bad.  Okay, Nicolas Cage bad!) but, ever the techie, I loved going in the editing room and playing around with sound, graphics and other effects.  It’s not in the clip but I was particularly proud of creating an End Credits sequence with music, everybody’s names and roles they played and billed as a “Universe City” production (say it fast!) since this was very rudimentary technology compared to today when people are creating feature films on their MacBooks in their living rooms.

Anyhow, I should write more about my England exchange sometime.  Don’t tell Shea I said this but I think of it as the single best uninterrupted four month stretch of my entire life.  I was flush with class after a sweet summer job, I was in my fourth year of undergrad but taking classes that were 100-level introductory classes (which would still count for full credit back home), and I learned all kinds of new and interesting things…including what “flares” were! 😉

17 Misused and Made-Up Words That Make You Rage

I’m horrified to learn I’m guilty of using at least a couple of these on a regular basis.  I won’t tell you which ones but I will observe that it’s hot enough today that I could really go for some sherbert.  😉

Music Monday – “Joan went east/Then she went west/I stayed right here in the middle/That’s where I liked it the best”

This song will always remind me of high school but even after listening to this song hundreds of times in my life, it took this slowed down acoustic version to make me realise I’ve misheard the lyric I quoted in the title of this post as “Joe went east/she went west” as if the narrator was talking about all his closest friends moving away instead of one woman named Joan roaming across the country.  I like my version better!)

“Good Times” – Tom Cochrane

The Story Behind the Development of the First iPhone

This in-depth look at the behind-the-scenes developments that led to the creation of the first iPhone is filled with all kinds of stories of innovation on a tightrope.

It’s positively shocking how close the first iPhone launch (with a demo product that was apparently held together by duct tape and wishes!) came to being a disaster.  Or how different history might’ve been had that occurred.

Anyhow, after you read the article, watch the original iPhone launch with a whole new appreciation of what this meant at the time (and how far we’ve come in the six years since!)…

(via Reddit)

Saturday Snap – A Day in Saskatoon #yxe

Had to go to Saskatoon today for a board meeting for one of the organizations I’m involved with.

I arrived in Toon Town early so took a quick tour around, not having been there since March.  (Big advantage – no massive hangover today like the last time I was in Saskatoon!)  😉

I took my usual route down 8th Ave checking out which businesses and restaurants were new then turned on to Broadway Ave to go past the house where my sister used to live when she lived in Saskatoon.  

(I often feel like things work out for me so well in terms of timing of these things.  Her and her husband happened to live in Saskatoon at the same time I was doing some contract work for Sask Publishers Group members including a few that were in  Saskatoon so I had a place to stay that was convenient to Thistledown Press, the University and a few other clients.)  
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Stopped at the JS Wood Branch  of SPL to have a look at the library that, along with the Central Branch, are often my main stop when I’m in Saskatoon.

Then on to the board meeting after a winding drive through downtown, again to see what was new.

Last night, while Googling to get directions to our meeting location, I realised it was in “Wolf Willow”, a co-housing building.  I wasn’t familiar with this type of living arrangement but further reading revealed that co-housing originated in Denmark 50 years ago and was brought to North America in the late 1980’s.  Co-housing was a similar to a housing cooperative but even more integrated with residents owning their own condo-style living spaces (800-1200 sq ft) but completely sharing all common spaces as an extension of their own private space.

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At the end of our meeting, the board member who lived in the complex, along with his wife, gave us a tour and it was fascinating to see a mode of living that’s so unique (it’s the only co-housing development in Saskatchewan and one of only a handful in Canada.)

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One of the biggest advantages is that, instead of everyone needing to own certain items when they have an individual dwelling, those kinds of items can be “pooled” in the common areas by owners in a co-housing situation.  They had a beautiful second floor deck with an assortment of different types of patio furniture, a large kitchen/dining/sitting area (where we had our meeting), a music room, a crafting room, and even a workshop that was filled with everything you’d need for anything from woodworking to welding!

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There was an evening celebration for two retiring board members but I was anxious to get home so took a pass on that (I may regret that decision when I hear about the food at the next board meeting!)

Since I was in the neighbourhood, I thought I’d pop by and see Saskatoon’s newest library and see how it compared to Regina’s newest library.  (I prefer RPL’s but I’m biased!) 😉

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Then happened to bump into two Ryan Meili supporters carrying their groceries out of the Good Food Junction co-operative in Station 20 West.  Had a nice chat with them then decided to pop in there as well since I’d never been (contrary to the store’s name, the only thing I bought was a soda for the road home!) 😉

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About to head out of town, I loaded the UrbanSpoon app to look for a restaurant that was (preferably) cheap, quick, on my way out of town and something I rarely get in Regina.  Hit the jackpot with a place called Lebanese Kitchen.  It’s been there for three years but is a block off 8th and I’d never heard of it before.

Now, I’ve spent years trying to find a chicken schwarma that compared to the ones I used to have as a weekly Friday ritual at Falafel King when I worked in Calgary.  I’ve tried them in Regina, Vancouver, Kelowna, Toronto, Montreal and never found one that was as good as the ones I remembered in Calgary.  This place comes *really* close though – so close I almost went back and ordered another one just to take home for tomorrow. (And as I type this, am really regretting that I didn’t!)   

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Final stop on the way out of town – gotta check out McNally Robinson Booksellers – one of my favourite bookstores ever.  Didn’t buy anything but my “To Read” list has grown by about another dozen titles.  (Lucky, I work in a library!)

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See you next time Saskatoon!

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Friday Fun Link – A Great Convocation Speech by Tim Minchin

God, I love Tim Minchin!  (Er, never mind that I said that given the topic of this post!) 😉

This convocation speech is especially great…

   

 

 

My One Month Anniversary at @officialrpl Regent Place Library – Top 10 Good Things About My New Position

It’s flown by but today marks one month since I started as the Branch Manager at RPL’s Regent Place Branch.

One word that keeps popping in to my head when I think about my new job is “comfortable”. What I mean by that is any new job, even one you want or are looking forward to, is going to have some butterflies. But I haven’t really felt that with this job and at least part of the reason why this may be occurred to me the other day. When I went back to library school, I think “Branch Head” was probably the library job I was most familiar with and also the most likely role I saw myself filling when I finished my Master’s.

It turned out to be a long and winding road to get there – rural branch supervisor, organization development specialist, business librarian, outreach & homebound services librarian – but now, here I am, seven years into my career as a librarian (seven years?!?) and I’m finally in the job that I thought would be where I was most likely to end up in the first place!

The timing of my move to this job feels right too – I’d been encouraged to apply for the Regent Branch Head position by a manager the last time it came open but didn’t feel the timing was right for a host of personal and professional reasons. Then, when my ODS position was eliminated and I had to bump to somewhere else at RPL, my union local inquired about whether I could bump into the RP Branch Head position. But unfortunately, it was a payband 10 position and I was (at the time) in a payband 9 position and even though both are librarian positions and I was qualified to be RP branch head (in all honesty, with my years of experience and public library background, more experienced than the person who was in the job), they wouldn’t allow me to “bump up”.

So anyhow, via a very circuitous route, I’ve ended up where fate may have put me a couple times before and it’s only been a month but so far, so good.

Here are some of my favourite things about my new branch…

  1. Regent was my home branch before I became an RPL employee and it remains the closest to our house. That means I can come home at lunch to see Shea and Sasha, something that wasn’t really an option when I worked downtown (this is also a nice parallel to my first librarian job in Weyburn when Pace was born and I also got to be home with the family every lunch hour).
  2. It’s the newest RPL branch having re-located just over a year ago so everything in it is basically brand spanking new while other branch heads spend time dealing with stuff like replacing carpet and crumbling stairs and layouts/shelving/designs from other eras. Meanwhile, RP incorporates a lot of modern library ideas including BISAC-based shelving for our non-fiction, lots of self-check machines, a video game collection which I believe is currently the only one in the entire RPL system and more.
  3. Selfishly, I’m lucky that someone else was responsible for doing all the “heavy lifting” of overseeing the transition from our old location to a temporary location to our current location and then, before I arrived, a decent amount of time passed while existing staff were able to “work out the kinks” in the new branch.
  4. I’ve got a number of new staff members – basically half my staff is new when you count myself, a couple new clerks I hired as my first duty as branch head, an LA who has been on sick leave but has just returned, not having worked a day in this new location plus a senior public service clerk who was transferred in a few months ago. Having a balance of experienced and new staff is great for being able to maintain the institutional memory and community connections but also brings in “fresh eyes” and new ideas about how we might do things.
  5. Although downtown Regina has lots of restaurants and shopping, the location of Central Library means there’s not a lot super-close if you want to “pop out” quickly for food or whatever (City Hall Cafeteria = hidden gem) – everything’s at least a couple blocks away (and more once you consider that many destinations are in the Cornwall Centre which you have to walk miles to get to places like The Dollar Store or Shoppers or Tim Hortons or the food court or whatever.) At Regent, we’re in a strip mall that includes a couple fast food places, a pharmacy plus there are lots of food and shopping options within a block or two.
  6. Regent not only has reserved parking but it has plug-in parking that is FREE for staff. (Compare that to the $60-$110 you might pay for an electrified parking spot downtown!)
  7. I can be home in five minutes if I drive and 20-30 minutes if I walk. That also means more time at home compared to when I took the bus downtown for work and have to allow half an hour or more for the commute each way.
  8. I’ve got a really great staff who are excellent at what they do.
  9. I’ve also got a really good manager which makes a huge difference. He was the Acting Branch Manager for a few months in between the departure of the previous branch head and my hiring which gives him an excellent familiarity with what’s going on at the branch.
  10. Again, a silly reason but being close to home means I’ll likely save a ton of cash, both because I won’t eat out 1-2 times a week like I might have when I worked downtown and I suspect even considering wear and tear, the cost of driving will be less than I was paying for a bus pass.

It’s not a perfect branch by any means (is there such a thing?) and there’s lots I’d have changed if I was designing it (and would still like to change now.) But overall, it’s been a great first month and I look forward to seeing what comes next!

Cabela’s Doing Customer Engagement Right

Went to check out Regina’s new Cabela’s store tonight and a good old Foursquare check-in provided the very cool tip that they have an actual archery shooting range on site for customers to try before they buy!

Bonus they had a smaller bow suitable for a small child to try (even if his dad wasn’t about to buy!)…

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The 2013/14 Season Begins Tonight

My picks for Conference Finalists: Detroit Red Wings vs. New York Islanders in the East and LA Kings vs. Minnesota Wild in the West which becomes NYI versus LA with the Kings winning.

Music Monday – Andino Suns – “Cantando el Pajaro”

One of the many highlights of the 2012 version of the Ryan Meili NDP Leadership campaign was an amazingly fun event that featured a great local Moose Jaw band by way of South America, Andino Suns.

If I was a bit more linguistically adept, I’d try to catch a few lyrics from this song to provide a pull quote for my Music Monday post title like I usually do.  But since I’m not, let’s just leave the name and title of this catchy tune instead, okay?    Si! 😉