This is the second year we have filmed our Yamhill County neighbors reading poetry for One Poem A Day Won't Kill You.
Here is the schedule for One Poem A Day Won't Kill You beginning Tuesday, April 1.
McMinnvile Community Media TV Comcast cable channel 11 and Frontier 29 at 7 PM each evening.
APRIL 2014 READER NAME
Apr 1 Mike Santone
Apr 2 Alan Goodwin
Apr 3 Jeff D Peterson
Apr 4 Lex Runciman
Apr 5 Ken Dolinger
Apr 6 Barbara Drake
Apr 7 Steve Long
Apr 8 Joe Wilkins
Apr 9 Emily Grosvenor
Apr 10 John Mead
Apr 11 Lisa Wiedman
Apr 12 Tim Timmerman
Apr 13 Frank Messina
Apr 14 Pat Smith
Apr 15 Zackoree Ash
Apr 16 Donna Gillenardo
Apr 17 Mitch Horning
Apr 18 Melissa Terrill
Apr 19 Samantha Jordan
Apr 20 Chris Benham
Apr 21 Dave Borchel
Apr 22 Patricia Britton
Apr 23 Mary Slocum
Apr 24 Susan Currie Sivek
Apr 25 Dave Hansen
Apr 26 Bob Zahniser
Apr 27 Bill Rizer
Apr 28 Allan Garry
Apr 29 Chris Nordquist
Apr 30 Kathleen Blair
If you do not have cable her in Yamhill County, not to worry, I will be posting the readings on our Meadowlake Studios Youtube Channel:
We are curious and seek to explore our interests and the world. Painting, Pottery, Sculpture, Felt, Mixed-Media, other Visual and Performing Arts,Creative Writing and Documentary Video.
3/31/2014
2/03/2014
10 Tips for New Years Resolution #7 "To Write Better:
Here it is New Years, time for Resolutions. For those of you who have made a New Years Resolution to write, and for me it is my Resolution Number 7 “to write better” Since the advent of Email and all the rest I can't tell you how many times I wished I had listened to David Ogilvy 's advise. David Ogilvy was one of the most influential advertising executives during the hey day of modern advertising. His ad agency Ogilvy and Mather Worldwide was one of the largest in the world. In 1982 Ogilvy sent an internal memo to all his ad agency employees, titled “How To Write”. The memo is published in the 1986 book “The Unpublished David Ogilvy” which is out of print and hard to find. The University Of Oregon Knight Library does have a copy.
Here is the 1982 memo which is relevant in today’s world of emails, tweets, Facebook updates, Comments, and Blog posts.
The better you write, the higher you go …….. People who think well, write well.
Woolly minded people write woolly memos, woolly letters and woolly speeches.
Good writing is not a natural gift. You have to learn to write well. Here are 10 hints:
- Read the Roman-Raphaelson Writing That Works Read it three times.
- Write the way you talk. Naturally.
- Use short words, short sentences and short paragraphs.
- Never use jargon words like reconceptualize, demassification, attitudinally, judgmentally. They are hallmarks of a pretentious ass.
- Never write more than two pages on any subject.
- Check your quotations.
- Never send a letter or a memo on the day you write it. Read it aloud the next morning — and then edit it.
- If it is something important, get a colleague to improve it.
- Before you send your letter or your memo, make sure it is crystal clear what you want the recipient to do.
- If you want ACTION, don’t write. Go and tell the guy what you want.
David
I hope for my Resolution #7 "to write better" I can take Ogilvy's advice to heart, today and every day. For a little more detailed advice look at 20 Secrets of Good Writing that expands on Ogilvy. Although I try to adhere to Tip #5; Never write more than two pages on any subject, luckily, Blog pages can be very flexible. I love #10. If you want action don't write...talk in person.
Credits: Brain Pickers and the ever wonderful Wikipedia
7/14/2013
Art Education and helping a worthy charity
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| Salud! group watch Liz demonstrate felt making |
Held in November the Salud! auction benefits the health care for migrant farmer workers through the Virginia Garcia Memorial Health Center. Many of the wineries and vineyards in Yamhill County get involved with the auction in one way or another.
We were happy when Reed Oliver, the tasting room & hospitality manager for Winderlea Vineyard & Winery asked us to be part of an auction package which included wine tasting, our artist tour and then dinner at Cana's Feast.
The group spent about 45 minutes with each artist's studio. It was a great opportunity for us to help a worthy cause and to educate interested Portland folks about our art.
I got to demonstrate making a clay mask, throwing a bowl, trimming a bowl and my favorite pulling 1800 degree glowing red work out of a Raku kiln and putting in a reduction chamber to flame up with drama. Raku being fast. The group got to see the finished glazed work before they left the studio.
I'm not sure how things will work out for next year, but I hope we can do another Salud! auction artist tour. Showing interested folks what we do and how we do it is great and helping a good cause makes it that much better.
Labels:
art education,
Art Tour,
Auction package,
Dwight Evalt,
Lorri Lewis,
Reed Oliver,
Salud!,
Virginia Garcia Memorial Health Center,
Winderlea Vineyard and Winery
4/03/2013
One Poem A Day Won't Kill You in April National Poetry Month
One
Poem A Day Won't Kill You project started showing on McMinnville Community Media Monday April
1st. I have begun to post the readings
on our Youtube channel today. We started
asking folks about their favorite poems and filming in May 2012. Most of the readings were completed by
mid-September. By the end of February,
2013 the editing was done. Seeing it in
motion after all these months of putting it together gives me a feeling of
lightness, of youth, of anything is possible.
Those pleasant delusions we give ourselves when we complete a "job
of work" as my dad used to say.
One
Poem A Day Won't Kill You is the idea of poet Phoebe Newman. She explained to Arts Alive host Lynda
Phillippi during a recent appearance on the show that the origins of the phrase
came as a personal exhortation. She had
recently received her Master of Fine Arts degree in writing (primarily poetry)
and she and her husband had moved to Ketchican Alaska. She began to struggle to maintain her
motivation to continue writing regularly.
She began to say to herself, "One Poem A Day Won't Kill You"
as a way to tell herself to write a poem a day.
In
the mid-1990s as a way to encourage poetry in KetchiKan she went to the local
public access radio station (cite, call and web) and put out several public
service requests for local folks to sign up to read their favorite poem on the
radio during the month of April, which is National Poetry Month. The response was over whelming. She called her radio show "One Poem A
Day Won't Kill You". She produced
the show for ten years. The show is
still going on in Ketchican. This will
be its 18th year.
We
have been filming poetry readings and last year we filmed Phoebe reading selections from her books of poetry. She asked us if we would like to do video
of Yamhill County folks reading their favorite poems. I had to think about it. The studio approach of bringing people in to
the studio Phoebe used for her radio program.
Bringing people into the MCM studio (cite) to read was very doable. Using the studio has some advantages. It is efficient. People are scheduled in, maybe several in a
day, they are taped reading, little editing and it is done. The TV studio also has some
disadvantages. The studio can be pretty
intimidating with the lights and cameras.
There needs to be a crew for cameras and control room. And most importantly it can be visually
boring and for a visual medium that is not a good thing.
We
decided to film people reading poems where ever they felt comfortable. We filmed in gardens, back yards, kitchens,
living rooms, city streets. Each
location was a challenge for lighting and for audio. I learned a lot about camera settings. Then
it sometimes got complicated in editing.
Overall, the filming the readings in field locations added to the
uniqueness of each reading.
The
other lesson this project has helped me learn about is copyright
permissions. Just finding out whom to
ask to get permission is a lot of work and can be very frustrating. Since I volunteer and consider our video
endeavors as completely non-commercial and educational, I am not always
generous in my thoughts about those who want money to allow us to use the poem
or music in what amounts to free advertising for them. They say things get easier as you do
them. I hope so.
I
will be posting the readings the day after they have been aired on MCM and
thinking about a follow up show reflecting on the making of One Poem A Day
Won't Kill You.
3/26/2013
Poetry Post, A random act of poetry
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| Poetry Post, NW Yamhill, McMinnville, Oregon |
Walking four or five mile each day around McMinnville allows
you to learn the little idiosyncrasies of each neighborhood, each street and
sometimes individual yards. A couple of
days ago toward the end of our walk we found ourselves walking down NW
Yamhill. There was a Poetry Post. Two or three years ago I had read about Poetry Posts in Portland neighborhoods in the The Oregonian. Ever since I thought it would be great to put one up in our McMinnville yard, when we finally move in. We stopped to read the poem.
Portland, being Portland, the Poetry Post idea has expanded across neighborhoods. Laura Foster in her blog Portland Walks and Urban Hikes talks about touring the many Poetry Posts around Portland. Yes there is an 'App' and map for finding Posts in Portland.
The poem was by Emma Wheeler Wilcox. The poem was her most famous 'Solitude' . As we stood there the poem seemed to lift us from ourselves. The first four lines,
"Laugh, and the world laughs with you;
Weep, and you weep alone;
For the sad old earth must borrow its mirth,
But has trouble enough of its own." stopped us.
We stood on the sidewalk and read the entire poem aloud alternating every four lines.
We walked away from reading feeling we had been given a gift, a gift of kindness, a gift of unexpected poetry. Our world and McMinnville was a better place.
Labels:
McMinnville,
Poetry,
Poetry Post,
poetry reading
3/23/2013
Do It Yourself: Pork Chops to Ham Hocks
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| Lisbon, Portugal Meat Shop |
Maybe it is our personal experiences as native Oregonians growing up in a time when it was okay and kind of expected that friends and families would cut up their own deer, elk, beef or hog and put it in the freezer, we were excited when we heard the Friends of the McMinnville Public Library Explore Oregon Series was going to feature a talk by Chef Eric Ferguson of Nick's Italian Cafe and Fino in Fondo.
We thought Eric was going to give a straight ahead discussion of the Fino in Fondo Italian sausage process. When we talked with Eric a few days before his Explore Oregon presentation he told us he planned on cutting up a half a pig. Okay. The Library was an interesting venue for cutting up a pig.
Eric did a great job of explaining what he was doing and why. He demonstrated various cuts and he gave advice from holding a knife to where to cut. He made wonderful suggestions for cooking various cuts.
He was asked if the Italian style sausages he makes a Fino in Fondo are raw. He explained the sausages are ground meat, spices, good bacteria stuffed into casings and fermented. The Italian style sausages are not cooked, they are fermented product like wine.
Eric is eloquent in his enthusiasm for food and the need to be connected to the food we eat.
Labels:
Eric Ferguson,
Explore Oregon Series,
Fino in Fondo,
foodie,
McMinnville,
McMinnville Public Library,
Nick's Italian Cafe,
Yamhill County
1/03/2013
Stephanie Lenox, Exploring strangeness in the voice of the other
In November 2012 Stephanie Lenox was one of the featured poets at Linfield College Nicholson Library's “Readings at the Nick” events. She talked about and read from her book “Congress Of Strange People” recently published by Airlie Press.
Lenox co-edits Blood Orange Review and teaches poetry at Willamette University. She is a member of the nonprofit publishing collective Airlie Press which is dedicated to cultivating excellent contemporary poetry
Lenox says her book “Congress Of Strange People” is about her ascination with strangeness of all types. One of the methods of her exploration of strangeness is to write in the persona of the stranger. This poetic exercise in empathy provides an extraordinary gift. Lenox seeks to push her empathetic powers to the extreme by choosing to engage the personas of Guinness World Record holders.
Lenox projects her poetic voice to the perspective of some familiar and some very strange people. Empathy is an essential human quality. Lenox’s poetry moves into the center of another human experience. She brings us along with her. We connect to that strangeness, we feel empathy and we recognize our common humanity, all of which are the real gifts of the poems in “Congress of Strange People”.
After talking about her book, Lenox reads “The Heart That Lies Outside the Body”. Watching and listening to her read this poem brings you the full gift of her poetic empathy.
Labels:
Airlie Press,
bloodorangereview,
Congress of Strange People,
Linfield College,
Poetry,
Stephanie Lenox,
Writing
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