Took the family up to my mom’s place in Radford, VA to spend a long weekend with her, her beau Bert and my brother and his family. On Friday night we went to Floyd, VA to see the bluegrass and gospel groups that play every Friday night at the General Store, along with some impromptu playing on the streets by various groups. It’s a completely different world and culture and it was a definite eye opener for the kids (of all ages). Here’s a little video I shot with my camera phone (date: 7/28/06):
Are We George Mason Alums Readying a Takeover of Winston-Salem?
After my glut of George Mason University posts due to my alma mater’s run in the NCAA’s which included the vanquishing of the Tar Heels I haven’t really carried the torch much. But now I find out that Lee Garrity, the new city manager for Winston-Salem, is a fellow GMU alum and I just have to give the Patriots another shout out.
That brings the number of GMU grads I know in Winston-Salem to five if you include me, my wife, our good friends the Figuracions and Mr. Garrity. Since we GMU grads are inordinately powerful and brilliant I think this bodes well for the community.
Lots of Cool Stuff In a Little Space
Instead of putting out lots of posts about the interesting stuff I’ve come across the last couple of days I thought I’d do a little digest. Here ’tis:
- Spoof of Mac Commercial
- Un-Safe Pictures
- Do It Yourself Home Fitness Tool
- 100 Most Misspelled Words
- Weed Wrench
- Weed Flamer
- Resources for Kids to Learn Programming (read the comments)
- Bill Gates Goes to College (Bill Gates & Napoleon Dynamite)
- ToolURL (for web geeks)
- Netvibes (more for web geeks)
That’s it for now. Enjoy.
Looking for an Award Winning Writer?
So I’m browsing Craigslist/Winston-Salem and under the Services/Creative category I come across this posting:
award winning writer available to write for you
Hello, I am an award winning writer, in poetry, lyrics, and short
stories. I have 30yrs exp. I am available to write anything you may
need written. Please contact me for furthur details.
I guess we need look no furthur as our praiers have bene anwswered, in writeeng no less.
There IS a Winston-Salem Craigslist
The last time I looked the only Craigslist listings you could find that were specific to Winston-Salem were rolled in with the Greensboro section. Well that is no longer true as a Winston-Salem-specific Craigslist was launched earlier this summer. You can find it here.
Family Member and Winston-Salem Native Makes the Front Page of the Washington Post

My cousin Adam Good was the subject of a story that was on the front page of the Saturday (July 22, 2006) Washington Post in an article titled "Secure in His Mannyhood: Evolved or an Anomaly, a Male Nanny Enjoys His Job in VA". There’s even a video with an interview in the online version. (Photo to the left is from the Washington Post article, by Kevin Clark of the Washington Post).
Adam’s a great guy (I’m still tempted to call him a kid) who grew up here in Winston-Salem. To say he’s smart would be the world’s greatest understatement. Before we moved here we stayed at my Aunt Debbie’s (Adam’s mom) house during one visit and we had Adam’s old room. His bookshelves were crammed with books on philosophy, politics, and literature that scared the crap out of me in college and he was reading them in middle school and high school. He graduated with honors from American University and will be pursuing his masters degree in the near future.
It’s wild to think that a family member is being profiled in one of the nation’s most prominent newspapers and is considered representative of a new "trend" called "mannyhood." It cracks me up to no end that he’s being compared to Britney Spears’ "manny." Adam being mentioned along with Britney Spears is extremely funny. Suffice it to say that I seriously doubt that Adam’s music collection contains anything from artists with names like Britney, Avril or Jessica.
And of course it’s entertaining that Adam has to answer the requisite "are you gay?" question (he’s not) as if men aren’t capable of being good child care providers, and I’m sure he gets his fair share of grief from his male friends, but as Adam points out in the article it is no small deal that he’s getting paid good money and he’s living rent free, which is a big deal in DC. Like I said Adam’s one smart dude.
A side note to a prominent blogger here in North Carolina, Billy the Blogging Poet: Adam is also an accomplished poet and a very good musician.
NAH-NAH-NAH-NAH
You know how little kids will plug their ears and yell "nah-nah-nah" when you’re telling them something they don’t want to hear? Well apparently the US intelligence czar John Negroponte is doing the same thing. According to this piece on the Harper’s Magazine site he is not granting approval for the CIA to do a new national intelligence estimate for Iraq, and the theory is that he doesn’t want one done because he wants to protect the President from a situation like one he had when the last NIE was released in 2004 and promptly leaked to the New York Times.
If true doesn’t this make Negroponte the czar of anti-intelligence?
Reading is Weird
There’s an interesting set of statistics on the book industry at the Para Publishing site and as you’d expect some of the prominent bloggers in the publishing industry have picked up on it. The stats that will horrify people like my Mom are these:
Who is Reading Books (and who is not)
- One-third of high school graduates never read another book for the rest
of their lives. Many do not even graduate from high school.- 58% of the US adult population never reads another book after high school.
- 42% of college graduates never read another book.
- 80% of US families did not buy or read a book last year.
- 70% of US adults have not been in a bookstore in the last five years.
To be honest I don’t find these surprising. Growing up I was considered pretty weird by my friends because I enjoyed reading and I learned at an early age to not mention how much I enjoyed a book. In fact I can’t think of any conversations we had about books, but we talked a lot about sports, music, movies, video games and music videos (those were the early days of MTV). Now as an adult I notice how few books, outside of coffee table books, I see in other peoples’ homes but how many more music CDs and movie DVDs they own than we do.
My love of reading can be traced to some wisdom that Mom had, namely that any reading was better than no reading so she indulged my early passion for mysteries (Hardy Boys) and adventures (anything besides Hardy Boys). And of course seeing her read on a daily basis had an influence on me as well. Carting her boxes of books around every time we moved definitely had an effect on my back.
Celeste and I are both avid readers and it has had an effect on our kids, most notably our youngest. He earned more Advanced Reader points than any other child in the fourth grade at Lewisville Elementary and I think there was only one kid in the entire school with more points and he didn’t consider it work. He did it for fun. Our older kids also read, albeit not as much as the youngest and I think it has definitely helped them in their ability to communicate in writing. My feeling is that they’ll have to "work" on their writing much less than their peers in the coming years.
Now book reading is not the only form of reading out there and I can think of several people who would never read a book who read voraciously online. My theory is that reading online is done in small, easily digestible chunks so it doesn’t feel like "reading" to them. It isn’t "boring" and each individual piece isn’t time consuming, although if taken in the aggregate I think most people would be surprised how much time they spend reading online.
What’s going to be interesting to watch is what happens over the next 10-20 years. As online video and audio become more common will reading and writing fade into the background? Or is there something unique in how our brains process the written word that will keep it at the forefront of information sharing? And will there still be a place for books in all this? Personally I think so since books provide a time-tested vehicle for sharing large chunks of information and I think there will always be a segment of the population who will enjoy the long narrative of a novel, but I fear it could become a group as small as those who still enjoy chamber music.
Fun with Google
Here’s some fun I’m having with Google. I’m searching to see how many times I’ve used certain terms on this blog. For instance how many times have I used "I love" on this blog? Or how about "I hate"? Here’s the results:
- I hate – 19
- I love – 28
- What the hell – 15
- Dumb ass – 4
- Bush administration – 37
- Stupid – 280
- Brilliant – 19
- Genius – 24
- Moron – 15
- Shit – 7
- Damn – 30
- F-bomb (spelled correctly) – 1
Conclusion? I type a lot cleaner than I talk.
Cool Story from the Long Tail
There’s a new book out that I’m dying to read called "The Long Tail" (I won’t bore you with the details here) and it is written by a guy named Chris Anderson who has a blog by the same name. It ends up that in the early 80s he was in a punk band in DC and he has a great story about how his band ended up in a kind of "battle of the bands" against REM at the 9:30 Club in 1982. The 9:30 Club was easily the best place to see live music in DC for years (I have no idea what’s going on in DC these days) and REM has always been one of my favorite bands so this story hit home with me.