I am going to get one of these coffee tables at work... someday... I hope.
This is where we are headed... we are getting closer and closer to that crazy power glove wall computer from Minority Report ... Awesome!!!
And guess what device has multitouch technology????? the iPhone ... coming to a circuit city near you in June 2007
More links
* Perceptive pixel homepage
* Multitouch research at NYU
* iPhone
Wednesday, May 30, 2007
Tuesday, May 29, 2007
Hip Hop
Yeah, so I'm in a hop hop phase.
Saturday, April 28, 2007
Richmond ZineFest 2007
I almost didn't go to this, but I thought it would be cool to see what kind of underground paper culture is floating around Richmond. The Richmond zinefest was held at the Firehouse Theater and at The Camel and according to the people I talked to, it was the first such festival in Richmond in about 14 years. As it turns out, about half the zine publishers were from out of town. Knowing nothing about zine culture except a vague reference from a 1990s Harvey Danger Song, I decided to learn more about zines from the people at the 25 or so tables.
I talked to most of the participants and picked up a lot of free schwag. The setup was rather like a flea market or comic convention, with each zine person sitting behind their own own table or half table. Some people had tee shirts and stuff for sale, but a lot of people gave me free stuff because I was talking to them.
You know this was a Richmondy event because RVA Magazine was there and it was at the Firehouse Theater (co-founded by Harry Kollatz Jr., aka senior writing editor of Richmond Magazine and guy with the funny hat who is always fan walking in Carytown). The guy from Patchwork Collective was manning the info table, and the Zinefest program he had put together was about as DIY as you can get.
Keywords for noobs:
* Zine -- a Do It Yourself(DIY) magazine-like publication, usually 10 to 50 pages containing original art, poetry, opinion pieces, doodles, and random whatever.
* Distro -- sort of a zine middleman; a person who publishes lists of available zines and will send them to you. Examples include PaperChaseDistro.com, , parcell press , Valiant Death (records and Distro). Zineworld ("A reader's guide to the Underground Press") seems to be a good place to start... they review zines of all quality levels as well as writing articles on how to do zine stuff.
* PerZine -- someone who writes a zine about their PERsonal experience.
* Tower Records -- Apparently Tower used to be zine central, but now that they have filed for bankruptcy.
* Tabling -- I saw this on a flyer... not sure if it is zine scene lingo but it works... it's a verb... "who will be tabling at that event? Oh, I have a bunch of people who want their own tables"
As some of you may know, I originally intended sceneonerichmond to be a "newsletter" for the Richmond <>< scene. When my co-conspirators in the sceneone project bugged out in 2004, I started this blog in 2005. Even as I am now mostly internet presence, I have always had a place in my heart for making and distributing paper information pamphlets around Richmond. Here are some things I learned about the craft in case there are others like me who think about this kind of stuff...
* Frequency -- most zine kids are far less productive than they originally intended. The distro people told me it was fairly normal to have zines be created bi- monthy (that is... every other month). Some people put out zines only once a year. One guy shared a table with another "zine buddy" told me he put out two zines in August 2006 and started a third that didn't get done until last week.
* Media -- Most people published in 8" X 6" staple-bound "fold copy paper in half" format, and several mentioned to me that they relied heavily on the Staples copy center honor system or friends who had access to "free" copy machines. Several people went beyond the low-fi DIY norm and actually had impressive art and copy. The twine guy (28 Pages Lovingly Bound With Twine) was using a wooden spoon to get the twine the right length. I was also particularly impressed with the stuff at the substanceInk table (these guys were VCU art students). The other people who set the curve at this festival were the folks from Young American Comics. Not only that but, they gave me their price list for making buttons. Buttons!
* Content-- HOW TO tips like Gardening ... musings about love... documentation of experiences... Richmondy stuff... anarchists calls to arms... stories about a particular location... absurd anecdotes... tripped out doodles(brains melting, etc) ... personal poetry... artsy comics
My overall memory of this event was that it was a lot of down to earth people who are trying to build community by putting a little bit of themselves on paper. Many of them got into "the zine scene" by first reading other peoples' stuff and saying, "I can do THAT!"
I am struggling for a pithy conclusion here. I guess I'll just say that I also got the feeling that zine-ing can't be that hard. I have even though of a name if I ever do catch the zine bug... " ZineOneRichmond!"
-RCU
I talked to most of the participants and picked up a lot of free schwag. The setup was rather like a flea market or comic convention, with each zine person sitting behind their own own table or half table. Some people had tee shirts and stuff for sale, but a lot of people gave me free stuff because I was talking to them.
You know this was a Richmondy event because RVA Magazine was there and it was at the Firehouse Theater (co-founded by Harry Kollatz Jr., aka senior writing editor of Richmond Magazine and guy with the funny hat who is always fan walking in Carytown). The guy from Patchwork Collective was manning the info table, and the Zinefest program he had put together was about as DIY as you can get.
Keywords for noobs:
* Zine -- a Do It Yourself(DIY) magazine-like publication, usually 10 to 50 pages containing original art, poetry, opinion pieces, doodles, and random whatever.
* Distro -- sort of a zine middleman; a person who publishes lists of available zines and will send them to you. Examples include PaperChaseDistro.com, , parcell press , Valiant Death (records and Distro). Zineworld ("A reader's guide to the Underground Press") seems to be a good place to start... they review zines of all quality levels as well as writing articles on how to do zine stuff.
* PerZine -- someone who writes a zine about their PERsonal experience.
* Tower Records -- Apparently Tower used to be zine central, but now that they have filed for bankruptcy.
* Tabling -- I saw this on a flyer... not sure if it is zine scene lingo but it works... it's a verb... "who will be tabling at that event? Oh, I have a bunch of people who want their own tables"
As some of you may know, I originally intended sceneonerichmond to be a "newsletter" for the Richmond <>< scene. When my co-conspirators in the sceneone project bugged out in 2004, I started this blog in 2005. Even as I am now mostly internet presence, I have always had a place in my heart for making and distributing paper information pamphlets around Richmond. Here are some things I learned about the craft in case there are others like me who think about this kind of stuff...
* Frequency -- most zine kids are far less productive than they originally intended. The distro people told me it was fairly normal to have zines be created bi- monthy (that is... every other month). Some people put out zines only once a year. One guy shared a table with another "zine buddy" told me he put out two zines in August 2006 and started a third that didn't get done until last week.
* Media -- Most people published in 8" X 6" staple-bound "fold copy paper in half" format, and several mentioned to me that they relied heavily on the Staples copy center honor system or friends who had access to "free" copy machines. Several people went beyond the low-fi DIY norm and actually had impressive art and copy. The twine guy (28 Pages Lovingly Bound With Twine) was using a wooden spoon to get the twine the right length. I was also particularly impressed with the stuff at the substanceInk table (these guys were VCU art students). The other people who set the curve at this festival were the folks from Young American Comics. Not only that but, they gave me their price list for making buttons. Buttons!
* Content-- HOW TO tips like Gardening ... musings about love... documentation of experiences... Richmondy stuff... anarchists calls to arms... stories about a particular location... absurd anecdotes... tripped out doodles(brains melting, etc) ... personal poetry... artsy comics
My overall memory of this event was that it was a lot of down to earth people who are trying to build community by putting a little bit of themselves on paper. Many of them got into "the zine scene" by first reading other peoples' stuff and saying, "I can do THAT!"
I am struggling for a pithy conclusion here. I guess I'll just say that I also got the feeling that zine-ing can't be that hard. I have even though of a name if I ever do catch the zine bug... " ZineOneRichmond!"
-RCU
Friday, April 27, 2007
Summer Fun in Richmond -- Schedule
This post will be regularly updated with concerts and other fun stuff occurring this summer. **** This was last updated April 28, 2007****
If you want weekly schedules, go to weeklyrant.com or check out the event links to the left.
1. GENERAL CALENDAR
------MAY------
* Friday Cheers and other weekly summer concert venues (see below) kick off
* Jamestown 2007 kicks off, including Godspeed visiting Richmond and Henricus May 23-26
* Richmond 1977 "30 Days of 30 Years" kicks off ...
May 5 -- Cinco De Mayo on Brown's Island
------JUNE------
June 9 -- (tentative) River city Beer and Seafood festival
------JULY------
* July 4 -- Fireworks at Dogwood Dell and The Diamond... followed by Fan Walking
* July 5 -- Kingsfest at King's Dominion
------AUGUST------
* TBD -- Carytown Watermelon Festival (Sunday Afternoon Early in August)
2. Innsbrook After Hours (Wednesdays, and some Fridays)
May 9 -- Wierd al Yankovic
May 16 Elliott Yamin
May 23 -- Dark Star Orchestra
May 30 -- Huey Lewis and the News
June 3 -- Three Days Grace/Braking Benjamin
June 6 -- LIVE
June 13 -- Gin Blossoms
June 20 -- Doobie brothers/Little Feat
June 22 -- Sugarland
June 27 -- TBA
July 4 -- No Concert
July 7 -- Taylor Hicks
July 11 -- Hootie an the Blowfish
July 18 -- Los Lonely Boys/Pat Green
July 25 -- TBA
July 26 -- Sara Evans
July 28 -- Chicago
Aug 10 -- The Wailers
3. Groovin in the Garden (Thursdays)
May 10 -- Seldom Scene... and the Avett Brothers
May 17 -- Dickey Betts & Great Southern
May 24 -- Medeski, Martin, & Wood
May 31 -- Big Bad Voodoo Daddy
June 7 -- Big Head Todd and the Monsters
June 14 -- Son Volt
June 21 -- TBA
June 28 -- 1964 the Tribute (Beatles covers)
4. Friday Cheers (uh... Fridays)
May 11 --- Carbon Leaf
May 18 -- Lee Boys / DJ Williams Project
June 1 -- Soullive/Exister
June 8 -- Keller Williams
June 15 -- AAE/Crucial Elements
June 22 -- Drive-by Truckers
June 29 -- The Slip
5. Other concert venues I will link but not list
* Fridays at Sunset (weekly)
* Dogwood Dell Festival of the Arts (Daily )
* Third thursdays at VMFA (monthly)
* Fourth Fridays at Artworks (monthly)
* First Fridays on Broad (monthly)
* Richmond Kickers games... not a concert but fun to watch with friends.
6. FALL 2007 EVENTS
* "Swingin on the Tracks" at the Science Museum (September/October) (weekly)
* October 5-6 -- 2nd Street Festival
* October 12-14 -- National Folk Festival
If you want weekly schedules, go to weeklyrant.com or check out the event links to the left.
1. GENERAL CALENDAR
------MAY------
* Friday Cheers and other weekly summer concert venues (see below) kick off
* Jamestown 2007 kicks off, including Godspeed visiting Richmond and Henricus May 23-26
* Richmond 1977 "30 Days of 30 Years" kicks off ...
May 5 -- Cinco De Mayo on Brown's Island
------JUNE------
June 9 -- (tentative) River city Beer and Seafood festival
------JULY------
* July 4 -- Fireworks at Dogwood Dell and The Diamond... followed by Fan Walking
* July 5 -- Kingsfest at King's Dominion
------AUGUST------
* TBD -- Carytown Watermelon Festival (Sunday Afternoon Early in August)
2. Innsbrook After Hours (Wednesdays, and some Fridays)
May 9 -- Wierd al Yankovic
May 16 Elliott Yamin
May 23 -- Dark Star Orchestra
May 30 -- Huey Lewis and the News
June 3 -- Three Days Grace/Braking Benjamin
June 6 -- LIVE
June 13 -- Gin Blossoms
June 20 -- Doobie brothers/Little Feat
June 22 -- Sugarland
June 27 -- TBA
July 4 -- No Concert
July 7 -- Taylor Hicks
July 11 -- Hootie an the Blowfish
July 18 -- Los Lonely Boys/Pat Green
July 25 -- TBA
July 26 -- Sara Evans
July 28 -- Chicago
Aug 10 -- The Wailers
3. Groovin in the Garden (Thursdays)
May 10 -- Seldom Scene... and the Avett Brothers
May 17 -- Dickey Betts & Great Southern
May 24 -- Medeski, Martin, & Wood
May 31 -- Big Bad Voodoo Daddy
June 7 -- Big Head Todd and the Monsters
June 14 -- Son Volt
June 21 -- TBA
June 28 -- 1964 the Tribute (Beatles covers)
4. Friday Cheers (uh... Fridays)
May 11 --- Carbon Leaf
May 18 -- Lee Boys / DJ Williams Project
June 1 -- Soullive/Exister
June 8 -- Keller Williams
June 15 -- AAE/Crucial Elements
June 22 -- Drive-by Truckers
June 29 -- The Slip
5. Other concert venues I will link but not list
* Fridays at Sunset (weekly)
* Dogwood Dell Festival of the Arts (Daily )
* Third thursdays at VMFA (monthly)
* Fourth Fridays at Artworks (monthly)
* First Fridays on Broad (monthly)
* Richmond Kickers games... not a concert but fun to watch with friends.
6. FALL 2007 EVENTS
* "Swingin on the Tracks" at the Science Museum (September/October) (weekly)
* October 5-6 -- 2nd Street Festival
* October 12-14 -- National Folk Festival
Monday, April 23, 2007
I suck at blogging, but...
... I have been linked, so I have to blog now. Let the real blogging begin!!!!
Ok, stream of consciousness wikification:
Today is April 23, which is, let's see... the third day of Taurus... that number 23 is coming up like in that movie.
I paid off my car today... I talked to my sister in Kita, Mali on a three way call for the first time since Christmas.
I am turning 30 in May, which means you should take the pledge. ... Richmond1977.com, aw yeah
All I need to be a great blogger is... practice! I think my slant for this blog will be that I go out in the world and assimilate random information and post it here so that other people can read it and assimilate it some more and then ... hopefully someday... it will be useful to someone.
...so you should expect lots of random but interesting links and facts!!!!!!!!!!
Ok, stream of consciousness wikification:
Today is April 23, which is, let's see... the third day of Taurus... that number 23 is coming up like in that movie.
I paid off my car today... I talked to my sister in Kita, Mali on a three way call for the first time since Christmas.
I am turning 30 in May, which means you should take the pledge. ... Richmond1977.com, aw yeah
All I need to be a great blogger is... practice! I think my slant for this blog will be that I go out in the world and assimilate random information and post it here so that other people can read it and assimilate it some more and then ... hopefully someday... it will be useful to someone.
...so you should expect lots of random but interesting links and facts!!!!!!!!!!
Friday, March 30, 2007
We are the Web
Yeah, so I have been telling everyone about "The World is Flat" by Thomas Friedman. We are all interconnected more than ever before.. in all of history.
Tonight, I found a cool link on YouTube that conveys this pretty well.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6gmP4nk0EOE
The phrase to remember is "We are the Web" The internet/blogs/Web2.0 is produced by people like you and me. If you don't like what you see on the internet, ask yourself what you have done to contribute. Nothing? Think about that.
Sunday, February 04, 2007
Top 50 from United Way
1 | American Red Cross Greater Richmond Chapter | 754,928 | http://www.yourunitedway.org |
---|---|---|---|
2 | Family Lifeline | 742,268 | http://www.family-lifeline.org/ |
3 | Friends Association for Children | 569,001 | http://www.friendsassn.org/default.asp |
4 | YWCA of Richmond, VA | 398,537 | http://www.ywcarichmond.org/ |
5 | Memorial Child Guidance Clinic / ChildSavers of Richmond | 361,000 | http://www.mcgcva.com/ |
6 | YMCA of Greater Richmond | 358,807 | http://www.ymcarichmond.org/ |
7 | Salvation Army - Richmond | 353,678 | http://www.uss.salvationarmy.org/richmond |
8 | Boys and Girls Clubs of Metro Richmond | 315,311 | http://www.bgcmr.org/ |
9 | IVNA Health Care | 277,000 | http://www.ivna.org/index.html |
10 | William Byrd Community House | 267,587 | http://www.wbch.org/ |
11 | Commonwealth Catholic Charities | 164,304 | http://www.cccofva.org/defaultHome.aspx |
12 | The Greater Richmond ARC | 152,279 | http://www.richmondarc.org/ |
13 | HomeAgain (formerly ESI Connections) | 148,000 | http://homeagainrichmond.org/ |
14 | Goodwill of Central VA | 147,880 | http://www.goodwillrichmond.org/index.asp |
15 | Offender Aid and Restoration of Richmond | 135,000 | http://www.oarric.org/ |
16 | Jewish Family Services | 129,612 | http://www.jfsrichmond.org/ |
17 | Children’s Home Society of Virginia | 124,443 | http://www.chsva.org/ |
18 | Refugee and Immigration Services | 123,469 | http://www.richmonddiocese.org/ris/ |
19 | CHIP of Greater Richmond | 123,413 | http://www.chipofrichmond.org/ |
20 | Big Brothers Big Sisters Services | 122,187 | http://www.bigbrobigsis.com/ |
21 | Daily Planet | 120,000 | http://www.dailyplanetva.org/ |
22 | A Grace Place Adult Care Center | 118,500 | http://www.agraceplaceacc.org/index.php |
23 | Southside Child Development Center | 115,160 | http://www.mcgcva.com/about.htm ??? |
24 | Boy Scouts - Heart of Virginia Council | 95,220 | http://www.scoutingvirginia.org/ |
25 | Circle Center Adult Day Services | 84,000 | http://www.circlecenteradultday.org/index.php |
26 | Meals on Wheels Serving Central VA 40th anniversary!!!!!!!!!! | 84,000 | http://www.mowdelivers.com |
27 | Freedom House | 83,000 | http://www.freedomhouserichmond.org/ |
28 | Fan Free Clinic | 77,559 | http://www.fanfreeclinic.org/ |
29 | Central Virginia Legal Aid Society | 76,231 | http://www.cvlas.org/ |
30 | CARITAS | 75,000 | http://www.caritasshelter.org/ |
31 | Carol & Marcus Weinstein Jewish Community Center | 70,246 | http://www.weinsteinjcc.org/ |
32 | Salvation Army - Southside | 66,579 | http://www.salvationarmysatx.org/ |
33 | Girl Scouts: Commonwealth Council of VA | 65,828 | http://www.comgirlscouts.org/ |
34 | Quin Rivers Agency for Community Action | 54,108 | ??? http://www.vadv.org/??? |
35 | Senior Center of Richmond | 48,000 | http://www.benevolink.com/main.aspx?page=ConsumerCharityProfile&id=564578 |
36 | Association for Retarded Citizens Petersburg Area | 45,363 | ??? http://www.unitedwayofhopewell.org/profiles.html |
37 | Hanover Adult Center | 30,872 | http://hanoveradultcenter.com/ |
38 | Foster Grandparents Program-Petersburg | 27,068 | ??? http://www.yourunitedway.org/NR/rdonlyres/FBA6009C-60FC-4B28-A4F7-568F83CAC286/0/PARTNERCODES.pdf |
39 | American Red Cross Southside Area Chapter | 27,000 | ??? |
40 | Hanover Arc | 26,600 | http://www.hanoverarc.com/ |
41 | CARES | 24,998 | CARES, Inc. (Crisis Assistance Response Emergency Shelter, Inc.) P.O. Box 1142 Petersburg, Virginia 23804 (804)861-0849/(804)861-0865 Regional shelter serving persons in the cities of Petersburg, Colonial Heights and Hopewell, as well as the counties of Prince George, Dinwiddie, and Chesterfield who are homeless as a result of a housing crisis, transportation crisis or are victims of domestic violence. Provides service referrals, travel assistance, child care as well as a mailing address. |
42 | Lead Safe Petersburg (Petersburg Health Department) | 24,000 | http://www.upal.org/safehousing_petersburg.htm |
43 | READ Center | 22,587 | http://www.readcenter.org/ |
44 | Goochland Fellowship and Family Services -- 45th anniversary!!! 18,000 | http://www.goochlandfellowship.org/ | |
45 | South Richmond Adult Day Care Center | long link | |
---|---|---|---|
46 | CHIP of Petersburg (Petersburg Health Department) | CHIP of Petersburg Petersburg Health Department 301 Halifax Street Petersburg, Virginia 23803 (804) 863-1652 15,000 | |
47 | Tri-City Literacy Council | http://www.tricityliteracy.org/14,000 | |
48 | In Home Care Fund for the Elderly--Petersburg Department of Social Services | ???11,421 | |
49 | Virginia Voice for the Print Handicapped | benevolink link 11,000 | |
50 | Crater District Agency on Aging | http://www.cdaaa.org/pages/1/index.htm10,000 | |
51 | Emergency Medication Fund Dinwiddie Department of Social Services | ??? 8,000 | |
52 | Al-A-Mo Recovery Center | ??? link?>?? 6,817 |
Tuesday, January 23, 2007
Other Good Causes
Still deciding whether to elevate these to "top 30"...
http://www.projectrescue.com/ -- Money donated saves the kids from brothels and helps to get women out of trafficking slavery. Pretty intense.
http://www.richmondhabitat.org/page3.html
http://www.forkeepsvirginia.org/ -- a project for the first lady about finding permanent placement for Va. teens in foster care
http://www.invisiblechildren.com/ -- it's a movie... not a charity.. but a good cause, of course.
http://www.virginiasupportivehousing.org/icf.htm -- Virginia Supportive Housing works with other community development corporations in the Richmond area to revitalize abandoned and substandard housing to provide safe affordable housing. Virginia Supportive Housing also works closely with Richmond area homeless shelters and transitional programs.
http://www.bgcmr.org/ Richmond Boys and Girls Club ... for the kids... (Donate here!)
Crisis Pregnancy Center -- The Center is dedicated to providing compassionate care and practical assistance to women who are unprepared for pregnancy. Since 1983, the Center has helped more than 20,000 women meet the challenges of pregnancy, childbirth, and parenting. All services are provided free of charge. 24-Hr Helpline: (804) 673-2020 or Email us at CPCRichmond2@aol.com
Central Virginia Food Bank -- " The Central Virginia Foodbank (CVFB) was founded in 1980 to procure and distribute food efficiently and effectively to feeding programs throughout the area. Since then, the Central Virginia Foodbank service area has grown to include 31 counties and five cities in the Central Virginia region. Presently, we distribute food through a network of more than 500 network partner agencies, which includes more than 130 child care providers serving needy children. In addition, we serve as many as 4,000 daily meals in the summer and 2,000 daily meals during the school year to needy children through our 54 Kids Café programs."
http://www.projectrescue.com/ -- Money donated saves the kids from brothels and helps to get women out of trafficking slavery. Pretty intense.
http://www.richmondhabitat.org/page3.html
http://www.forkeepsvirginia.org/ -- a project for the first lady about finding permanent placement for Va. teens in foster care
http://www.invisiblechildren.com/ -- it's a movie... not a charity.. but a good cause, of course.
http://www.virginiasupportivehousing.org/icf.htm -- Virginia Supportive Housing works with other community development corporations in the Richmond area to revitalize abandoned and substandard housing to provide safe affordable housing. Virginia Supportive Housing also works closely with Richmond area homeless shelters and transitional programs.

Crisis Pregnancy Center -- The Center is dedicated to providing compassionate care and practical assistance to women who are unprepared for pregnancy. Since 1983, the Center has helped more than 20,000 women meet the challenges of pregnancy, childbirth, and parenting. All services are provided free of charge. 24-Hr Helpline: (804) 673-2020 or Email us at CPCRichmond2@aol.com
Central Virginia Food Bank -- " The Central Virginia Foodbank (CVFB) was founded in 1980 to procure and distribute food efficiently and effectively to feeding programs throughout the area. Since then, the Central Virginia Foodbank service area has grown to include 31 counties and five cities in the Central Virginia region. Presently, we distribute food through a network of more than 500 network partner agencies, which includes more than 130 child care providers serving needy children. In addition, we serve as many as 4,000 daily meals in the summer and 2,000 daily meals during the school year to needy children through our 54 Kids Café programs."
Monday, January 22, 2007
Bells and Whistles
Ok, so here are some elements to work on....
==Definite==
blog ... content to be developed ... sceneonerichmond.blogspot.com
Tee shirt
-- Logo... working
-- Schedule of May events to wear your tee shirt to(Cinco De Mayo, Friday Cheers, )
-- official purchase location for tee shirts
-- should I charge for tee shirts?
Website ... still need to decide on a URL... stick with sceneonerichmond.blogspot.com?
==Possible==
myspace account?
Theme song?
______ contest?
==Definite==
blog ... content to be developed ... sceneonerichmond.blogspot.com
Tee shirt
-- Logo... working
-- Schedule of May events to wear your tee shirt to(Cinco De Mayo, Friday Cheers, )
-- official purchase location for tee shirts
-- should I charge for tee shirts?
Website ... still need to decide on a URL... stick with sceneonerichmond.blogspot.com?
==Possible==
myspace account?
Theme song?
______ contest?
Take the pledge! Draft list of charities
The challenge: Take the pledge! Under the consultation of friends, I have chosen a list of 30 charities that I would feel comfortable giving money to and that I feel do a great deal of good for the Richmond community. I am challenging everyone I know to give$30 to one of these charities... or $1 to all 30.... however you want to do it. Consider it a b-day gift. To take the pledge, simply let me know when you have sent your gift the charity(-ies?) of your choice. Obviously, I can't tally how much money you gave because I can't prove it.. but I am going by the NPR honor system... I only tally the amounts that people have pledged!!!
This is a start. (in no particular order)
Send suggestions to sceneonerichmond@ g ma il. com. At some point, I'll put together a tee shirt design.... still need to figure that out.
1 William Byrd Community House Help out the kids.
2 CARITAS Richmond End Homelessness in Richmond Check out their "donate" tab... pay online
3 Homeward End homelessness in Richmond heck out their "donate" tab... pay online
4 ART 180 - "ART 180 creates and provides art-related programs to young people living in challenging circumstances, encouraging personal and community change through self-expression. Our group is based in Richmond, Virginia."
5 United Methodist Family Services "By making a gift to UMFS you can touch the life of a child or family in deeply significant ways. Your financial support enables UMFS to be a world-class leader providing human services that enable children and families to realize their hopes for the future." (Adoption, Treatment Foster Care, Residential Treatment, Support Services, and Affiliate Services.)
6 The Giving Heart (Community Thanksgiving Feast) - Providing basic needs, assistance, acceptance and opportunities to the underprivileged, elderly and those who otherwise are hindered in their desire to move forward 7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
25
26
27
28
29
30
This is a start. (in no particular order)
Send suggestions to sceneonerichmond@ g ma il. com. At some point, I'll put together a tee shirt design.... still need to figure that out.
1 William Byrd Community House Help out the kids.
2 CARITAS Richmond End Homelessness in Richmond Check out their "donate" tab... pay online
3 Homeward End homelessness in Richmond heck out their "donate" tab... pay online
4 ART 180 - "ART 180 creates and provides art-related programs to young people living in challenging circumstances, encouraging personal and community change through self-expression. Our group is based in Richmond, Virginia."
5 United Methodist Family Services "By making a gift to UMFS you can touch the life of a child or family in deeply significant ways. Your financial support enables UMFS to be a world-class leader providing human services that enable children and families to realize their hopes for the future." (Adoption, Treatment Foster Care, Residential Treatment, Support Services, and Affiliate Services.)
6 The Giving Heart (Community Thanksgiving Feast) - Providing basic needs, assistance, acceptance and opportunities to the underprivileged, elderly and those who otherwise are hindered in their desire to move forward
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
25
26
27
28
29
30
Arbitrary 2007 anniversaries
It seems like 2007 is the year for arbitrary celebrations of increments of time ending in 0 or 5.
For example:
* 400th anniversary of Jamestown
* 385th anniversary of the Indian Massacre of 1622
* 265th anniversary of the founding of Richmond (1742)
* 200th anniversary of Robert E. Lee's Birthday
* 175th (ish) anniversary of the Virginia Historical Society
* 10th anniversary of Bandito's Burrito Lounge
And, obviously, the 30th anniversary of me.
For example:
* 400th anniversary of Jamestown
* 385th anniversary of the Indian Massacre of 1622
* 265th anniversary of the founding of Richmond (1742)
* 200th anniversary of Robert E. Lee's Birthday
* 175th (ish) anniversary of the Virginia Historical Society
* 10th anniversary of Bandito's Burrito Lounge
And, obviously, the 30th anniversary of me.
30 days Of 30 years: The concept...
It all starts with concept...
Premise 1: I am turning 30 in May... people who turn 30 often do something drastic on their 30th birthday...
Premise 2: doing drastic things doesn't need to be negative... I can do something drastically positive on my 30th birthday... like get people to donate to charity. It is right to help out the little guy.
Premise 3: tee shirts are awesome. Richmond is awesome. Raising awareness of Richmond charities by putting them on tee shirts is awesome...
Premise 4: Viral Marketing sucks but it works... and advertising for a good cause doesn't suck .
I think the conclusion follows... A 30-day Richmond Charity Pledge Birthday Festival Website Tee Shirt
Coming to a capital city near you in May of 2007.
I will keep you posted via this blog.
Premise 1: I am turning 30 in May... people who turn 30 often do something drastic on their 30th birthday...
Premise 2: doing drastic things doesn't need to be negative... I can do something drastically positive on my 30th birthday... like get people to donate to charity. It is right to help out the little guy.
Premise 3: tee shirts are awesome. Richmond is awesome. Raising awareness of Richmond charities by putting them on tee shirts is awesome...
Premise 4: Viral Marketing sucks but it works... and advertising for a good cause doesn't suck .
I think the conclusion follows... A 30-day Richmond Charity Pledge Birthday Festival Website Tee Shirt
Coming to a capital city near you in May of 2007.
I will keep you posted via this blog.
Walking into 2007...
I feel a little like Rip Van Winkle....
ok, so apparently I didn't make ANY blog posts in 2006. That tells you what sort of blogger I am. I am a very bad blogger.
So what did I do in 2006? I did exactly what I said I would ... I walked the Fan, and I promoted walking the Fan. For my birthday in May, I took the GRTC and walked to Brown's Island and joined 3500 of my closest friends for a Friday Cheers concert by Fighting Gravity. The highlight of that evening was when the lead singer (Shiavone McGee), shouted happy birthday.. to himself... but little did he know that he was playing my party... the biggest birthday party that Richmond had ever seen.. up to that time.
The best part of the whole year was December 31, when over 6000 people joined me in Carytown and that dude from RVAmag yelled something passionate about community and we all waited for the New York Deli ball to drop... err rise... and then we all went Fan walking into late into the night.
So what's next for 2007? Obviously, I have to throw a bigger birthday party than last year.
... and that's a pledge...
ok, so apparently I didn't make ANY blog posts in 2006. That tells you what sort of blogger I am. I am a very bad blogger.
So what did I do in 2006? I did exactly what I said I would ... I walked the Fan, and I promoted walking the Fan. For my birthday in May, I took the GRTC and walked to Brown's Island and joined 3500 of my closest friends for a Friday Cheers concert by Fighting Gravity. The highlight of that evening was when the lead singer (Shiavone McGee), shouted happy birthday.. to himself... but little did he know that he was playing my party... the biggest birthday party that Richmond had ever seen.. up to that time.
The best part of the whole year was December 31, when over 6000 people joined me in Carytown and that dude from RVAmag yelled something passionate about community and we all waited for the New York Deli ball to drop... err rise... and then we all went Fan walking into late into the night.
So what's next for 2007? Obviously, I have to throw a bigger birthday party than last year.
... and that's a pledge...
Saturday, December 10, 2005
Monday, October 24, 2005
Reading is the new trend, hepcats!
Romans 12:2:Do not conform any longer to the pattern of this world,

but be transformed by the renewing of your mind.

but be transformed by the renewing of your mind.

Tuesday, October 04, 2005
Thursday, April 28, 2005
Kings Fest
Kings Fest is being held Thursday, July 7 through Saturday, July 9 at Paramount's Kings Dominion this year--
Click here for the Upcoming.org event listing. It would be cool if you registered with Upcoming and dropped yourself in the Richmond metro group, and listed yourself as attending if you are...Three days of Christian music, speaking and teaching. Many performances are scheduled for this three day event.
Thursday: Third Day, Pillar, Hyper Static UnionFriday: Audio Adrenaline, Cameron Mills, Rebecca St James, Kutless, Building 429, Hawk Nelson, Stellar Kart
Saturday: Newsboys, Wes Hamilton, Tobymac, FFH, Jeremy Camp, Thousand Foot Krutch, Dizmas
Sunday, March 06, 2005
Finding the Scene Part 1
I had a thought today. What if I subscribed to all the church newsletters in the Fan? I could compile a a list of the most interesting Young Adult activities and send it out to everoune through my account at sceneonerichmond@gmail.com.
Nah... too much work.
There must be an easier way to collect this information.
PS when I say Young Adult, I mean ages 20-30. We need a new word.
Nah... too much work.
There must be an easier way to collect this information.
PS when I say Young Adult, I mean ages 20-30. We need a new word.
Monday, February 28, 2005
The Madness of Crowds
Crowds are trendy nowadays.
http://www.randomhouse.com/features/wisdomofcrowds/
I am skeptical. As I sit at World Cup Cafe on Morris Street, I observe to my left a rowdy group of 12 Christian young adults from a vibrant Fan-area church. They have colonized the entire East side of the cafe to the point that the Men's bathroom is blocked off. Their presence distracts the VCU kids trying to study, and their mass arrival and demand for every sort of fancy beverage and dessert creates a tremendous workload for the barista, which makes her grumpy. Is this a loving witness? It appears that this excursion into public space is also an intrusion, an invasion.
They are sincere in their relationships with each other, and I love them and respect them for it, but they represent a tremendous annoyance to everyone else in the cafe. Sometimes, the only contact some people have with Christians is through being lectured and talked-down-to, and through rude but oblivious groups such as this one. Where is the model of Christian fellowship in the world that gives people exposure to loving Christians without having us be the bull in a china shop?
http://www.litrix.com/madraven/madne001.htm
http://www.randomhouse.com/features/wisdomofcrowds/
I am skeptical. As I sit at World Cup Cafe on Morris Street, I observe to my left a rowdy group of 12 Christian young adults from a vibrant Fan-area church. They have colonized the entire East side of the cafe to the point that the Men's bathroom is blocked off. Their presence distracts the VCU kids trying to study, and their mass arrival and demand for every sort of fancy beverage and dessert creates a tremendous workload for the barista, which makes her grumpy. Is this a loving witness? It appears that this excursion into public space is also an intrusion, an invasion.
They are sincere in their relationships with each other, and I love them and respect them for it, but they represent a tremendous annoyance to everyone else in the cafe. Sometimes, the only contact some people have with Christians is through being lectured and talked-down-to, and through rude but oblivious groups such as this one. Where is the model of Christian fellowship in the world that gives people exposure to loving Christians without having us be the bull in a china shop?
http://www.litrix.com/madraven/madne001.htm
Sunday, February 27, 2005
Scene Insider #1
This guy is basically WeeklyRant.com. While his position gives him the
scoop on RVA events, there may also be a bias to plug his sponsors.
That said, http://weeklyrant.com and its companion blog
http://riverrapids.blogspot.com/
are pretty good views to the RVA Scene.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)