Friday


21
Feb 14

Southeast Journalism Conference

Here’s the big deal:

Best of the South

In the Best of the South contest Samford students won 11 honors.

Ninth place in best special event reporter: Chelsea Pennington
Eighth in best graphic news designer: Sarah Norville
Eighth in news-editorial artist/illustrator: Zach Brown
Eighth in best newspaper: Samford Crimson
Sixth in best arts/entertainment writer: Matt Harrison
Sixth in best video news program: Samford News Network
Fourth in best magazine: Exodus
Third in best news writer: Sydney Cromwell
Third in best op/ed writer: Evan Elmore
Second in best TV feature news reporter: Ally Reece
Winner, best journalism research paper: Lauren Cherry

That’s against students from 51 other member schools. We are very proud of the hard work the students put in, and the recognition they are receiving from industry professionals. We’re doing something right and so are the students.

Anyway, there is a lot more from the conference on my Twitter feed. I’ve been live-tweeting the excellent panels, a panel session on a case study of the 2012 Mickey Shunick murder in Lafayette, La. and a panel on the “neglected health beat.”

Last night I judged contestants in the onsite sports photography contest. One of our writers, Clayton Hurdle, the Crimson’s sports editor and the guy in the center above, took part in the sports writing contest. Zach Brown the Crimson’s editor in chief and Sydney Cromwell, the news editor, took part in contests today. The winners of those will be announced tomorrow.

The food at the conference has been amazing, by the way. At our buffet dinner tonight we had crawfish étouffée with steamed white rice, beef stroganoff, tossed salad, corn maque choux, steamed broccoli. At lunch today we had what we were told were the best po’ boys for miles around.

Here’s the daytime view from my room on the 14th floor:

Vermilion River

And looking the other way up the Vermilion River.

Vermilion River

Here’s my view at sunset.

View

From the parts that I was fortunate to see the host school, the University of Louisiana-Lafayette has a lovely campus. One more half-day of conference tomorrow, and then we head back home. And more pictures to come, at some point.

And now I’m going to go try another midnight 5K.

I do not know what is happening.


14
Feb 14

Your typical, lovely Friday

The scene earlier this week at Cheaha, Alabama’s highest point. Today, depending on where you were, it was mild and clear or mild and overcast with the occasional shower. Cheaha, which will likely be closed for several days for cleanup, got up to 58 today and had sunny skies, with rain later.

All of this is how you know that spring is about to make her entrance. When nothing makes sense it all clicks into comprehension, meteorologically speaking.

This morning I had a BLT for breakfast. Later I swam 2,850 yards — and some of it wasn’t bad. And I did some other things, too.

We went to the gym meet this evening:

gymnastics

Auburn hosted fifth-ranked Alabama, a team whom they’ve never beaten in the history of gymnastics. But they’re getting really, really close. By the time the number 12 Tigers were on the beam they were only a few hundredths of a point behind with the floor still to go. It was apparent that it would come down to either a Bama stumble on the beam or the last routine on the floor for Auburn.

gymnastics

The fourth rotation came along. Bama held a slim, but sure lead. Auburn was still in striking distance. We were still in an anything-could-happen atmosphere.

gymnastics

And hope springs eternal, for the numbers are good and Auburn’s tiny powerhouse Bri Guy is up to anchor the floor routine and close the meet. And on her first tumbling pass Guy stumbled out of her leap and then fell harsh and hard to the ground. There were a scary few moments:

gymnastics

They put her in an air cast, sat her on a gurney and wheeled her out of the Arena. The crowd chanted “We love Bri! We love Bri!” and she flashed that adorable, big smile she has and waved to everyone as Alabama’s gymnasts and Auburn’s looked on. Later they would pray together, stunned by the scary moment that could have been any of them.

(Update: She reportedly tore both of her Achilles’. One apparently on the way up and perhaps the other on the way down. Despite all of that she narrowly avoided landing on her neck and head. Sadly, her junior season is done.)

Auburn lost, but posted their second highest score in the history of the program. They’re getting closer all the time.

And then, later tonight we laughed with a friend at the local barbecue joint. We made a new friend there, too. And then they kicked us out because they all wanted to go home.

It was a fine day.


7
Feb 14

Check your egg rolls for bugs and the store owner for guns

We’re at Walmart. There are two checkout lines open. And each line has about 20 people in it. One of the two lines is for the Express lane, which is more a state of mind than an indicator of progress or even a goal to which anyone abscribed. Such is your lot in life at Walmart. I’d say late at night, but increasingly, this seems to be the case no matter the time of day you’re there.

So The Yankee goes to the other line, figuring one of us will have to move eventually, because Disney World doesn’t stay stagnant forever, and the winner can call the other person halfway across the store to the other line. By now I’ve made friends with the young couple in front of us. The Yankee’s line starts to move. She waves me over. Our new buddies come to. The girl says to the boy, “They have to be first … ” and he says of course.

About this time two other families slink into that line. And my new friend says “Actually, we’ll be behind them.”

And his date, a charming young woman, says “No we won’t, we’re going in right after him.”

To which I said, “Yep.” So I fell in line behind my wife. This couple fell in line behind me and four people with tons of stuff had to wait because, By Walton, we’d all been there for an interminable amount of time.

Maybe the place was in shock about the massacre in the Valentine’s Day part of the store:

animals

I broke my swimming goggles today. I’m always struggling with them in one way another, fighting the creeping water or exasperated at the slowly accumulating fog. Even if I wanted to swim non-stop I’d be stopped just so I can see. I’m forever closing one eye or both and just guessing. So, somewhere in a bad swim today, I pulled up and pulled on the straps, and broke them.

The nicest thing about the googles was that there was plenty of strap, because this is the kind that allows for a strip of the rubber to go around the bottom and the top of the back of your head. I spent a long time trying to reconfigure them today, finally got it to work, and found that it was no better.

Oh well. It was a lousy swim anyway, even by my poor standards.

This afternoon I had a nice meeting with industrial designer Chris Arnold. We are trying to tease out a few interesting things to explore in the journalism world. This conversation goes on and on, which means there is a need to refine some ideas. But Chris is a long-time Twitter friend, and it is always nice to get to spend more than few moments in passing with thoughtful people.

We watched the live-on-tape Opening Ceremonies with friends at a party. Some people dressed up as their favored nations. I think we all told each other we were Canadians. One woman wore a ushanka, with the standard Soviet pin, and she did so without irony. There were artists there, so they were thrilled with the constructivism, which was neat to see. One of the art historians there was a woman at the party from Belarus, and she got to hear her national anthem and gave us some context for some things.

I promised myself I’d limit the number of things I said about the Opening Ceremonies, so I’ve limited it to the above and just a few tweets:

The two overly annoying phrases that NBC developed for their embarrassing coverage: “This is highly idealized” and “pivotal experiment.” I’m not sure whether they were talking about the Soviet era or themselves.

Things to read … because this part of the daily post is always pivotal, even when it is quick.

You can admit it, you can’t wait until these become ubiquitous: Cruise Ship’s 80-Inch ‘Virtual Balconies’ Livestream the High Seas

The kindness of strangers always awes us: Snow can’t stop the Southeast’s largest kidney transplant chain at UAB

This is a regrettable portmanteau, but a fine read: Rise of the Platishers

A record month here, the coldest in a generation: The Alabama Climate Report

The Snowden era of journalism:

Snowden has prompted a free-for-all among journalists itching to tell America’s surveillance secrets, an important generational shift as the nation faces years of growing debate about privacy in an increasingly wired world. The litany of stories come not just from the handful of reporters with access to the former NSA contractor’s treasure-trove of documents but also from competitors eagerly searching for scoops to move the dial on what has become one of the biggest stories of the decade.

“For years … it was like the number of articles to come out on NSA you could count on the fingers on one hand,” said James Bamford, who has written four books on government surveillance. “Now it’s almost impossible to keep up.”

“What we’ve seen with the Snowden revelations is the impact that putting documents out there really has,” added Siobhan Gorman, a national security reporter for The Wall Street Journal, during a recent panel discussion hosted by Northwestern University’s Medill School of Journalism and the Reporter’s Committee for Freedom of the Press.

I’ve been thinking about this for a while. For example: You can have a robot vacuuming your floor, not unlike the Jetsons. That’s existed for some time now. But no one really wanted a Roomba until you saw it as DJ Roomba on Parks and Recreation. Anyway: Technology? We haven’t seen anything yet.

Headline of the day: Birmingham restaurant owner accused of shooting at customer who complained of bug in egg roll.

Let’s not eat there.


31
Jan 14

So, so very tired

Before I went to bed last night I made a big cup of hot tea. I felt tired enough to need some caffeine so I could go to sleep. It helped.

Naturally I woke up tired this morning.

Breakfast at The Barbecue House. And then we went for a swim. It felt miserable. I was tired and sore and haven’t done anything since Monday. I was finding excuse after excuse to not swim.

I actually did a few hard laps. I found that I can swim 25 yards at about the same pace of the pool record — for the 50 yard race. So I’m twice as slow, which is fine. César Cielo, the guy that holds that is Brazil’s most decorated swimmer, with three Olympic medals, six World Championship gold medals and two world records.

I think I was ready to fall asleep in the pool, too. But I did manage to get in 2,150 yards before they closed.

Spent the rest of the afternoon fighting off a nap. Spent the evening wandering around the grocery store looking for naan. Finally one of the young ladies that works there told me it was in the bakery, “By the thing next to where the soft drinks are.”

Well, she was wrong, but she was in the right neighborhood. She was also eager to help, and she actually knew what the stuff was, so she gets points for that. And now we have enriched and whole wheat naan.

So, as Fridays go, pretty great.

Tomorrow it’ll be in the 60s. I’ll be awake for that.


24
Jan 14

Photo week – Friday

The sign at Price’s Barbecue House, where we enjoy breakfast on Fridays:

sign

We just beat the rush today, because that’s the kind of charmed little thing that happens sometimes. It seems to happen more often if you notice them. Think about that for awhile.

Swam this afternoon. Got in 1.22 miles, or 2,150 yards before they kicked me out. The pool closes at 1 p.m., apparently. The sweet little lifeguard didn’t have the heart to tell me, but some guy behind me, unseen and unknown with a little too much bass in his voice, gave me the news. So I got out.

Next week I’m getting over the 2,650 block.

We attended a dinner party tonight. A room full of academics. Everyone had a speciality. And almost all of them were widely different than anything I know about. This is good, you can learn something at a very broad level from people who know things from excruciatingly precise points of view. So I asked appropriately broad questions and let people go on a bit about their passions. People are fascinating, if you ask questions. You learn all sorts of things.

Tonight it was comic books, coat hangars, building demolition and a lot of art. The party was a welcome party. A friend is having a friend stay for a while, so she must be introduced to people. The new lady focuses on 19th century Russian art. I know so very much about 19th century Russian art, let me tell you.

So we discussed artists, external factors like the technology — which she is really interested in, I learned — and things like varying cultures, infrastructure, religion, the Mongolians and Bolshevism.

We went to a dinner party and discussed art. That’s life.