Sunday, May 17, 2009
Saturday, May 16, 2009
POD-O-MATIC TROUBLES
BROADCAST ASSIGNMENT
I’VE RECENTLY BEEN HASSELING WITH THE REALITIES OF HAVING TWO PUGS IN THE HOUSE. YOU WOULD THINK THAT ADDING TWO CUTE, FUN LOVING CREATURES INTO MY LIFE WOULD MAKE THINGS MORE RELAXING AND ENJOYABLE, RIGHT?
WRONG!
WHILE HAVING BUFFY AND PEACH AROUND HAS HAD IT PERKS, I HONESTLY CAN'T HELP BUT WONDER WHY I DIDN'T BUY TWO CATS INSTEAD.
I MEAN REALLY, WHY SET YOURSELF UP WITH SOMETHING YOU HAVE TO POTTY TRAIN WHEN YOU CAN GET A CAT?
CATS HAVE BEEN LITERALLY PREPROGRAMMED TO DISCARD THEIR OWN FECAL MATTER IN CONVENIENT, OUT OF THE WAY PLACES.
OR IN OTHER WORDS, THEY GO ON YOUR NEIGHBOR'S LAWN. NO CLEANUP NECESSARY!
BESIDES THE OBVIOUS, THEY ARE INDEPENDENT, CAN FEED THEMSELVES AND, LET'S FACE IT. THEY HAVE A LOT MORE CLASS THAN ANY OLD MANGY SLOBBERY DOG WILL EVER AMOUNT TO.
IN OTHER WORDS, THINK TWICE BEFORE CHOOSING FIDO OVER FLUFFY!
Saturday, May 9, 2009
How To Appear Smarter Than You Actually Are
News Website Critique
a) Do the news items reflect immediacy?
Yes, they do. The Santa Barbara fires are a very important story right now, and it is given the most attention ontheir the home page.
b) Does the site try to help readers save time?
No. The site takes time to navigate through. The type is in small font, and there is a lot of it on the page. You really have to focus and physically get close to the screen to find what you want out of all of the rest of the stuff they have displayed.
c) Is it quick and easy to get information?
Check above.
d) Does it provide both visual and verbal information?
Yes, although most of the pictures are quite small. It would have been nice to have some bigger ones! There was also quite a bit of text covering the page!
e) Do the stories contain lists and bullets to make them easier to scan?
Yes, there are lists and bullets, although the bullets are hard to distinguish since they are not physically separated from the bullets above and below them.
f) Are the stories broken into "chunks"?
Yes, some stories are broken into chunks. On the right hand side of the screen there are links to several stories, all with a small chunk of catchy information to get the reader to pursue the story.
g) Do stories provide hyperlinks to additional information?
YES! For example in an article titled, "South Bay voters approving school tax measures", there is a link provided to help readers to get a better understanding of the material.
http://www.mercurynews.com/elections/ci_12303561?nclick_check=1
h) Are there opportunities for readers to "talk back"?
Yes, there is a designated area on the bottom of each article for people to make comments as they see put. Not many people appear to be taking advantage of this, however.
i) Does the site use multimedia to enhance understanding and add appeal?
There are no videos on the site, but there are quite a lot of photos!
Saturday, May 2, 2009
Lead Exercise
Last month, the retired medical doctor had four gravity-fed, 5,000-gallon polyethylene water tanks installed on his Monte Sereno property. The system will harvest raindrops to provide irrigation for an extensive food garden.
Block sees it as a patriotic as well as an environmental statement.
LEAD #2 : Given the circumstances, Kristen Graczyk might have abandoned her pursuit of a soccer career. She has suffered three major knee injuries and wasn't drafted when the Women's Professional Soccer league began this year.
Yet she has become a starting defender for FC Gold Pride.
ANALYSIS : Lead #1 is a focus story lead while Lead #2 is a character lead.
Friday, May 1, 2009
Exploring 'White Culture'
And then it came to me.
There are so many different kinds of white people out there that it's hard to fit us all into one universal category. The reality is that white culture consists of a variety of sub-cultures, and it's the lifestyle you lead that defines which sub-culture you belong to. Alas, we are not culture-less after all!
Take my family as an example. We are all as white as you can get, but we definitely belong to a culture and lifestyle that differs greatly from others of our kind. What makes us different? Where we come from and the values we share. In our case this common ground is a love of hunting animals for food and sport.
I come from a family of farmers and ranchers from North Dakota, where killing your own meat is literally a way of life. When you have chickens and deer running around why go to the supermarket when you can chop a head off or go hunting? My uncle who lives in Alaska embodies this ideal perfectly; he shot a moose out of his own backyard a while ago and has been living off the meat for months now.
The fact that conversation at our family get-togethers always seems to revolve around hunting stories should have given me a clue that I had a culture a long time ago. We talk 'gun-talk' like some people talk about football!
I guess what I'm getting to is that you should never allow yourself to think that you are 'culture-less'. Just because yours pales in comparison to more colorful and obvious cultures (complete with costumes, blatantly obvious traditions and relics) doesn't mean that yours doesn't exist!
If you want to get a clear idea of what your TRUE culture is all about, think under the skin. Is there a core value, tradition or lifestyle that you and your whole family share? That alone should give you a strong clue and help you to discover that you do have a culture after all.
Football Injuries
The ball-carrier from an opposing high school football team runs towards the goalpost. Pete Sternoff has the perfect opportunity to wrestle his opponent to the ground before he makes it...He leaps and braces for the contact...and his life changes right before his eyes.
Sternoff knew there were risks involved when he decided to play high school football. He didn't realize how serious they could be until that fateful game; the day he hit his head into the side of the opposing ball-carrier and cracked several vertebrae in his back.
Now confined to a wheelchair, Sternoff is not alone. Out of all of the 20,000 high school football related injuries that occur each year, roughly 35% involve injuries to the neck and head; 12% of all cases result in permanent damage. 13 youths died from football-related accidents last year alone.
