Saturday, June 11, 2011

There Was a Time

A sign of the times.
There was a time when you could go to the local park or playground and only have to worry about when you had to leave so your mom wouldn't use your freedom as leverage to enforce your punctuality.
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Sure, there may have been other things to worry about, like will certain people be there: the school bully, or the girl you really like, but are deathly afraid of asking out. But it never occurred to you someone, or maybe even some thing could be there. A kind of spider you couldn't see until you were entangled in their nefarious web.
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There was a time when you hadn't heard of a sex offender, or even knew what it was. They may have existed, but not with the numbers we have today. The number, apparently is so big, we have to use tax money to not only defend them in the judicial system, but we have to remind them (and others) where the electric fence is by making large signs and displaying them in prominent locations like here, at Country Park in Greensboro, NC.
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I was riding my bike through the lengthy trails one day recently, and in a clearing came upon this playground. The first thing I saw was this cube of bricks that housed the restrooms. It made me shudder to think that something sordid could have happened inside those dirty rooms--especially seeing this big sign posted on the building. (I used to ride my bike down to the local park when I was in grade school. Thankfully I still can, and still do.)
Sadly, an empty playground.
You ARE cordially invited to enjoy the grounds. 
 Note the sign on the sign: "If a problem is observed..." We don't really know which kind of problem they mean. If you see a broken swing, then call. If you see Aqualung, don't call the number, beat his ass. Just watch out for snot.

Anyway, I turned the corner and saw this park bench. (You know it, "Eyeing little girls with bad intent.") Well that song didn't start playing on my internal jukebox like it is now, I just hoped Mr. lung hadn't been here, and little Susie simply forgot her doll. I mean, you see this bench and you have to wonder. Did anyone call that number? As I stood there with these thoughts, I saw that there was no one around. And while this playground is in a very large tract of land, it's also next to tennis courts, the main road, and a parking lot.
I want to believe that nothing sordid and clandestine happened here. Nevertheless, my opinion was forged when I saw that sex offender sign. 
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I will still bring my bike to this park, in the same manner I took it to Lynnhurst Park in South Minneapolis when I was too young to know there really were boogie men. As it goes, we can't let the ten percent spoil our fun. I only hope it is just ten percent.
Aqualung's viewpoint

Tuesday, June 7, 2011

Volunteering for a Purpose

As I walked across the parking lot of Jamestown Middle School, I felt as if I was beginning a new job. Only this one was temporary--very temporary, and I was to be compensated afterward with a small bag of hard candy and some crudely fashioned easter grass stuff that someone pulled out of the shredder, all bound in a small cellophane bag that the lady at the desk called "a snack."
I was to begin my day in the "Media Center". When I was a middle school student, that room was called the "Library." These days a library is a dying pile of bricks, books, some computers, and some homeless people all slowly slipping away into extinction. Today, it's a bright, shiny room with more wires than books. And now, a dozen or so fellow volunteers, some not much older than the students, some so old, they thought, "library" was cutting edge, gathered in one section of the room for the proctor indoctrination process. Several of us brought whatever liquids would help us focus at 8:00 in the morning. For me, it was a tall shot of Krispy Kreme caffeine. I had already turned three donuts into mush on the drive over, so I was good to go. We were all told to read a thin book of rules and etiquette for proctoring. I scanned the thing and found the gist of it was to keep the testing as clean as possible. Well, all I was gonna do was strike an intimidating pose in the room and hope to not end up taking a pencil shower and end up looking like a number 2 porcupine. It could happen, there was a surplus of potential missiles, and the teacher had me pass one weapon out to each student. They all took one from me as I slowly walked through the classroom. But there was one student, a black girl, who refused to accept my offering. Her belligerent demeanor spoke. I had a feeling we were going to have issues with this one. We did.

As I walked from the media center with my slip of paper scratched with the room number and name of the teacher, I flashed back to my elementary school years--not because the school was old, Jamestown Middle looked to be no older than a toddler, it was perhaps merely because I was in a school for tweens. Funny how our brains work. The concept and size of a school locker was still the same. I liked the ones that went all the way to the floor, so you didn't have to share the same space with someone who smelled like West Virginia roadkill. The room indexing didn't make sense. I was to go to room 807.  "OK, let's see, eighth floor..." No. There were only two floors in this thing. Go down this hall, take a left, through the double doors, then take another left and it should be down there somewhere. Found it. Ms. Miller's room. Only she's not Ms. Miller anymore, she's Mrs. Kelly, or something. Didn't matter. I was only going to be in there for 3 or 4 hours, right? Wrong.  Miss "I have a better pencil than you," made sure we were ALL there as long as possible.
There were 20 students, half of them boys. There were a few hispanics, a few asians, even fewer whites, and most were black. Then there was poor, strung-out Ms. Miller--desperate for another adult to occupy her little undisciplined cubicle. It was obvious that too many years in the public school system put the zap on her. On any other day I imagine the precocious hispanic boy in the back would be running the operation. Today, he showed restraint. Until he finished a four hour exam in two and a half.
This was the math part of the exam, and the test books came in four colors. I guessed it was four different versions of the test--another way to discourage one form of cheating. I passed those out, then I distributed the pencils and very fancy calculators which had apparently all been scrutinized by the district's computer geek to ensure there were no formulas or small wizards within.
Four students, one near each wall of the room turned his or her desk toward the wall. I thought this was to help them focus. Maybe it was, but all four were among the last seven students who did not finish in the allotted time. Our friend with her own pencil stopped with 3 questions remaining, and plenty of time to finish, but instead she stared, put her head down, and fidgeted for about an hour. Turns out, her boyfriend was sitting in front of her and may have been distracting her with visions of teen pregnancy and all the fun that goes with it. They both timed out and had to finish another day.

In the end, I was happy to have helped out. I got an education, but I will not do it again.
I could tell who was going to have a purpose and who was going to be shaking the fry bin for years to come. Then again, that is a necessary and tasty purpose.

Friday, March 25, 2011

What Goes Around...

I guess it's inevitable. We're all gonna get sick. I just didn't think it would happen to me right as I'm heading into vacation. I had been doing everything right, like washing my hands--a lot, using hand sanitizer, and excercising regularly. And for the entire season of Winter, I watched every person at work take sick days.
Now I possess a sinus infection, and I'm about to wage war on it with amoxicillin, fluticasone and musinex.
Sunday morning I will be confined to three planes, sharing the cabin air with dozens of strangers. I hope to have won my battle by then. I would hate to spread this misery.

Thursday, March 24, 2011

An Injustice

It was a day in which people who didn't want to be on TV were on, and people who DID want to be on weren't. Couple that with a lack of communication, and you have a frustrating day.

I was to do a story with a reporter on electronic devices that can help parents of teenagers have a little control over how their inexperienced drivers travel. We started at the local state-run driver's license office, where we immediately found a mother and her daughter just arriving to get a driver's test. Mom reluctantly agreed to talk with us on camera, though the whole time we were in there, and she was not "on camera," I could hear her saying very softly to her kid how she really didn't want to do this. To which her daughter replied, "You're the one who agreed to do it." After our interview, mom insisted that we find someone else who would sound better, but we tried to assure her that she did just fine, and that it only felt worse than in reality.

While mom was being interviewed, her daughter and a surly DMV guy exited the building. I had to make a move if I wanted the video of the girl driving. I left the camera recording, and gestured to the reporter to keep going. I caught up with the two just as they were about to pull out of the parking lot. I asked the tester if he would mind if I stuck a mini cameral on the dash to get some footage. In more words than this, he said yes. He would mind.

We gathered our requisite "official" sound from AAA, then headed back to put it all together. Not once during the course of this newsgathering process did I ever hear where I was to be able to get some good video to help tell the story.  Several hours earlier, an email was sent to several people which included a link to a web site that would have good video I could use in the story. No one told me about it. It didn't make it into the story. Another story which I was happy with the fact that the public doesn't know they were looking at my work. Only the reporter's name is associated with the story. I still was left feeling cheated out of the ability to put my best work out there. I love what I do, and I want everything I do to be the best it can be, but I can't when there are days like this.

No sooner did we get back to the station, I got a call from the desk telling me to drive 40 minutes south to check on a "bad" car wreck. There was plenty of time for me to do that, and I made it back by 8pm.
The "bad" car wreck involved three cars, snarled traffic for an hour, but no one had serious injuries. I took a couple of stills and sent them back for the web guys, called in the info, and shot video and two interviews. NONE of it made air or the website. What a waste of time, money, and effort.