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>> 26.2.09

Shameless Plug


Look at these boys. They look so serious, so stoic, and so professional.




























And sometimes they wear cat ears and mustaches.


This is Backflip Wilson, Bellingham’s new sketch comedy group. The group started last year as a collaboration between five friends with some crazy ideas. They’ll make you laugh, they’ll tickle your soul, and sometimes they’ll dance around in their underroos. (But you have to pay extra for that).

Between them they have acting, writing, filming, improve, and stand-up comedy skills (and even martial arts knowledge, but don’t worry, that only comes out when absolutely necessary).

As their photographer I thought it’d be only fair to give them the obligatory plug. Check out their rehearsal photos here.

And now the important stuff:

WHO: Backflip Wilson

WHEN: Tonight (Thursday Feb. 26) from 7:30-8:45pm

WHERE: Firehouse Café/1314 Harris Ave./Bellingham, WA

HOW MUCH?? : $4 (less than a movie and more entertaining than that same TV program you’ve watched 500 times.)

For more info you can e-mail me or check out their Facebook page.

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>> 9.2.09

Need a gift for V-Day?



Yes, I know that is only a *slightly* ridiculous suggestion considering the day of pink is but three days away. Then again, if you're anything like me...I still haven't given my dad and brothers their Christmas presents.

(No. Seriously.)

I warn you, dear reader, I realized as I was typing up this post I get rather wordy. This one's a longer-than-normal, so I apologize in advance, but this was a pretty amazing story:

Recently we had the author/journalist Jack Hamann speak on campus about his book "On American Soil" . To be perfectly frank with you, dear reader, despite the fact that I was interested in going I

1. Had no idea who this guy was or what it was about
2. Had a sneaking suspicion that I might fall asleep during the presentation (nothing against the speaker of course, it had just been a very long day);

Hamann quickly turned that around, though, when he proved to be compelling in both speech and story. It was a story of investigative journalism--at it's best. I don't want to give too much of his book away, and there is plenty of information on his website, but here is at least a rough overview of what he told us.

When Hamann was a young budding journalist he got an assignment to cover a story about the expansion of a sewage treatment plant in Seattle. Exciting, no? But as some stories go, while he was in the area he discovered a what, at the time, seemed like the most amazing story never told.

A lynching of an italian prisoner of war by African American soldiers during WWII.

Well, according to Hamann, his reaction was much like yours and mine was. Prisoner of War? Lynching?? By African American Soldiers?? In Seattle???

Hamann went on to tell us how the story was published, but as you might imagine something about this story didn't sit well with many people. So, with some very classic and old school techniques Hamann and his wife proceeded to spend days at the national archives searching through document after document (thank goodness for Wikipedia...right? right? ...ok fine.) until they discovered what they had suspected.

It wasn't true.

I won't go to much further, I wouldn't want to give away the all of the book after all. But, just like the first part of the story it didn't end after it was published. Hamann went on to tell us that shortly after he published the book he got a call from a Seattle congressman at the time asking Hammon what congress could do.

These simple paragraphs couldn't even begin to describe the process of tracking down every man from the 28 convicted (or family members), compensating them and changing their dishonorable discharges to honorable. And in a final act, the Army held at ceremony at Discovery Park in Seattle for these men. At the ceremony, the Army didn't beat around the bush--they just came out and said exaclty what happened, and that they were wrong, Hamann said.

Again I don't want to get into more of the details. You'll just have to check it out, dear reader.

Us being the journalists that we are we were able to throw in a short Q and A in the end:

Q: Have you tracked down all the men or their families yet?
A: We're still trying to track them all down. So many of them had such common last names it's hard to find all the right people.

Q: Have you kept in close contact with many of the families?
A: Yes. It's generally not a journalistic practice. There is a comfort in our distance, but with many of these families there needed to be more. They were telling me things they haven't told anyone, sometimes even their family members. You get value from a perfect stranger from this. Sometimes telling strangers can cost them, but in this case we got the feeling that we were giving something back too.

(Hey, I told you it was short. We were busy getting our books signed.)

Hamann concluded with "The first draft of history is written by those in power. Real history is changing because it happens to everyone. Real history is richer and far more interesting. You can be sitting at a presentation about a sewer treatment plant and come across history."

That's my recommendation for the day. Buy it....borrow it from the library....e-mail me and maybe I'll let you borrow it. I guess I'm still reading Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas after all. But an amazing story nonetheless.

Until Next Time.

//CassiBean

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>> 3.2.09

A Garden...of News


Between the PI announcing the newspaper is either going under or online only and the Times cutting jobs and sections out of the newspaper, people often ask us if being a journalism major right now is really such a good idea.

Thankfully the answer is still yes. Because despite everything, at the very least people will always need news.

Also with some photo skills, a little video knowledge, some techno-savvy lingo, one might still do all right in this business. It pays having a few (lots of) geeky friends. So at least we can jump head first into all newspapers who are transferring online-branching out to a global market.

Let's stop for a minute though. What if we tried something different? What if we took the idea of taking the market online but instead of marketing out, we marketed in? Taking online news and making it local instead of global--or even better, making it
hyperlocal.

Really? Can you make the internet local, much less hyperlocal?

You can if 1. you begin targeting your news to a very specific audience, such as a neighborhood or city section and 2. if you incorporate community journalism. That's the idea behind the very new company: Serra Media. Mark Briggs and Glenn Thomas have started a new section of very experimental journalism that is being tested by three local Washington newspapers and various (vary willing) schools of journalism around the state. (What can I say? With every speaker who comes to our school ending their presentations with "hey all our jobs are frozen right now...but good luck when you get out there!"...it's not exactly an era to turn down new opportunities).

The idea is that the page will have section that is divided by neighborhood. Anyone can post information, journalists and neighbors alike. Stories that come up on the news feed pertain only to the area. So things that might not be breaking news but it still important can make the feed. So community members can read what important to them, and journalists can still get closer to their community by reporting in it.

© Copyright 2009 Serra Media, LLC
"
The more that people [that] collaborate to build this information resource, the better it will be," Briggs said. "What it means to a news company is here's a platform to build hyperlocal publications in each of the communities they want to cover in a way that is networked together."

Briggs also said a big appeal is it would be a "one-stop-shop" of news pertaining to the reader.

So no pessimism or skepticism, dear reader. This looks like an amazing opportunity and one I look forward to working with. And if that doesn't work out I still have my nerd skills to fall back on.

//Cassi Bean

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Mt. Baker Part the second



Want to check out more Mt. Baker pics? Go here

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>> 1.2.09

The many faces of Mt. Baker



Saturday, January 31st:

The first time ever I've gone to Mt. Baker after living less than an hour away from it for three years. Of course, the reason I make my epic journey up is not to ski or snowboard. Oh no, it's to go to a photo shoot.

Ah well.


KVIK, the campus TV station at WWU is making a musical. Yay! Trust me, it's not as bad as it sounds. The crew was filming a scene where an emo girl runs away to the mountains to escape (it's a spoof).

So to get an early start we left at 5 a.m. (oh boy...). We proceeded to spend the next 12 hours on a very large patch of white snow. There wasn't much in the way of anything on the patch of snow we were on.



However the background was breathtaking. Being on a mountain we proceeded to experience about 7 different weather changes throughout the day.

7 a.m. We get to the mountain after an epic coffee trip. It's cold and extremely foggy. Snow proceeded to fall on and off in varying degrees throughout the day.

11 am. After convincing ourselves that we were going to have a miserable shoot and that we would never be warm again, the sun begins to break through the foggy trees, slowly washing itself over the snow drifts. Our cold foggy morning has suddenly turned very, very, bright. We weren't complaining though. We instead worked hard at taking advantage of the time we had.


2 p.m. Sky sighting! It's a miracle, we hadn't seen sky in eight hours. This was amazing. Filming in the snow is proving to be a lot more exhausting than one might think. No we're not doing as much physical activity as we would if we were up there skiing or snowboarding, but it was that lack of activity that was actually our downfall. No movement equals no blood flow, and in cold, snowy weathers our bodies weren't too happy with us. We actaually had to take an extended lodge break at one point to keep one of our actors from passing out, as he was getting pretty purple in the cheeks. Oh dear...

(After a chili dog and a hot beverage though, he was as good as new)

Now as a small campus film crew, we don't have much in the way of a budget. And when I say not much in the way of I really mean none.The fun part is the director is a big fan of dolly shots (for those who might not know, and believe I never want to assume a dolly shot is when the camera "is mounted on a wheeled platform that is pushed on rails while the picture is being taken" -- Nation Master Encyclopedia. However, we managed to make due. Thanks board and PCV pipe!


But hey, it was well worth it.



// CassiBean

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