Friday, January 8, 2010

Walking in Memphis on Elvis' 75th birthday: some Swedish and Icelandic treats to celebrate with

1993 Elvis Presley Stamp -Watercolor of Elvis by Mark Stutzmamn

As some of you who've been coming to this blog
for awhile know by now, after my family moved
from San Antonio, where my sister and I were
born and my mother grew-up, my family moved
to Memphis in 1965, where we lived for three
years, and where my youngest sister was born.
We moved to South Florida in July of 1968
just a few weeks after Dr. King was assassinated,
following the horrific aftermath in the city.

It was in Memphis specifically, and the Mid-South
in general, on our weekend family drives around
Tennessee, Arkansas and Mississippi -not always
so great in an un-air conditioned car with two
younger sisters!- where I first
developed my
deep and enduring love and preference
for many
things that still remain with me to this day:

the Mississippi River; rhythm 'n' blues;
Al Green;
The Andy Griffith Show; Dusty Springfield;
Petula Clark; St. Louis Cardinals baseball on
the radio in the summertime during their mid-60's
glory era; smoky sweet Memphis-style barbecue ribs;
cornbread, and, of course, The King -
Elvis.

To a devout
Elvis fan like me, who knows just
about everything there is to know about him,
the good and the bad, the best books ever written
on Elvis -by far- are Peter Guralnick's masterful
"Last Train to Memphis: The Rise of Elvis
Presley"
and the great follow-up, "Careless
Love: The Unmaking of Elvis Presley."

Each is written with honesty and empathy,
free of the judgmental cant and analysis that

doomed other books that purport to tell the
tale.


It was also while living in
The Mid-South,
that I first became greatly interested in the

American Civil War, following a summer
day-trip to Shiloh, the site of the bloody
April 1862 battle.

It was on that summer day-trip that I had
a
chance encounter with a VERY old man
on the battlefield itself.
A man whose own father had actually
fought
in the battle -and lived to tell
the tale!


For more info on
Shiloh, see
http://www.nps.gov/shil/

Spending a day there is an awesome and
eye-opening experience and really puts
things into their proper perspective,
just as my later trips to Gettysburg,
Harper's Ferry, Winchester,
Fredericksburg
and Spotsylvania
did as well, after I moved to the
D.C. area.


You'll recall that a few days ago I shared
video with you of
Yohanna singing
Don't Save It All For Christmas Day
at
En Sång För Hemlösa 2009 in
Stockholm and encouraged you all
to watch the entire TV program if
you could, because it was so well done.

Well, on what would be
Elvis' 75th
birthday I return to our talented friend
from Iceland and share a song that she
recorded last year called
Butterflies
and Elvis.

I'm choosing today to also write for the first
time here -though some of you know from
emails- about another young singer whom
I know you all have never heard of before,
but whose talent is so obvious that...
well, the first time I heard him, let's just say
that I was just thunderstruck.

Just like I was the first time I heard
Molly Sandén or Yohanna.
Obvious transcendent talent!

A friend in Europe has seen him on the
Idol Sweden program and she sent me
a video
of his audition in
Malmö in an
email last year that had the simple words,
"Must see!!!"
in the subject header
.

Wow! Was she ever right!

I'm talking about Calle Kristiansson,
a name you will be hearing a lot more
of in the future, because seeing and hearing
IS certainly believing.

-----
First, the original version of Mark Cohn's song
that you probably first heard sung by
Cher.



When the song was incorporated into the
1997 X-Files episode called The Post-Modern
Prometheus
, it instantly became my favorite
episode.

See video of it at
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3CKs8NjusTQ


----

Prepare yourself to be wowed and remember
in the future who first told you about a Swedish
singer named
Calle Kristiansson.
Me!


TV4.se
Calle Kristiansson - Walking in Memphis -
IDOL Sweden 2009,
auditions in Malmö


http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3CESHAeCxV4



-----

Calle Kristiansson - Walking in Memphis -
XL Live Expressen

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OQtKe9qQYH8



See also:
http://www.expressen.se/
and
http://www.youtube.com/ExpressenTV

-----

Yohanna -Butterflies and Elvis
from her Butterflies and Elvis CD



See also: http://www.youtube.com/TEAMYOHANNA
and http://teamyohanna.blogspot.com/
plus http://www.myspace.com/yohannamusic


Memphis Commercial Appeal
Bitter cold can’t keep these Elvis fans from his birthday party
By Michael Lollar
January 8, 2010
http://www.commercialappeal.com/news/2010/jan/08/bitter-cold-cant-keep-these-elvis-fans-his-birthda/

Wednesday, January 6, 2010

WSJ shows James Notter remains part of the accountability problem in Broward County, not part of the solution. Robbing Special-Ed funds from kids!

My comments follow the story.
-----

Wall Street Journal
Special-Ed Funds Redirected

School Districts Shift Millions of Dollars to General Needs After Getting Stimulus Cash

By Anne Marie Chaker
January 6, 2010

Florida's Broward County Public Schools saved as many as 900 jobs this school year. Nevada's Clark County School District just added more math and tutoring programs. And in Connecticut's Bloomfield Public Schools, eight elementary- and middle-school teachers were spared from layoffs.

These cash-strapped districts covered the costs using a boost in funding intended for special education, drawing an outcry from parents and advocates of special-needs children.-----

Read the rest of the story at:
http://online.wsj.com/article/SB126274303415617219.html

Reader comments at:
http://online.wsj.com/article/SB126274303415617219.html#articleTabs%3Dcomments

-----
This led to this blog posting:
Sun-Sentinel Schools blog
Wall Street Journal: School districts, including Broward, redirecting special ed money
by Kathy Bushouse
January 6, 2010
http://weblogs.sun-sentinel.com/educationblog/2010/01/wall_street_journal_school_dis.html

-----

Seriously, what does it show about the generally lackluster
quality of the majority
of South Florida's print/electronic
media that they don't even pick-up
on this story from
the third page of the Wall Street Journal 'till nearly
5 p.m.?

Exactly.


At least the Sun-Sentinel's Kathy Bushouse was
paying enough attention
to mention it in their blog,
so what's everyone else's excuse?


And in case it had escaped your notice of late,
in the year 2010,
the Miami Herald STILL lacks
an Education blog.

http://www.miamiherald.com/opinion/blogs/

Guess they were too busy interviewing people about
the weather,
and what was happening to the invasive
iguanas, to see a story
that speaks volumes about the
consistently piss-poor judgment
of people in power
here.
Say hello again to James Notter, another big
reason why large
dynamic companies consciously
choose
NOT to relocate to Broward County.

Yes, the sad, tragic but oh-so logical consequences
of having
someone like him in charge are all around us.

So what do you think Notter is telling parents of
affected kids,
"Take one for the team?"

As a well-informed person wrote me earlier this evening
about this
matter, almost incredulously:
Do you know how many times they’ve told us
they’ve subsidized
special ed from the general fund?
This is really outrageous.


Outrageous sure, but if nobody else knows about
it because the press has falling iguanas on the brain...
Aye, there's the rub.

A must-read at Eye on Miami blog: Trouble growing at Fairchild Tropical Botanic Garden

So, should I be surprised that this particular affair
hasn't been mentioned anywhere in South Florida
media circles?

Gimleteye's
piece at Eye on Miami below is the
only
public account I've seen or heard about.

Whatever the true facts are here, and I have no idea

what they are, they deserve a full public airing,
especially if someone is being made a scapegoat by
one of the few genuine institutions in South Florida.

Fairchild Tropical Botanic Garden was one of
my
mother's favorite places in all of South Florida
when
I was growing-up in South Florida in the late
'60's
thru the '70's, despite the fact that my family
lived-up in
North Miami Beach. I'd guess that
she visited there, as well as Matheson Hammock,
almost as often as I
was down at the Orange Bowl
for
Dolphin, Hurricane and Toros (soccer)
ballgames, which was well over
150 before I left
for
IU in August of '79.

Me, not so much into the whole Botany thing!


-----
Eye on Miami blog
http://eyeonmiami.blogspot.com/

Trouble growing at Fairchild Tropical
Botanic
Garden ... by gimleteye
January 4, 2010
http://eyeonmiami.blogspot.com/2010/01/trouble-growing-at-fairchild-tropical.html

-----------
Miami Herald
Making nature fashionable and chic
November 26, 2009
By Paradise Afshar

When student Krystal Gonzalez creates her own clothes, the closest she gets to nature is using fabric made of cotton. But for the past two weeks she has been working with leaves, seeds and flowers to create eco-friendly designs.

Making outfits out of plants was all part of the Fairchild Challenge Botanical Fashion Show. The Fairchild Challenge is a program that allows students to explore nature by doing research and working on projects.

Students strive to earn points toward the Fairchild Challenge award with top schools earning an additional $250-$1,000 for environmental programs at their schools.

"It was very difficult. The flowers would wilt up in two days," said Krystal, 18, of Pinecrest, who calls designing clothes a hobby. "I just do it for fun."

The theme of Saturday's fashion show was Miami Chic. Students from 48 middle and high schools in Miami-Dade and Broward counties participated.

Some of the criteria that judges used to rate the outfits included knowing the scientific and common name of the plants, having less than half the outfit consist of flowers and making sure all the visible parts were made from plants.

Krystal, a senior at Our Lady of Lourdes in Kendall, designed more formal clothes.

She made an off-the-shoulder dress and tuxedo from the leaves of croton, various palm trees, roses, daisies and other materials.

"I had to find the leaves randomly," said Krystal, who found most of what she used in her backyard.

She relied a lot on the colorful croton, a popular plant used in the competition, with its green, red, yellow and orange leaves.

"I am extremely proud of everyone -- the designers and the models who put it all together this past week," said Marguerite Graham, a biology teacher at Gulliver Preparatory School in Pinecrest. "They put a lot of work in."

A panel of 16 judges will vote on the entries, with scores being announced next week via e-mail to the schools.

"They don't know what everyone else is getting, we send scores to teachers at the school and they are tabulated and the winner is announced at the award ceremony in May," said Scott Sasich, communications manager for the Fairchild Challenge.

Lauren Elliott and Carly Bruening, seniors at South Plantation High who are botany students in the school's environmental science magnet program, focused on a laid-back South Florida style. They designed a sundress for girls and board shorts and a T-shirt for guys.

"I think we could win," said Carly, 17, of Sunrise. "We kept it simple."

They used leaves from the elephant ear tree for the T-shirt plus leaves from the croton plant and autograph tree (it gets its name because people can write messages on the leaves) for the dress, among other materials.

"I think it's fun," said Emily, 17, of Sunrise, who modeled the clothes. She said that she can now name the proper and common names of the plants that were used.

"It enriches their curriculum," said Pamela Krauss, a botany teacher at South Plantation. "We totally enjoyed it."

While Emily had a team of people working on her dress, David Dugard, a junior at Christopher Columbus High School, designed his short and T-shirt combination on his own.

"It took two days, I was just surprised about how fast [the leaves] die," said David, 16 of Homestead. "It was an experience."

Spectators like Trish Baron who were watching the event, were impressed by the students' creativity.

"It was really interesting," Baron, a Weston resident, said. "They all did a wonderful job."

-----
Miami Herald
FAIRCHILD CHALLENGE
RISING TO THE CHALLENGE
By Christina Mayo, Special to The Miami Herald
November 12, 2009

With arms waving to mimic the grasses of the Everglades, almost 250 middle-school students and their teachers across the county began the Fairchild Challenge at Palmetto High School in Pinecrest.

Many came dressed for the challenge -- as turtles, egrets, tourists, panthers and alligators.

After all, it was The Everglades: River of Grass contest hosted by Fairchild Tropical Botanic Garden in Coral Gables.

Participants from 33 schools vied to perform the best original skits of rap, spoken word and music.

This year more points were given for audience participation, so there was an enthusiastic entourage of teachers, families and friends.

Students from Arvida Middle School in Kendall were the first to go on stage.

They quickly had the audience moving to this chant: "The Everglades suffers and you still don't care? Wave your hands in the air."

"This is our third year in the Challenge," said Arvida's drama teacher, Lesley HoSang. "It's the first year we've seen this much excitement, and I think it's because of the audience participation addition."

"It took us a month to prepare," added Arvida's creative writing and journalism teacher Ishani Persaud. "Even though there were only eight students and two teachers on stage, there were 60 students working behind the scenes."

"All the costumes and materials were reusable items," HoSang said. "We tried to keep everything recyclable from start to finish."

Jesse Martin, a seventh-grader from The 500 Role Models Academy of Excellence in Liberty City, said the event was the first time he played drums on a stage. He has been drumming since he was 5.

"My favorite part is getting to play music in school," Jesse said.

Designed in 2002 for high schools, with middle schools added in 2003, the Fairchild Challenge has encouraged more than 57,000 South Florida students to do the right things to help the environment.

Everglades National Park Superintendent Dan Kimble thanked the middle students for their enthusiasm at the Oct. 29 competition.

"We have a biological marvel. There are no other Everglades," he said. "We have the largest eco-restoration system ever attempted on the planet right here in South Florida. Thank you, students."

They roared with applause.

Throughout the program, they were equally enthusiastic about their ecological mission.

Students from Frank C. Martin K-8 Center in Richmond Heights dressed in plastic bags and sang to Michael Jackson's Beat It.

Only they improvised with "Save It. Just save it."

Many students said they couldn't wait to continue the Challenge, which has 11 options for middle-school students. Points are accumulated through May, and then awards are given to the winning schools.

"This is really fun," said Georliam Rodriguez, an eighth-grader at South Miami K-8 Center.

"I learned a lot," said eighth-grader Sigure Williams of 500 Role Models Academy.

"The most fun I had was when I was speaking," fellow performer Rose Tillett said.

The 500 Role Models Academy Science's Coach Judy Rosenblum said the students brainstormed and wrote everything. They found an Everglades-related word for every letter in the alphabet, such as M for Marjory Stoneman Douglas and N for night blooming epidendrum, an Everglades wildflower.

Students at David Lawrence Jr. K-8 Center in North Miami made their skit into a land over the rainbow.

"Just follow the river of grass," they sang to the Wizard of Oz song Follow the Yellow Brick Road.

The students dressed as Dorothy, Munchkins, a tin man, lion, scarecrow, witch and wizard for their two-minute skit.

"Boas, parrots and mahoe, oh my!" they chanted. The mahoe is a type of plant, and all three are considered alien invaders in the Everglades.

Students from Coral Way K-8 Center in Little Havana dressed in green and covered themselves with cutout leaves. Then they rocked the house with music by Queen played on saxophones and garbage cans and lids. "We will, we will, rock you," they sang.

Students in the audience held up their illuminated cellphones with approval.

Judges for the event included Kimball and Everglades National Park rangers Larry Perez, Christina Admiral and Maria Thomson. Also appraising the students were Kirk Fordham, CEO of Everglades Foundation; Richard Gibbs Sr., director of communications of Everglades Foundation; Art Herriot, retired Florida International University scientist; Barbara Hobbs, writer and Fairchild Challenge supporter; Alex Suarez, South Florida Water Management District media specialist; Robyn Wolf, donor, graphic designer and Fairchild Challenge supporter; and Jonathan Walton, New York poet and writer.

"It was inspiring to see kids more passionate about the Everglades than even their parents and some of our lawmakers," said Fordham, of the Everglades Foundation.

Eighth-grade journalism students Michael Diaz-Silveira, Carlos Cabrales, Joseph Cacioppo and Anthony DeFurio of Epiphany Catholic School in High Pines all agreed the Challenge was fun.

"I'm also a Boy Scout, and it is great to help the environment," Michael said.

The night ended with a poetry performance by Walton, who encouraged the students to "turn down Beyoncé and Lil Wayne and take a trip to the Everglades. It is the living picture of mucky perfection."

Caroline Lewis, Fairchild's director of education, celebrated the students' art and told them to honor the teachers who helped them prepare.

"Teachers are golden," she said. "Here's to every teacher out there."

-----

Miami Herald

FAIRCHILD TROPICAL BOTANIC GARDEN: South Florida students get creative at Fairchild showcase
-
ABOUT 200 SOUTH FLORIDA STUDENTS PARTICIPATED LAST WEEKEND IN THE FAIRCHILD CHALLENGE RESEARCH PROJECT, A CULMINATION OF WORK SINCE THE BEGINNING OF THE SCHOOL YEAR ON PROJECTS IN FOUR CATEGORIES

By Erika Capek
April 23, 2009

Senior Michelle Loret de Mola of Carrollton School of the Sacred Heart stood to the side of her home-cooked Peruvian Quinoa dish. She spent her Saturday explaining to judges why the dish she made was not only healthy but also environmentally friendly.

"This type of food is replacing rice, or risotto, because unlike those grains, quinoa is easily digested and has high mineral and protein content," Michelle said. "It's an excellent meal for vegetarians and every ingredient is organic or locally grown and has a low impact on the environment."

Michelle, along with 200 other high school students, came together at Fairchild Tropical Botanic Garden on Saturday afternoon for one of the Fairchild Challenge events.

The challenge, started and directed by Caroline Lewis, is in its seventh year and holds a variety of challenge options including performances, design challenges, papers, debates and research projects. For each option students throughout South Florida's private and public schools participate in, the more points they earn. The goal is to reach 900 points to receive a Fairchild Challenge Award and the school with the highest number of points receives $1,000 to support their environmental program. Then the next five top-scoring schools will receive $500 and the following 10 $250.

On Saturday, students from Dade, Monroe and Broward counties participated in the Fairchild Challenge Research Project. Students from 33 participating schools could take part in four categories including inner-city sanctuary, green cuisine, solar inventions and field phenology study. But no more than one group of students or an individual from each school could participate in each of the categories.

Two students from South Plantation -- Shawn Abrahams, a junior, and Vanessa Thisler, a sophomore -- took part in the field phenology study.

"We chose the bald Cyprus tree because of its drastic changes," Shawn said. "We found it in a park across from our school and we measured the tree for two months during the wet season and then another two months during the dry season."

They started the project in September by conducting research and figuring out what needed to be recorded. Then they began measuring in October and ended in January.

"We found out that during the dry season, the plants lost most of their leaves and their cones, and during the wet season, the plants retained everything," Shawn said. "I loved doing this project not only because of the learning experience, but because this is the field I'm hoping to go into after high school."

About 60 judges including architects, lawyers, professors, chefs and other community leaders listened to the students' results, scoring them on a judging rubric.

"We decided to make a vegan pizza," said Keith Williams, a senior from Central High School.

'We used fresh-grown tomatoes from our school and made our cheese from ground-up cashews and yeast flakes. Then for the 'pepperonis,' we used sweet tomatoes mixed with pecans and garlic powder, paprika and chili pepper."

Keith presented the dish with his two friends, Hector Duran, a junior, and Greg Pierre, a sophomore.

"I love cooking," Keith said. "This is such a hobby for me and I've learned so much by participating in this challenge and cooking green."

Four friends and classmates in Advanced Placement Environmental Science -- sophomores Hector Schmidt and Jamin Alfonso and juniors Lisbet Castillo and Nancy Narvaez-Garcia from Westland Hialeah High School -- participated in the inner-city sanctuary category. They designed a "pocket park" with areas for play, rest and other uses that students can enjoy at their school. They are in the process of talking with the school administration to make their design a reality at Westland High.

"We want to make the area at our school more green because right now there's only grass," Jamin said. "We incorporated native plants like the blue iris and milkweed plants to attract butterflies. We also have a rock waterfall in the middle of our design."

And another group of students from Palmetto Senior High got together to design their own solar invention. The three freshmen, Lee Seifer, Jason Schmidt and Eddie Santos, made a solar-powered aerator filter for aquaculture by using a fish tank powered , connecting old phone cords together and activating charcoal for the filter.

"By using something like this, it would provide a food source for people in Third World countries," Jason said. "This would also help species from going extinct because those people wouldn't have to kill endangered species."

The boys also went on to say that their device harvests biofuels by growing algae.

"Algae produces 15 times the amount of fuel as other biofuels," Lee said.

Lewis, Fairchild's director of education, stressed the importance of embracing not only the challenge, but the green movement that she has been working toward.

The Fairchild Challenge is getting recognition and is being replicated inplaces like Costa Rica, Venezuela, Chicago and Orlando, yet Lewis hopes more city officials will come out to the events and support this movement.

"These students and teachers take great pride in these events and we invite city officials and the school board to come and celebrate with us," Lewis said.

"It's their role and obligation to come out and see what these kids are doing. It's amazing."

On May 2, Fairchild is hosting its annual teacher celebration luncheon and Lewis is hopeful many invited officials will attend. Then on May 9 at 1 p.m., the challenge results will be announced for the high schools and 5:30 for the middle schools.

-----
Fairchild Tropical Botanic Garden
10901 Old Cutler Road, Coral Gables, FL
(305) 667-1651
http://www.fairchildgarden.org/

http://www.fairchildgarden.org/education/fairchildchallenge/


http://www.fairchildgarden.org/uploads/docs/Education/Challenge/2009/Media_and_PR/Fairchild_Challenge_Conservation_Fund_FINAL_for_distribution.pdf

Tuesday, January 5, 2010

Ineptitude reminiscent of HB City Hall! WCBS-TV: Comedy Of Errors - Cameras Didn't Work At Newark Airport

WCBS-TV, New York
Comedy Of Errors: Cameras Didn't Work At Newark

Sources Tell CBS 2 That TSA Surveillance Cameras Were Inoperable At Time Of Terminal C Security Breach

TSA Apparently Didn't Know Number For Continental To Get Other Footage

It's a tale of shocking ineptitude: CBS 2 has learned a series of missteps unnecessarily added to the mayhem at Newark Liberty International Airport on Sunday. The six-hour delay stranded thousands of people, creating extreme crowding and chaos.

The mistakes made at the airport give new meaning to the term "domino effect." It was a cascading series of missteps that cry out for action.

The sign at the Transportation Security Administration screening post at Newark read: "Premises Under Constant Video Surveillance."

What is should add is: "If We're Lucky."

Read rest of story at:
http://wcbstv.com/local/newark.airport.continental.2.1407062.html

Video at:

http://wcbstv.com/video/?id=136879@wcbs.dayport.com

Reader comments:
http://wcbstv.com/local/newark.airport.continental.2.1407062.html#addComments

------

Ineptitude reminiscent of Hallandale Beach City Hall!

You know, the Broward city where the Police Chief,
Thomas Magill, actually shrugged and said at a 2009
HB City Commission meeting that the pitch black
public parking lot in front of City Hall AND the
Police Dept. HQ, which has been that way for a
good part of the past two years, wasn't that big a deal.

And the City Attorney, David Jove, just sits there
on the dais, dreaming of his pension, ignoring the
self-evident public safety and liability issues for the
city's taxpayers.


Who's their boss?
City Manager Mike Good.
That explains it.

Tonight, like last week, last month and last year,
three of the four parking lights closest to the public
entrance to HB City Hall have been out.
Much like they have been for the past six months,
and most of the past two years, but fortunately for
air travelers, the City of Hallandale Beach doesn't
have operational control of an airport!

Monday, January 4, 2010

Tuesday's important Broward vote on ethics; My resolutions re South Florida news media are already being kept!

This is an edited version of the email I sent out
earlier this evening.

------

Originally, since attending the December 9th,
2009 public meeting of the county's Ethics
Commission, and seeing certain things emerge
in the meeting and in the interim, my plan had
always been to post some things today on
Tuesday morning's Broward County Commission
meeting and the high-visibility ethics vote they'll
be casting.

I thought I'd describe some of the historical context
and the peculiar cast of characters who have brought
us to the point where, as a precursor to whatever
rules and operating structure the county's appointed
Ethics Commission comes up with to govern the
County Commission's behavior, the County
Commission will have to either vote Yes or No
on collectively drawing a firm line in the sand about
the ethical behavior of and expectations on County
employees, and say, "Here, and no further."
http://weblogs.sun-sentinel.com/news/politics/broward/blog/county_commission/

Tusday's agenda is here; ethics is item # 36
http://205.166.161.204/agenda_publish.cfm?mt=ALL&get_month=1&get_year=2010&dsp=ag&seq=156#ReturnTo0

But since last week, as I started getting more and
more emails and phone calls from interested people
around the county about what I had heard or thought
was going to happen, I came to the realization that
I was going to change plans.

Because until something actually happens, it's all
just talk, and that's what Broward's citizen taxpayers
are completely fed-up with: pols talking about doing
the right thing instead of simply doing it and setting
the right example.

One of my resolutions for the New Year was to stop
wasting so much of my time and energy on certain
people, especially elected officials or people with
influence, talking about doing something -presumably
positive- and instead, expend that time and energy
by writing about what they actually do -if anything-
and explain as best I understand, why I thought
things had either failed or succeeded.

Here, as anywhere else, you learn a lot by actually
showing-up, though that's a lesson many erstwhile
reporters down here seem to ignore.

Another resolution of mine concerns my frequent
emails around the South Florida area, especially
prior to an event I believe is of some importance.
That's now ancient history.

If the local TV stations or newspaper reporters
or columnists want to ignore the story, that's their
choice, and in South Florida, as we all know from
experience, that's always their default position
anyway: doing nothing and then being surprised.

Frankly, in the face of self-imposed personnel
cuts -or in the
Miami Herald's case, consistently
refusing
to send reporters or photographers to
events, meetings or forums in Broward County
that would merit
coverage in most parts of the
country as
journalism has traditionally been
practiced
- I don't see my particular civic role
while living in South Florida as simultaneously
playing the roles of Paul Revere, TV station
News Director or Assignment Editor, for
TV/print reporters and columnists.

That's especially the case when so many
reporters have consistently chosen to either
ignore or downplay the significance of verifiable
information or easily-understood stories I've
given them on a silver platter, despite their
claiming to me that they want to be kept
"in the loop" on what I know or hear.

Actually, they don't.
They just like to have the illusion they do.

There's no need for me to name names here,
but that's precisely why I'm deleting so many
newspaper/TV people from my email list,
including many people who are getting this
email.

Additionally, within the next few days, I plan
on finally -FINALLY!- editing the video
I made of that Dec. 9th Broward County
Ethics Commission meeting, which featured
the public testimony of the Broward Workshop's
George Morgan,
http://www.browardworkshop.com/ which is
described here:
http://weblogs.sun-sentinel.com/news/politics/broward/blog/2009/12/broward_business_leaders_want.html

(Dubious distinction: I was the only member of the
public for a good portion of that morning
meeting
on December 9th, while Scott Wyman
of the
Sun-Sentinel was THE only South Florida reporter
who
bothered to swing by in-person for even a
few minutes.
Additionally, I was actually on time,
even early, while MANY
members of the Ethics
Commission showed-up late.

Very Hallandale Beach-like!
)

To make it easier to follow, I broke my film
up by subject, and that's how I plan on putting
it onto my YouTube page.

I'll be there in person at the County Commission
Chambers on Tuesday morning, and hope you'll
make plans to be there, too.

Also see
Wimps of the Roundtable and Other Challenges for Journalism Schools

by Wayne Robins

http://journalism.nyu.edu/pubzone/debate/forum.1.essay.robbins.html

A terrific Swedish TV program we could use more of over here: "Jag ska bli stjärna"; The state of Girls sports in South Florida and the abysmal media coverage it receives; Zara Larsson

Below, Zara Larsson singing A Moment Like This.from Sweden's TV4 daily morning show "After Ten," from Nov. 26th, 2009.

Zara
is the eleven-year old winner of last year's
nationally televised Talang 2008 contest, and is one of the handful of very talented kids profiled on TV4's very compelling Tuesday night
documentary series,
Jag ska bli stjärna, (I'll be a star). 






You can see the most recent episode, 5 of 6, about 44 minutes long, by clicking below, as long as you do so before Tuesday afternoon our time, since a new episode airs tomorrow night in Sweden, and will be uploaded to their website some time
thereafter.

http://www.tv4play.se/aktualitet/jag_ska_bli_stjarna

Here, in a clip from last Tuesday's episode, Zara sings the Swedish national anthem at
a race track, and naturally, everyone's a critic!

Meanwhile, back home, Laila Bagge helps Zara get prepared to record a demo CD
and sets the wheels in motion for Zara to go to Hollywood.

But not before preparing here to answer basic questions, en engelsk, like, "Who are your musical influences?"



I think it'd be great to see a show as savvy, serious and well-produced as this made in the U.S., but you just know that given the current entertainment climate, rather than make a smart,
knowing
documentary series, they'd intentionally add a lot of unlikable kids into the mix instead, just to add some spice and melodrama.

That's the current casting method at reality
shows like Fox-TV's American Idol and MTV's
Real World, and a little often, lately,
with CBS-TV's Survivor.

(I've watched just about every single episode of Survivor since the show first aired, but after watching this past season's premiere in September, my gut-sense was that the cast seemed a little TOO predictable and orchestrated. Nej tak!)


Me, I like to watch the inherent sociology of
what happens to people are suddenly thrown together and forced to deal with strangers, with whom they suddenly will have to depend upon to an extent.

That's one of the principal reasons why CBS-TV's
The Amazing Race is so great. 

That show is one I never miss, precisely because it's hard to orchestrate things well enough in advance to get teams to act a certain way.

Frankly, that's why out of all the myriad reality
shows, a celebrity season of it would prove quite interesting and appealing ratings-wise, as long as you have teams that mix smart and
resourceful
people from different milieus competing against each other: academia, High-Tech, fashion, sports, Film, TV, high culture, et al.


That would be very compelling TV with the right people in place.

One of the things that I personally find so appealing
and compelling about Jag ska bli stjärna is that you literally have no inkling of what's going to happen to the kids and their parents before it actually does.
The "real" of reality TV!


Thus, it seems fresher and more genuine than
anything like the pre-programmed reality shows
here in the U.S., where the show runners seem unwilling to trust the intelligence of viewers
to figure things out on
their own.

I have a great sense of humor but I suspect that's
one of the many reasons why I've NEVER watched a moment of Fox-TV's American Idol, except for the spill-over at the top of the hour when I flip over to watch House.

To me, it seems pre-programmed 
to a fair-thee-well to get a particular narrative and construct.

I want competitions to be about what the subject
at hand is -not people trying to become famous for 'Fifteen Minutes'- and want the final results to correspond to something
involving talent, ability
or effort.

I guess I'm just Old School that way.
But then I've been a Turner Classic Movies fan from Day One, too.


Olivia Welin från Höllviken GIF.

.

Thirteen-year old soccer player Olivia Welin and her family and teammates, who were
filmed since last January, remind me a lot, in a positive way, of a lot of the families with
daughters I saw for many years in
my sister's part of western Howard County, Maryland,
and how they focus some of the their time and energies on their daughters playing sports,
especially field hockey, lacrosse
and soccer.


The parents are VERY committed, especially the mothers, as is the case with Olivia'smother on the show, as well as my sister, who is a coach for field hockey and soccer,
just like my brother-in-law in Maryland is.

All of my three nieces played field hockey 
and two have already started in the Maryland State High School Championship game for their team, with one now playing in college.
They all played soccer, too, of course, and one -the youngest- does field hockey, soccer and lacrosse over the course of a year.
I'll be writing on the topic of Girls sports in more
detail in the future, but to me, comparing how they're organized in the greater Northern Virginia/ DC/Baltimore area, is that Girls sports are MUCH better-supported, valued and attended up there compared to the rampant apathy
of South Florida.


I have my suspicions on why that's the case, but it starts with the mothers down here, too, who, sadly, far too often, live in self-absorbed condo cocoons, and who clearly aren't willing to spend
the time and energy with their daughters they should.

That time means occasionally having to be a referee or a coach or raising
money for trips if it's a Travel Squad.

And do I even have to mention how atrocious South Florida's sports media is in covering Girl's high school or Women's college sports in a serious and non-condescending way?

With all the technological resources they have now, they've stood still and are running-in-place.
It's really, really embarrassing.

Meanwhile, elsewhere, the world has evolved while South Florida's sleepwalking media watches the grass grow...
http://www.expressen.se/sport/sanktan


The media coverage was MUCH better in the late 1970's, especially at the Herald, which I know from personal experience because of...
Well, I'll explain more in the future, but suffice to say for now that it has to do with North Miami Beach High School Girls Gymnastics and Hialeah Miami Lakes High School girls Soccer.

One more important point, without getting into lots
of minute detail.
In watching the previous shows as I have, you can see after watching Olivia Welin's
self-evident talent, ability and dedication to listening to her coach and getting better, why Sweden, not England or some other well-known South American soccer countries -besides Brazil- are among the top Women's National Soccer teams in the world, EVERY YEAR.
Like the Dutch in field hockey!

That's why all the elite NCAA field hockey programs have Dutch players: UVA, Maryland, Wake Forest...

Below, Olivia's first day as a referee



Olivia has some difficult decisions to make



See also:
http://www.tv4.se/jag-ska-bli-stj%C3%A4rna/artiklar/olivia-welin-4fbf872404bf72519400275c

More about Olivia:
http://www.tv4.se/jag-ska-bli-stj%C3%A4rna/artiklar/l%C3%A4s-hela-chatten-om-fotboll-med-olivia-4fbf8bd104bf725194002f91

http://www.expressen.se/Sport/sanktan/skane/1.1799454/jag-ska-bli-stjarna

Saturday, January 2, 2010

Coming Sunday: SNAFU! Gulfstream Park Race Track and Casino is a MESS! What, if anything, can be done to change it?

December 29, 2009 photo by South Beach Hoosier.
Looking north on U.S.-1/ South Federal Highway
from the Broward and Miami-Dade countyline
towards
Gulfstream Park Race Track & Casino
and the
Village at Gulfstream in Hallandale Beach.

Gulfstream Park Race Track and Casino
:
It's where smart long-term planning, savvy
consumer marketing and plain common sense
go to die in a big black hole.

What a complete mess!!!


On Sunday, the first day of racing at Gulfstream,
you'll be able to see for yourself what the truth has
been over there for the past year, right under the
nose of South Florida's sleepwalking news media,
and read some suggestions for making the property
viable and successful in the future.

But don't kid yourself, it will be far from easy, for
Magna Entertainment and Forest City to get out
of the big black hole of negativity they've created for
themselves with South Florida's residents/consumers
thru their self-evident myopia and longstanding
incompetence.

Incompetence that, in my opinion, calls into serious
question whether they are even fit to run this valuable
property, which is for sale, regardless of what they
do or do not say "officially."
To the latter, I can only say, "Thank goodness."

If Magna isn't prepared to genuinely eject their failed
and dim-witted strategy and and accept constructive
criticism and consciously think 'outside-the-box' or
their, yes, 'comfort zone,' in terms of their overall
property operations, customer outreach and Quality
Control, they are going to have wasted not just tens
of millions of dollars, but a golden opportunity.

The clock is ticking, and time is most definitely
NOT on their side.

December 28, 2009 photo by South Beach Hoosier.
Looking south at the Gulfstream Park sign on
Hibiscus, just off U.S.-1/South Federal Highway,
a sign that has NOT been lit at night since 2008.

You only see this because of my camera's flash.

It took the people at Magna Entertainment
over ELEVEN MONTHS to notice and do
something about the self-evident fact that there
were ten-foot weeds and vines completely taking
over the sign and obstructing the words
.
But the lights STILL don't work!

That's the kind of genius brainpower you
have running things there.
Hopefully, not for much longer!


See my last post on Gulfstream Park
from November 1st, 2009 titled
Problems at Magna's Gulfstream Park
are much bigger than you think!

http://hallandalebeachblog.blogspot.com/2009/11/problems-at-magnas-gulfstream-park-are.html

Updated; IU, Bloomington shocked and dumbfounded by stabbing death of English professor Don Belton; hundreds brave cold to attend candlelight vigil; Michael Griffin convicted of murder, sentenced to 65 years in prison

  
wish YouTube Channel video: WISH-TV, Indianapolis - Hundreds attend vigil for slain IU prof outside Monroe County Courthouse. Uploaded January 1, 2010. http://youtu.be/XAEqoQSa8vg

Related article:
Hundreds attend vigil for slain IU prof

Updated: Friday, 01 Jan 2010, 6:12 PM EST
By reporter Liza Danver, editor Hyacinth Williams
http://www.wishtv.com/dpp/news/local/south_central/hundreds-attend-vigil-for-slain-iu-prof


Above, Indiana University Assistant Professor of English Don Belton,
Photo: courtesy of Indiana University

I first heard about this terrible incident just before the Michigan at IU basketball broadcast on ESPN Thursday afternoon, when I was checking my myriad Hoosier media sites for any last minute info.

Unfortunately, TV news-gathering is never much in evidence over holidays, and that's as true in Indy and Bloomington as much as it is here in South Florida.

It just seems so much worse in Miami because there's so clearly a higher percentage of news reporters here who seem to prefer doing "soft" stories, rather than ones that require some degree of mental acuity and resolve.

For more on what happened, please see http://justicefordonbelton.com/
---------
http://newsinfo.iu.edu/
IU News Room
IU community shocked, saddened by professor's death
December 29th, 2009
Read entire official statement at
http://newsinfo.iu.edu/news/page/normal/12982.html

---


wish YouTube Channel video: WISH-TV, Indianapolis - Police: Slain IU prof mentioned suspect in diary. Reporter Daniel Miller on the latests news in the slaying. Uploaded December 29, 2009. http://youtu.be/5ImX02RoVZI





Friday, January 1, 2010

Wow! Yohanna sings "Don't Save It All For Christmas Day" on TV3's "En Sång För Hemlösa 2009" (HD)

To start the New Year off right, in a positive mood, I'm going to a new favorite of mine this
past year, with Jóhanna Guðrún Jónsdóttir, a.k.a. Yohanna.

I wrote in this space many, many months ago, much as I had earlier -and justifiably so- for Molly Sandén and Esmée Denters
Hennes enorma talang kunde knappast vara
mer uppenbar!
Her enormous talent could hardly be more obvious!



I was more accurate about that than anything else I wrote here all year.


For your perusal, below, along with the teaser, from just two weeks ago on Dec. 15th in Stockholm, for TV3's Dec. 23rd and 25th broadcast of her amazing performance at their "En Sång För Hemlösa 2009" (A Song For The Homeless 2009), Yohanna sings "Don't Save It All For Christmas Day"




If you've heretofore neglected to take my sage advice to heart, do yourself a favor and start
the new year off right and take a listen to Yohanna's amazing voice for yourself at

http://www.youtube.com/user/yohannamusic
and
http://www.youtube.com/TEAMYOHANNA
and
http://www.myspace.com/yohannamusic


You can watch the entire video of the broadcast, by turns beautiful and thoughtful, and just under
59 minutes, at: http://www.tv3.se/play/224911

Once there, click Fullskärm for full screen and best viewing.

The audio is superb.


I should mention as a bonus delight that the second song played here is Yohanna singing
the song she sang in Moscow at Eurovision and captured second place with, Is It True.
I hardly need tell you at this point that she's amazing here, as per usual.
But she is.

I realize that many, if not most of you, won't know whom everyone singing and speaking
is, per se, but trust me, it's well-worth seeing for yourself, and shows what you can put on
television if you genuinely have the desire to put quality first.

It beats the hell out of any original holiday programming that you saw on American TV
networks over the past two weeks -as if there was any!

Don't hold your breath thinking that COMCAST is going to do anything half this quality if
they get the govt. okay to buy NBC-TV.

And besides, what's the point of my having a blog if I can't share with you here, something
that I personally find of great value and pleasure?




Gott Nytt År
!