Pube Juice

This is kind of dumb but for some reason, Shea and I were absolutely killing ourselves reading these out loud tonight!

Five Differences Between Christmas Concerts For Pace and The Elementary School-Aged Me

Pace had his first Christmas concert (actually “concerts” – see #5 below) today. That got me thinking about the ways they’ve changed since I was a kid.

[Edit: Someone pointed out many of the differences are as much about rural vs. urban approaches as generational which is probably true.]

  1. First off, when I was a kid, we actually *had* Christmas concerts. Pace had a “Holiday Celebration” or some such word mush.
  2. Pace’s had a whole lot more educational content than I remember my own long-ago Christmas concerts having. With a theme of “Christmas Around The World”, we got narrations about Christmas traditions for Jewish people, Africans, Germans, Chinese and maybe 1-2 other cultures/countries. Mine might have had an abridged version of “The Night Before Christmas” or the story of “The Babe in the Manger” (definitely *not* educational!).
  3. Not a single Christmas carol, not even a secular one, or even one that mentioned Santa. (I mean, wouldn’t “Let It Snow” work?). They did, however, have a song about how German people put pickles in their Christmas Trees which almost made up for it.
  4. All classes from K-8 were on the stage at the same time for the whole half hour production. Back in my day, the classes got marched up from the front rows of the school gym (uphill both ways through six feet of snow of course!), one at a time, to do their song.
  5. They do two performances in the city – one in the afternoon and one in the early evening. My memory is that we only did an afternoon concert when I was a kid but I may be mis-remembering that.

    Extra ideas after discussing with a co-worker who spent many years in a small town school library:

  6. Length.  Pace’s was half an hour from start to finish.  Small town Christmas concerts would go on for at least an hour and often a couple hours.
  7. They played “O Canada” as part of the program (and sometimes even “God Save the Queen”) in small town Christmas concerts.
  8. In Regina, they had a single lapel mic the kids on stage had to pass back and forth when doing their narration.  In a small town, my memory was that kids would have to go up to a podium with a handheld mic on it at the side of the stage.

@ryanMeili Monday – Who’s Winning The #skndpldr $$$ Race With Individual Support Only?

At the start of the #skndpldr race, there was a bit of attention when one candidate (I think it was Erin Weir?) proposed that if elected leader, he would work to ban corporate and union donations from the political process (although also declining to follow this guideline for the Sask NDP leadership race pointing out that this would only be fair if all candidates agreed to a similar restriction.)

With the release of the November fundraising totals today, I thought it might be fun to do a thought experiment to see where things would stand if the candidates had agreed to forego corporate, union and other organizational support in favour of *only* accepting donations from individuals.

(Of course, we have no way of knowing how that may have shifted their strategies or fundraising approaches but it’s still enlightening in that it shows a clear division between the two candidates who are very focused on getting funding mostly from individuals and two – including Weir – who are getting a much larger percentage of their support from organizations.)

Here’s how the candidates rank for total fundraising so far (with what I calculate their total would be if you remove all obvious corporate, organizational and union donations in brackets.)

Of course, I can’t account for any organization which gave less than $250 and I’m also whipping this off pretty quickly – just before heading out to a union meeting ironically – so there may be errors:

Ryan Meili – $58, 151.44 ($50, 745.19) which means Ryan gets about 87% of his funding from individuals.

Trent Wotherspoon – $56,202.88 ($36,614.88) which means Trent gets 65% of his funding from individuals.

Cam Broten – $40,007.89 ($36507.89) which means Cam gets 91% of his funding from individuals.

Erin Weir – $33, 623.64 ($22,728.89) which means Erin gets 68% of his funding from individuals.

If I’ve got my math right (and as an English major, I make a mostly okay mathematician), any surprises?

  • Ryan’s still in the overall lead if you take out donations from institutional supporters while, all of a sudden, Trent and Cam are neck and neck in second place in terms of money raised.
  • I would’ve thought Erin would’ve easily had the most support from institutional supporters given his strong union ties but Trent actually relies on institutional donors slightly more.
  • I was a bit surprised to see Cam narrowly beating out Ryan in the percentage of donations from individuals – but I suspect Ryan would take that trade-off if it means he’s raised $14 000 more than Cam! ;-).

Anything else catch your eye?

I Am (Not) Adam Lanza’s Mother

This blog post by the mother of a mentally-ill son, posted in the wake of the Connecticut shootings, was making the viral rounds.  Although I found it an interesting piece of writing with potentially some good points being made about the stigma of mental illness and the struggles of families trying to deal with it, there was something about the article that also really bugged me.  This response from another blogger captured many of the misgivings I had about the original piece.

Saturday Snap – Holiday Concert

Pace saw a YouTube video of the song he’s doing for his school Christmas holiday concert and decided he needed to jazz up his look too!

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Friday Fun Link – The Outdoor Coed Topless Pulp Fiction Appreciation Society

You know you’re old and married when you’re more interested in what books they’re reading than the other “boo” word that’s being featured in these photos!  😉

Sometimes I Really Miss Calgary

Like when I read articles like this one where I know the business and most people in the article including Greg and Simone.

Side note – I’ve long advocated that libraries should integrate the same type of question that Pages bookstore asks all their new applicants.

Happy 12/12/12

I’m posting this on 12/12/12 at 12:12pm (okay, I’m jiggering the time stamp so it appears like I posted it on 12/12/12 at 12:12pm.)

(How’d I miss such an obvious post for today?)

 

10 Things I’ve Seen on Facebook

I’m still continually amazed at Facebook as a communication tool and especially the varied ways that people use it, especially to share the most intimate details of their lives. (Is privacy dead?)

Here are a few of the things I’ve personally witnessed that I found either unique and/or “Wow, I can’t believe they posted that!”…

  1. A family friend posts simply “It’s a plus!” to announce her pregnancy.
  2. Numerous separations and divorces of varying degrees of animosity – from the simple “John’s relationship status is now single” to knock-down, drag-out comment brawls between the unhappy couple.
  3. A co-worker announced that she’d been diagnosed with cancer and has since provided regular updates including some that are quite hilarious (“I never realised it but chemotherapy makes *all* your hair fall out. Best Brazilian ever!”)
  4. Along the same line, a classmate at Western happily posts a naked photo of herself as her profile pic. Not sure if that was a statement of protest against Facebook’s restrictions on nudity, an artistic statement or an oops!
  5. Somebody posted a picture of what they had for lunch (just seeing if you’re still paying attention!)
  6. Another classmate who passed away quite suddenly but his profile page remains up (and occasionally active with people posting remembrances although less-so every year) to this day.
  7. The post that inspired this list. There’s a guy I don’t even know but who I added as a friend when I first joined in 2006 while in library school back when FB was only open to people with an .edu address. I was desperate to find people I had some connection with since many of my real-life friends weren’t on the site and I ended up adding anyone I could find from Saskatchewan. This guy was from Oxbow (where my mom’s family is from), was studying in the US (Harvard I think!) and had political views very different than mine. But I added him and have occasionally seen him cross my news feed – including just today where I realised he’s had a really bad accident and is now in a coma, having had a couple different surgeries and whatnot. Scary, sad stuff.
  8. Saw somebody do the infamous “First day back at work and boy does it suck!” post and they’re still employed at the same place.
  9. Saw somebody else doing a post about how little work they were doing and they’re no longer employed at the same place!
  10. To tie it full circle to #1, another former classmate posted the following to let all their friends (and apparently her husband?) know they were pregnant: “Hey Paul S., You’re going to be a dad! Hey, posting stuff like this is what Facebook is for, right?”

@ryanMeili Monday – #skndpldr Halfway Point Review

The #skndpldr contest kicked off in September and ends in March which means that early-to-mid-December is basically the halfway point of the campaign for all of them.  Since I’m big on celebrating milestones, I thought I’d take a moment to recognize some of the funniest, most memorable surprising and appreciated moments each has had so far as well as share how I think they rank so far – both among the voting members and also in my personal opinion.

Cam Broten
Biggest Surprise –  Given how glitzy Trent’s launch was and how many miles Trent put on early (which I thought would indicate fundraising to match), I was a bit surprised that it was Cam who had the biggest fundraising total in the first month (of course, that also means that his campaign posting the biggest drop-off to the second month was an even bigger surprise.)

A Funny Moment – During the Regina debate, there was a question about poverty and without a doubt, Ryan owns this issue, given his day-to-day work and the fact that he lives in Saskatoon’s inner-city.  But that didn’t stop Cam from trying to (to my ears) “out-poor” Ryan with a weird anecdote about how he drives past prostitutes at the end of his driveway when he gets home from work every day. 

This one’s funnier – the face Cam’s pulling in a Saskatoon Star-Phoenix article about the Saskatoon debate.

A Memorable Moment – The recent endorsement by Cathy Sproule now means that Cam has two in-caucus endorsers (Cathy & Danielle Chartier) and Trent has one (Warren McCall) with four remaining undeclared.

An Appreciated Moment –
After the first financial results were released, I was having trouble figuring out how Cam’s campaign could claim the most raised by donors under $250 when those numbers aren’t released.  They pointed out that it was easy – “subtraction”.  (Okay, they didn’t word it so abruptly!)

Candidate Rank
– 2 (tie)

Candidate Rank (personal opinion)
-4 (I’ve referred to it before on this blog but Cam is the candidate I’m least familiar with so that hurts how I rate him personally rather than how I think he’s doing generally.

Ryan Meili
Biggest Surprise –  The UFCW endorsement was huge given that Ryan didn’t get a lot of union support in 2009 and in this campaign, he talks frankly about how unions, like the NDP, need a real period of self-assessment

A Funny Moment –
The Duck question on the Reddit AMA

A Memorable Moment –
I’ll steal one from a first-time volunteer who came to one of our Regina events.  “Why’d you decide to support Ryan?” I asked.  “I was at the Regina debate and when he said, “Am I the person to lead this party? You bet I am!’, he was the only one I heard say that and it just resonated with me.” 

An Appreciated Moment –
I got a nice phone call from Ryan during a particularly stressful moment.

Candidate Rank
(my perception) – 2 (tie)

Candidate Rank (personal opinion) – 1

Erin Weir
Biggest Surprise –  As arguably the least well-positioned candidate at the start of the race (not a sitting MLA, not a previous leadership candidate), Erin has tenaciously hung on and is still right in the mix of things

A Funny Moment – 
In the first Regina debate, all the other candidates got asked which former leader they resembled/admired.  But somehow, Erin didn’t get asked that question so he quipped “I want the other question.  I had a great answer prepared for it!” which brought the house down.

A Memorable Moment –
At one point, Chad Moats, who is on Erin’s social media team, got into a flame war on Twitter with Murray Mandryk of the Leader Post about how much coverage Erin was (or wasn’t) getting.  This led to another member of Team Weir recanting with the old line about “Don’t pick fights with people who buy their ink by the barrel!”

A Memorable Moment (corrected) – 
At one point, Chad Moats, who is on Erin’s social media team got into a gentlemanly discussion on Twitter with Murray Mandryk of the Leader Post about how Mandryk was spending an inordinate amount of time covering Brad Wall’s Movember moustache instead of covering important news like the Sask NDP leadership campaign.  The bon mots they exchanged were of varying hilarity, capped by a member of Team Weir withdrawing from the discussion with the old line about “Don’t pick fights with people who buy their ink by the barrel!”  (Completely separate but around the same time, Chad was also challenging people who expressed different views than him on Twitter to boxing matches in real life.  That had nothing to do with #skndpldr but was pretty entertaining too!)

An Appreciated Moment – There was recently a bit of drama on FB (when isn’t there?) and even though the issue was related to the Meili team and an oversight with a former volunteer, a member of Erin’s team very generously and professionally stepped in in defense of our (and by extension, all) campaign teams.

Candidate Rank
(my perception) – 4

Candidate Rank (personal opinion)
– 2 (tie)

Trent Wotherspoon
Biggest Surprise –  I guess I was surprised to see Trent running a deficit in the first month (which continues to this day.)  As someone (Stefani Langenegger?) observed on Twitter, the optics are poor when the Finance Critic for a party that’s already (wrongly) perceived as unable to balance the budget, is running a deficit.

A Funny Moment
– Trent went for a morning run and later tweeted how beautiful the “horror frost” was.  (As someone who mixes up my homonyms all the time too, I thought this was funny.  But at least he didn’t write another homonym for “hoar”!)

A Memorable Moment
–  His launch was a real “holy shit!” moment for me.  Glitzy, professional, packed to the rafters.  Really helped set a tone for his campaign right off the bat.

An Appreciated Moment – 
Had a chance to have a really in-depth conversation with one of Trent’s supporters at Coronation Park’s “US Election Viewing Party” which was quite enlightening.

Candidate Rank (my perception)
– 1 (although I’d say the line between Trent and Cam & Ryan who I have tied in second is a thin one.  And I don’t think Erin’s as far back as some might think either.)

Candidate Rank (personal opinion) – 2 (tie)