JEFF INGLIS The latest articles by JEFF INGLIS at thePhoenix.com http://thephoenix.com/authors/JEFF-INGLIS/ Copyright © 2008 The Phoenix Media/Communications Group webmaster@phx.com http://backend.userland.com/rss http://thephoenix.com/RSS/ Fabulous flicks <strong> Our third short-film festival crowns all new winners </strong><br/> A new crop of local entrants, including a professional filmmaker, won awards at the third annual Portland Phoenix Maine Short Film Festival, which turned out to be the most competitive ever ... and the most fun! <br/><p></p><table class="show_design_border" align="center"><tbody><tr><td><img title="feat_filmfest_musicvid_stil.jpg" alt="feat_filmfest_musicvid_stil.jpg" src="http://cache.thephoenix.com/secure/uploadedImages/The_Phoenix/Movies/Features/feat_filmfest_musicvid_stil.jpg" border="0" /><br /><span class="cutlineText">A still from Lady Lamb the Beekeeper's <em>Antique Shop</em> music video</span></td></tr></tbody></table><br /><span class="bodyText">A new crop of local entrants, including a professional filmmaker, won awards at the third annual <i>Portland Phoenix</i> Maine Short Film Festival, which turned out to be the most competitive ever ... and the most fun!</span><p><span class="bodyText">The awards ceremony and screening at One Longfellow Square this past Thursday were packed, but if you missed them — or if you just want to relive the experience — we've highlighted the winners below. Some of these directors have work showing on television (on Portland Community Television, and even the History Channel); keep your eyes peeled for the others to make their appearances any day now. For the moment, check out the films online at <a href="/Portland/video" target="_blank">thePhoenix.com/Portland/video</a>, and get shooting!</span></p><p><span class="bodyText"><span class="bodyText"><br/><a href="/Portland/Movies/72339-Fabulous-flicks/">Read more</a> http://thephoenix.com/Portland/Movies/72339-Fabulous-flicks/ Features JEFF INGLIS http://thephoenix.com/Portland/Movies/72339-Fabulous-flicks/ Fri, 21 Nov 2008 20:31:31 GMT PPH almost sold. Now what? <strong> Press Releases </strong><br/> The long-floundering Portland Press Herald is about to have a new owner. At least, all signs suggest that the money necessary to seal the deal will come through by the end of the year. <br/><p><span class="bodyText">The long-floundering Portland Press Herald is about to have a new owner. At least, all signs suggest that the money necessary to seal the deal will come through by the end of the year. There are financial details to be finalized, and there's a slim chance the money won't materialize, but involved parties tell the Portland Phoenix that pens are very close to the financial paper, and that the financing may include an employee-ownership component.</span></p><p><span class="bodyText">As many had speculated, the likely new owner will be Maine Media Investments — owned by the governor's brother, Bob Baldacci; former US senator and defense secretary Bill Cohen; his son Kevin, a former Turner Broadcasting executive; housing and real-estate developer Mike Liberty; and Pennsylvania newspaper publisher Richard Connor (who was born in Bangor). Soon, this group will no doubt be making public what they plan to do to recover the paper's dying circulation, plummeting advertising revenue, and rock-bottom newsroom morale.</span></p><p><span class="bodyText">Connor himself was recently heard to say — while out and about in Portland — that he could see why the paper was struggling, since it was "so thin it blows off the front porch in the morning." That might signal an inclination to expand the news coverage, which has shrunk considerably in recent months, but it's unclear who would do that work: the employees union is "bracing" for significant layoffs after the deal is finalized, according to Portland Newspaper Guild acting administrative officer Kathy Munroe.</span></p><p><span class="bodyText">The new owners will have to navigate the complicated quagmire of determining what their readers actually want. The biggest dispute among the audience appears to be where a revamped Press Herald would strike a balance between local coverage and national and international news.</span></p><p><span class="bodyText">Some hints can be found in independent blogs. A poster named MediaDog at AsMaineGoes wants less wire-service copy, saying in an August post, "In this Internet era most wire news is stale by the time the papers reached readers' doorsteps."</span></p><p><span class="bodyText">At MediaMutt, Phoenix columnist Al Diamon's blog on the Down East magazine Web site, one commenter suggested last week that a more major overhaul is needed: "The newspaper has limited value in terms of keeping readers informed. I don't think I've ever seen a shallower newspaper than the version that is being published today."</span></p><p><span class="bodyText">Perhaps the best way to gauge the reaction from the Press Herald's audience, though, is to look at the comments on the paper's own Web site — specifically, those talking about the sale itself.</span></p><p><span class="bodyText">"I'm getting the Friday, Saturday, Sunday [subscription package] deal and the news is the same in all three papers," wrote one person, who said she is canceling her subscription.</span></p><br/><a href="/Portland/News/72343-PPH-almost-sold-Now-what/">Read more</a> http://thephoenix.com/Portland/News/72343-PPH-almost-sold-Now-what/ News Features JEFF INGLIS http://thephoenix.com/Portland/News/72343-PPH-almost-sold-Now-what/ Wed, 19 Nov 2008 21:41:23 GMT A few other races to note Down the ballot <br/> You can get your fill of reading about the presidential, congressional, state-legislative, city-council, and school-committee races a few pages farther on, but there are a few other questions Portlanders will have to vote on this Tuesday.   http://thephoenix.com/Portland/News/71071-A-few-other-races-to-note/ News Features JEFF INGLIS http://thephoenix.com/Portland/News/71071-A-few-other-races-to-note/ Wed, 29 Oct 2008 16:25:35 GMT The plebiscites <strong> There are three referendum questions all Maine voters must consider on Election Day. </strong><br/> Olympia has promised to spend at least $112 million developing a large casino-resort-hotel, likely somewhere in the town of Oxford, roughly an hour’s drive north of Portland. <br/><p></p><table class="show_design_border" align="right"><tbody><tr><td><img title="tji_Ballot_boxINSIDE.jpg" alt="tji_Ballot_boxINSIDE.jpg" src="http://cache.thephoenix.com/secure/uploadedImages/The_Phoenix/News/News_Stories/tji_Ballot_boxINSIDE.jpg" border="0" /></td></tr></tbody></table><br /><span class="bodyText"><strong>Question 1: A people’s veto seeking to overturn a law imposing tax on beer, wine, and soft drinks to help pay for the Dirigo Health Insurance Plan.<br /></strong>A “yes” vote supports overturning the law; a “no” vote supports keeping it. The law, enacted this past spring but not yet in effect because of the petition to overturn it, is touted by proponents as preserving Dirigo Health — a state-created insurance program that offers a taxpayer-funded subsidy to help the uninsured get health coverage. The plan serves roughly 12,500 Mainers, but those numbers are dwindling. New enrollments have been barred for more than a year because the plan does not have enough money to cover more people. And the number of uninsured people in Maine has not changed substantially as a result of the program (see <a href="/Boston/News/69606-Illusion-of-progress/?rel=inf" target="_blank">“Illusion of Progress,”</a> by Al Diamon, October 10, and <a href="/Portland/News/70044-Baldacci-raids-the-cookie-jar/" target="_blank">“Baldacci Raids the Cookie Jar,”</a> by Lance Tapley, October 17).</span><p><span class="bodyText">Unless it is rejected on Tuesday’s ballot, the law would change how the plan is paid for, reducing the amount that health-insurance companies pay and filling the gap with a new tax that would cost consumers three cents per 12-ounce beer, one cent per glass of wine (five cents per bottle), and four cents per 12-ounce can of soda. If it is rejected, lawmakers will likely have to find another way to pay for state-subsidized health-insurance.</span></p><p><span class="bodyText"><strong>Question 2: A citizen initiative to allow a casino in Oxford County.</strong><br /> A “yes” vote allows establishing a casino; a “no” vote would block it. The law that’s being voted on would, among other provisions, give Olympia Gaming, a Las Vegas company, a 10-year monopoly on casino gambling in Maine; reduce the legal gambling age from 21 to 19; and absolve the casino from all criminal and civil liability.</span></p><p><span class="bodyText">Of the casino’s gross income (after paying out to winners), 39 percent would go to various state programs, some of which already exist (such as biofuel research at the University of Maine, the state university system, and gambling-addiction treatment programs), and some of which do not (such as a project to investigate an east-west highway in Maine). Under the bill, the casino’s president would hold a voting seat on the board of every state or local agency supervising the spending of that money, including the UMaine board of trustees, the Land for Maine’s Future board, and even the Oxford County Commission (see <a href="/Portland/News/70003-Beatin-the-odds/" target="_blank">“Beatin’ the Odds,”</a> by Al Diamon, October 17).</span></p><br/><a href="/Portland/News/71064-plebiscites/">Read more</a> http://thephoenix.com/Portland/News/71064-plebiscites/ News Features JEFF INGLIS http://thephoenix.com/Portland/News/71064-plebiscites/ Wed, 29 Oct 2008 20:20:13 GMT Palin around <strong> Press releases </strong><br/> Sarah Palin's trip to Bangor drew a lot of positive attention from Maine's TV stations, who mostly left the criticism to bloggers.  <br/><p><span class="bodyText">Sarah Palin's trip to Bangor drew a lot of positive attention from Maine's TV stations, who mostly left the criticism to bloggers. Whether that was in deference to her telegenic presence or an attempt at objectivity, Maine's broadcasters treated a partisan political show as if it were a “feelgood” event — the protestors barely rated a mention — and missed a chance to bring truth and insight to viewers. Good thing the bloggers filled the void.</span></p><p><span class="bodyText">WGME-13 (Portland’s CBS affiliate) aired footage of a grinning Palin and a cheering crowd, with anchor Kiley Bennett delivering a credulous voice-over: “Palin came armed with her conversational style, but also came touting her ticket’s record of experience, promising a future of education reform, help for special-needs children, and the development of new energy sources.”</span></p><p><span class="bodyText">WABI-5 (the Bangor CBS affiliate) even went so far as to say Palin “resonated with Mainers,” though the station’s news crew talked only to people who attended her political rally. Nor did WABI examine what Palin said, airing a segment of her speech in which Palin said John McCain “knows how to win a war,” but then failing to ask for details in an exclusive post-rally one-on-one interview. (Instead, reporter Amy Erickson asked a softball question about LIHEAP, though she backed it up with a pointed observation that the program, which helps low-income and elderly residents pay their heating bills in winter, is “one form of government assistance [Palin] strongly supports.”)</span></p><p><span class="bodyText">WGME also noted that Palin was “welcomed by Maine Senator Olympia Snowe,” without observing — as did blogger Eric Olson at MaineOwl — the conspicuous absence of Maine’s other leading Republican, Susan Collins, who is in the midst of a re-election bid but is studiously avoiding almost every other GOPer, and even avoiding using the word “Republican” in her campaign ads.</span></p><p><span class="bodyText">Over at MainePolitics, blogger Mike Tipping took aim at Palin for repeating at the rally a line about America being a “shining city on a hill,” which she attributes to Ronald Reagan. Tipping notes, correctly, that it was uttered first by Massachusetts Bay Colony founder John Winthrop in 1630, and expresses doubt that “she knows the historical and philosophical background of that quote,” which was delivered in a sermon declaring the colony’s founders were chosen by God to create a holy community in the wilderness of North America.</span></p><br/><a href="/Portland/News/70387-Palin-around/">Read more</a> http://thephoenix.com/Portland/News/70387-Palin-around/ News Features JEFF INGLIS http://thephoenix.com/Portland/News/70387-Palin-around/ Wed, 22 Oct 2008 19:55:39 GMT Who’s your Rickey? Nagging your friends to vote <br/> A college friend recently got in touch, with an idea that resonated with me, and will with other political-minded folks who believe this election is important to our country’s future.   http://thephoenix.com/Portland/News/69999-Whos-your-Rickey/ News Features JEFF INGLIS http://thephoenix.com/Portland/News/69999-Whos-your-Rickey/ Thu, 16 Oct 2008 05:43:21 GMT The gulf of Maine <strong> Senator Collins votes the Bush line 77 percent of the time; her challenger, Representative Allen, weighs in at 18 percent. Will these numbers decide November’s election? </strong><br/> With a massively unpopular Republican president leaving office, this year’s Senate election is a contest based on a candidate’s alignment with Bush.  <br/><table class="show_design_border" align="center"><tbody><tr><td><img title="CollinsAllenChart1_inside.jpg" border="0" alt="CollinsAllenChart1_inside.jpg" src="http://cache.thephoenix.com/secure/uploadedImages/The_Phoenix/News/News_Stories/CollinsAllenChart1_inside.jpg" /><br /><span class="cutlineText">COMPARING THE CANDIDATES: How Collins and Allen stack up.</span></td></tr></tbody></table><p><span class="bodyText">Maine is a Democrat-leaning state that has — at least for now — two Republican senators. With a massively unpopular Republican president leaving office, this year’s Senate election is as much a contest based on a candidate’s real and perceived alignment with George W. Bush as anything else.</span></p><p><span class="bodyText">Democratic presidential nominee Barack Obama is making hay out of John McCain’s record of voting with Bush 90 percent of the time, and Maine Democratic US Representative Tom Allen is trying to do the same as he works to unseat incumbent Republican US Senator Susan Collins. One of his most recent TV ads blames the present economic meltdown on Bush’s efforts to deregulate the economy, and then says “Susan Collins supported the Bush economic policies that hurt Maine and created a national crisis.” For her part, Collins is trying to distance herself from Bush: A recent ad avoids the word “Republican” entirely, calling her “an independent voice for Maine.”</span></p><p><span class="bodyText">Collins <em>is</em> more independent than most Republican senators, opposing the president more often than all but one of her upper-house GOP colleagues — Maine’s other Republican senator, Olympia Snowe, who was elected to her third term in 2006.</span></p><p><span class="bodyText">But there is a gulf between Collins and Allen, and it becomes very apparent when looking at how their positions align with Bush’s (or don’t). <em>Congressional Quarterly</em>, a nonpartisan news organization covering Congress, has calculated a “presidential support score” for every member of Congress, looking at how often they voted with or against President George W. Bush’s wishes throughout his term to date — Collins voted with Bush 77 percent of the time; Allen just 18 percent.</span></p><p><span class="bodyText">On a broad range of <em>Phoenix</em>-selected key topics — including the USA PATRIOT Act, foreign trade, economic and tax policy, environmental issues, energy, stem-cell research, the Iraq War, the minimum wage, immigration, warrantless wiretapping, abortion and reproductive rights, education, open government and free speech, the Farm Bill, Congressional ethics and campaign-finance reform, homeland security, same-sex marriage, Supreme Court justices and key Cabinet officials (in the Senate only), AIDS/HIV, prescription-drug prices, military Base Realignment and Closure Commission issues, and treatment of terrorism detainees — Allen has sided with Bush 17 percent of the time, while Collins backed the president 64 percent of the time.</span></p><br/><a href="/Portland/News/69664-gulf-of-Maine/">Read more</a> http://thephoenix.com/Portland/News/69664-gulf-of-Maine/ News Features JEFF INGLIS http://thephoenix.com/Portland/News/69664-gulf-of-Maine/ Thu, 09 Oct 2008 16:19:52 GMT Out for a spin <strong> One week, one limited-edition Porsche — what to do? </strong><br/> Driving a 2008 Porsche Boxster RS 60 Spyder Limited Edition is an exercise in ridiculous, indulgent impracticality. But it's fun.  <br/><p></p><table class="show_design_border" align="center"><tbody><tr><td><img title="portlandporsche.jpg" alt="portlandporsche.jpg" src="http://cache.thephoenix.com/secure/uploadedImages/The_Phoenix/News/This_Just_In/portlandporsche.jpg" border="0" /></td></tr></tbody></table><p><span class="bodyText">Driving a 2008 Porsche Boxster RS 60 Spyder Limited Edition is an exercise in ridiculous, indulgent impracticality. But it’s fun — and it might get your name written on the inside of teenage girls’ pants.</span></p><p><span class="bodyText">Through no effort of my own, a man I had never met drove that car — number 296 out of 1960 ever made — into the office parking lot last week, and handed me the key. When he had called out of the blue offering the car as part of a Porsche marketing and promotion effort, all I’d done was tell him I’d drive it and return it in one piece. I made no promise to write about it, and only a vague verbal assurance that I could drive a stick-shift car. (For the record, my regular car, a 1995 Subaru Impreza wagon, is a stick-shift. So I wasn’t lying.)</span></p><p><span class="bodyText">On the very first night, it failed utterly as a utilitarian object. My wife and I were slated to pick up a friend (who was in town on business) at her hotel and take her to a restaurant for dinner. But the Boxster has just two seats, so within hours of receiving the key to a $65,000 car, one of just 800 in North America, I had to leave it parked in the garage while we picked up our friend in my wife’s 2000 Subaru Impreza Outback wagon.</span></p><p><span class="bodyText">That was the first of a few downers. Other low points were general paranoia about police officers — my uncle, a genuine “car guy” — had reminded me, when I called to gloat, that “a ticket is wasted money.” And then there was the horrific downturn the nation’s economy took, almost from the moment I received the Porsche’s key. At various points I drove past the panhandlers near the Deering Oaks Park I-295 on-ramp, and along the social-services end of Congress Street, in a car I did not own, could not afford, and could never imagine myself ever actually owning, even if one day I do have that kind of money just sitting in the bank. Don’t ask me what they thought of me — I was studiously avoiding their eyes.</span></p><p><span class="bodyText">Let’s move on to the high points.</span></p><p><span class="bodyText">Some of the people I took for rides surprised me, and even themselves. A freelancer who normally bums around in a 1980s-era Volvo with more than 300,000 miles on it turned out to also own an ancient sports car he keeps in good repair. And an utterly grounded, down-to-earth college friend became totally flighty upon sitting in the passenger seat, and spent much of the ride extolling the just-discovered virtues of expensive cars (except when she was feeling guilty for being so materialistic).</span></p><br/><a href="/Portland/News/69284-Out-for-a-spin/">Read more</a> http://thephoenix.com/Portland/News/69284-Out-for-a-spin/ This Just In JEFF INGLIS http://thephoenix.com/Portland/News/69284-Out-for-a-spin/ Thu, 02 Oct 2008 06:11:33 GMT Skatepark design picked Results <br/> http://thephoenix.com/Portland/News/69276-Skatepark-design-picked/ This Just In JEFF INGLIS http://thephoenix.com/Portland/News/69276-Skatepark-design-picked/ Wed, 01 Oct 2008 21:14:27 GMT Post-daily <strong> Press releases </strong><br/> After leaving daily newspapers, where do journalists go? <br/><p><span class="bodyText">After leaving daily newspapers, where do journalists go?</span></p><p><span class="bodyText">Kevin Wack, who had spent four and a half years at the <em>Portland Press Herald</em>, left the paper this summer, but is doing what he might have done had he stayed — covering the Senate race between incumbent Republican Susan Collins and Democratic US Representative Tom Allen. The difference is that he’s covering it online, for his own blog, <a href="http://themainerace.com/" target="_blank">TheMaineRace.com</a>.</span></p><p><span class="bodyText">Even in its first couple weeks, Wack’s blog is earning its stripes, uncovering the fact that a pro-Collins TV ad was paid for entirely by the pharmaceutical industry’s lobbying group. That and his other findings are attracting attention — including responses from commenters on <a href="http://turnmaineblue.com/" target="_blank">TurnMaineBlue.com</a> and <a href="http://asmainegoes.com/" target="_blank">AsMaineGoes.com</a>. Unfortunately, Wack took a long weekend off to travel out of town, and missed the first Collins-Allen debate (so there’s a bit of a delay for his insights on that, but we’ll look forward to more timely comments on the remaining nine).</span></p><p><span class="bodyText">Of his departure from the <em>PPH</em>, Wack says he could see the writing on the wall: fewer reporters was going to mean less time to do projects and investigations. Since those were his primary interests, “It was a good time to leave,” he says.</span></p><p><span class="bodyText">Armed with a few weeks’ pay and some solid time on his hands, he entered the blogosphere as a way to build his “online resume.”</span></p><p><span class="bodyText">Turning his political reporting into blogging was a natural choice. But many of the political blogs he read were “identifiably partisan,” and some offer not much more than a “link and snarky comment” treatment of important topics.</span></p><p><span class="bodyText">“I wanted to do something that was non-partisan and had original reporting,” Wack says. He hopes his blog will combine “the best of traditional journalism” — which he describes as the on-the-ground reporting effort, or “actual-fact-gathering” — with more “voice” than is customary in daily newspapers.</span></p><p><span class="bodyText">He might be regretting his choice of coverage, though — while Allen is closing what was a 20-percentage-point gap in the polls, the Senate race “looked like it might be a little closer than it is right now.”</span></p><p><span class="bodyText">After Election Day, he’ll head to DC to start a nine-month paid fellowship with the American Political Science Association. He will study how Congress “works,” and ultimately will spend several months working as a staffer on Capitol Hill, assisting either a member of Congress or a congressional committee. He expects that will give him additional insight into the machinations of the federal government, which will in turn — he hopes — allow him to better explain those processes to his audience at a future media job.</span></p><br/><a href="/Portland/News/68880-Post-daily/">Read more</a> http://thephoenix.com/Portland/News/68880-Post-daily/ News Features JEFF INGLIS http://thephoenix.com/Portland/News/68880-Post-daily/ Thu, 25 Sep 2008 04:53:30 GMT Will FairPoint run out of money? <strong> Land-line woes </strong><br/> Wall Street’s melt down could burn consumers throughout Northern New England — especially those in Maine. <br/><p></p><table class="show_design_border" align="center"><tbody><tr><td><img title="tji_Fairpointship.jpg" alt="tji_Fairpointship.jpg" src="http://cache.thephoenix.com/secure/uploadedImages/The_Phoenix/News/This_Just_In/tji_Fairpointship.jpg" border="0" /></td></tr></tbody></table><p><span class="bodyText">Wall Street’s melt down could burn consumers throughout Northern New England — especially those in Maine.</span></p><p><span class="bodyText">The flashpoint is FairPoint Communications, the state and the region’s principal phone company.</span></p><p><span class="bodyText">On Monday, FairPoint borrowed $200 million in cash for fear its major lenders might collapse and make that money unavailable.</span></p><p><span class="bodyText">FairPoint’s financial positions have been under scrutiny since the January 2007 announcement that the North Carolina-based company would buy Verizon’s northern New England landline operations (see “<a href="/Portland/News/64296-We-told-you-so/" target="_blank">We Told You So</a>,” by Jeff Inglis, July 4).</span></p><p><span class="bodyText">But the company’s financial struggles worsened Monday, when Lehman Brothers, a major lender to FairPoint, filed for bankruptcy protection.</span></p><p><span class="bodyText">Lehman was one of a group of lenders who collectively had offered to loan FairPoint $400 million. Of that total, Lehman was responsible for 30 percent, or $120 million, according to financial statements from the publicly traded FairPoint. (Spokesmen for the company did not return phone calls before the <em>Phoenix</em>’s deadline.)</span></p><p><span class="bodyText">Before this week, FairPoint had already borrowed $170 million of that group’s $400 million. Monday’s loan, also from those lenders, maxed out one of its largest available lines of credit and gave FairPoint $200 million more cash on hand. A company spokesman told CNN that he expected the $30 million in remaining credit to become unavailable due to the financial market problems. (It may sound like a lot of money, but it’s really small potatoes in the context of corporate financing. FairPoint, for example, borrowed most of the $2.3 billion it paid Verizon for the land-lines.)</span></p><p><span class="bodyText">Maine utilities regulators say having a cash reserve that the company spends down over time is better than not being able to pay for investments because money isn’t available from loans. But it’s a sign of how much FairPoint is relying on credit — rather than revenue from customers — to keep its finances afloat.</span></p><p><span class="bodyText">Making that sign more ominous is FairPoint’s admission to CNN that this move is more expensive than borrowing cash as the company needs to spend it, because the interest FairPoint earns on the funds it hoards will be less than the interest it owes on the loans. So FairPoint will be losing money just sitting still.</span></p><p><span class="bodyText">Also Monday, the company announced it would sit still longer, delaying its full takeover of telecommunications land-lines in northern New England until at least January 2009. In the meantime, FairPoint is paying Verizon $16 million a month to run the phone systems in Maine, New Hampshire, and Vermont.</span></p><br/><a href="/Portland/News/68483-Will-FairPoint-run-out-of-money/">Read more</a> http://thephoenix.com/Portland/News/68483-Will-FairPoint-run-out-of-money/ This Just In JEFF INGLIS http://thephoenix.com/Portland/News/68483-Will-FairPoint-run-out-of-money/ Wed, 17 Sep 2008 18:43:34 GMT It’s not about the art <strong> Looking behind the effort to paint South Portland oil tanks </strong><br/> The Art All Around project proposes to paint original artists’ designs on several Sprague Energy Corporation oil tanks in South Portland. <br/><table class="show_design_border" align="center"><tbody><tr><td><img title="feat_tanks_Gili_MatthewRobb.jpg" alt="feat_tanks_Gili_MatthewRobb.jpg" src="http://cache.thephoenix.com/secure/uploadedImages/The_Phoenix/News/News_Stories/feat_tanks_Gili_MatthewRobb.jpg" border="0" /><br /><span class="cutlineText">SHARP ANGLES: Jaime Gili’s signature style.</span></td></tr></tbody></table><p></p><table bordercolor="#ffffff" cellspacing="5" cellpadding="5" width="250" align="right" bgcolor="#e5e5e5" border="5"><tbody><tr><td><span class="bodyText"><a href="/Portland/News/67589-Words-over-pictures/" target="_blank">"Words over pictures," Evaluating the semifinalists for “Art All Around," by Ken Greenleaf</a></span></td></tr></tbody></table><span class="bodyText">The real goal behind the Art All Around project, which proposes to paint original artists’ designs on several Sprague Energy Corporation oil tanks in South Portland, will be fulfilled even if none of the tanks is ever decorated.</span><p><span class="bodyText">According to Jean Maginnis, who dreamed up the idea and is coordinating the effort to bring it to life, the project is not actually about art for art’s sake. Instead, she says, it’s about forcing “a large public discussion of art.”</span></p><p><span class="bodyText">Maginnis, the founder, executive director, and sole employee of the Maine Center for Creativity, the “group” that spearheaded the effort, is getting her wish. Five semifinalists’ proposals — all abstract designs — were selected by jury from 560 submissions and made public in the middle of last month (see “<a href="/Portland/News/67589-Words-over-pictures/" target="_blank">Words Over Pictures</a>,” by Ken Greenleaf). And since then, the outcry has been deafening. Though her organization has raised just $200,000 of the $1.2 million needed to actually put paint on steel, hundreds — even thousands — of Portland-area residents are thinking and talking about art, though not exactly the way Maginnis might have hoped. (See sidebar, “Talk of the Town.”)<br /><br /><strong>Good intentions</strong><br /> Maginnis is a passionate defender of her brainchild, initially responding to a <em>Portland Phoenix</em> request for an interview and up-close viewing of the proposals by saying “I’m not going to share my information with you if this is something you’re going to attack.”</span></p><p><span class="bodyText">She did eventually grant us an interview, in which she explained that she wants her three-year-old organization’s signature project to appeal to several distinct audiences, mostly far from Maine.</span></p><p><span class="bodyText">-international media outlets, which might cover Maine as an artsy destination;</span></p><p><span class="bodyText">-art-interested people around the country and the globe, who might travel to Maine if they thought about it as a creative place;</span></p><p><span class="bodyText">-Google Earth users across the Internet, who might see the painted tops of the tanks on their computer screens, if and when the Web-based satellite-photo database adds new images;</span></p><p><span class="bodyText">-business owners and leaders everywhere, who might be inspired to use artists’ work or artistic approaches in business applications;</span></p><p><span class="bodyText">-investors, who might bring their businesses to Maine if they were more aware of how creative our state’s residents are;</span></p><p><span class="bodyText">-artists, who might benefit from being able “to feel that they are able to make their dreams come true;”</span></p><br/><a href="/Portland/News/67581-Its-not-about-the-art/">Read more</a> http://thephoenix.com/Portland/News/67581-Its-not-about-the-art/ News Features JEFF INGLIS http://thephoenix.com/Portland/News/67581-Its-not-about-the-art/ Wed, 03 Sep 2008 19:56:16 GMT World without end <strong> After we're gone </strong><br/> Will the Earth miss us when we’re gone? <br/><p><img title="world_in" alt="world_in" src="http://cache.thephoenix.com/secure/uploadedImages/The_Phoenix/Arts/Books/tji_TheWorldWithoutUs_IN.jpg" border="0" /></p><p><span class="bodyText">Will the Earth miss us when we’re gone? It’s unlikely, suggests Alan Weisman, author of the best-selling 2007 book <em>The World Without Us</em>. Weisman, who stops by Portsmouth, New Hampshire, on Friday for a reading and book-signing, takes us to places people have abandoned and shows us how nature is reclaiming even urban landscapes.</span></p><p><span class="bodyText">He visits, among other places, the area around Chernobyl (still recovering from the 1986 nuclear disaster), and the demilitarized zone between North and South Korea (whose wildness is watched over by heavily armed soldiers), speculating on what will happen if, and when, people vanish (whether, Weisman cannily teases, by mass extinction, evacuation, or indeed Rapture) and leave the planet to its own devices.</span></p><p><span class="bodyText">His most striking example is on Cyprus, where, thanks to political tensions for the past 30 years, Varosha, a city that was once home to 20,000 people has been left abandoned and subject only to the forces of nature. Two years after war forced its evacuation, trees were growing up through what had once been paved roads, and at towering hotels, “10 stories of shattered sliding glass doors opening to seaview balconies now exposed to the elements, had become giant pigeon roosts,” Weisman writes. Four years later, “roofs had collapsed and trees were growing straight out of houses. . . . Tiny seeds of wild Cyprus cyclamen had wedged into cracks, germinated, and heaved aside entire slabs of cement.”</span></p><p><span class="bodyText">Now, “Fallen limestone facing lies in pieces. Hunks of wall have dropped from buildings to reveal empty rooms . . . brick-shaped gaps show where mortar has already dissolved. . . . Feral geraniums and philodendrons emerge from missing roofs and pour down exterior walls.”</span></p><p><span class="bodyText">Backed by extensive research and exhaustive travel, Weisman shows the real long-term effects of what we're doing to the planet — what wouldn’t make it through next week (New York's subway tunnels, daily in danger of being flooded), what would endure for 250,000 years (nuclear weapons' radioactivity), and what would last for millions of years (open-pit mines).</span></p><br/><a href="/Portland/Arts/67493-World-without-end/">Read more</a> http://thephoenix.com/Portland/Arts/67493-World-without-end/ Books JEFF INGLIS http://thephoenix.com/Portland/Arts/67493-World-without-end/ Wed, 03 Sep 2008 14:50:36 GMT Dumped by text <strong> Press Releases </strong><br/> He might not like this comparison, but Barack Obama has pulled a Britney. <br/><p><span class="bodyText">He might not like this comparison, but Barack Obama has pulled a Britney. He told his supporters — or at least those who signed up on his Web site — his vice-presidential nominee choice before granting an interview to a major daily paper or even holding a made-for-TV press conference.</span></p><p><span class="bodyText">Yes, Obama dumped the newspapers and the TV folks the same way the Mouseketeer-run-amok ditched K-Fed in 2006: by text message.</span></p><p><span class="bodyText">Some mainstream media outlets have tried to claim they had the news first, saying they had beaten the campaign to the punch by telling readers and viewers (mostly on their Web sites) that US Senator Joe Biden, a Delaware Democrat, was the “likely” choice throughout the day last Friday. But none of them could get rid of that troublesome word “likely,” and the only official-type comment was an outright denial from Biden, who said, “I’m not the guy.” So their efforts were pretty transparently speculation, however right they have turned out to be.</span></p><p><span class="bodyText">(As one possible exception, CNN has been claiming its reporting apparently influenced the timing of the text message — at 3 am Saturday rather than 8 am, as the campaign had originally planned.)</span></p><p><span class="bodyText">But the guessing game that makes up much of mainstream political journalism these days didn’t gain much traction among the general public. Americans were waiting for the word from Obama himself — not on TV, and not in the newspaper, but in their text-message inboxes.</span></p><p><span class="bodyText">The old-media train was already headed off a cliff, but Obama’s move has accelerated the derailment, highlighting the shortcomings of the traditional news sources and, simultaneously, the practicality of a new form of mass communication.</span></p><p><span class="bodyText">Of course, the newspapers made it easy to see where they missed the boat — witness the massive headlines on Sunday morning, more than 24 hours after the text went out, saying Biden was the pick. By then, the only people not in the know were — you guessed it — people who only get their news from the daily paper (if any such people still exist).</span></p><p><span class="bodyText">“Yesterday’s news tomorrow” never seemed so apt a slogan for the daily-newspaper industry. Even the TV newscasts were reduced to telling a huge portion of viewers something they already knew.</span></p><p><span class="bodyText">Obama’s text also showcased a new way that news consumers can get information. While many news organizations have started to “go mobile,” with “mobile-accessible” Web sites readable on Internet-enabled cell phones, and text-message alerts about breaking news, this is the first time a non-news organization has been invited by so many people (hundreds of thousands, and maybe millions — the campaign’s cagey about the numbers) right into their purses and pockets.</span></p><br/><a href="/Portland/News/67206-Dumped-by-text/">Read more</a> http://thephoenix.com/Portland/News/67206-Dumped-by-text/ News Features JEFF INGLIS http://thephoenix.com/Portland/News/67206-Dumped-by-text/ Wed, 27 Aug 2008 21:35:04 GMT Too scared to win? <strong> Barack Obama must fight for his principles, or he’ll give away the keys to the White House </strong><br/> What people want is someone who knows what he believes, says so, and stands up for it even in the face of criticism. <br/><table class="show_design_border" width="0" align="center"><tbody><tr><td><img title="cover_obamascream_inside.jpg" alt="cover_obamascream_inside.jpg" src="http://cache.thephoenix.com/secure/uploadedImages/The_Phoenix/News/News_Stories/cover_obamascream_inside.jpg" border="0" /><br /><span class="cutlineText">Credit: Dale Stephanos</span></td></tr></tbody></table><p><span class="bodyText">The video shows a meeting of Barack Obama’s campaign staff. A progressive activist arrives to pitch in, but her eyes glaze over amid Democratic-establishment polling reports and move-to-the-center cliché-spouting. Not quite two minutes go by before she interrupts to explain Obama’s connections to big corporations and neo-conservative foreign-policy advisers. “He’ll promise to rock the boat, but he won’t sink it,” she warns, insisting that the campaign return to the strong, eloquent, principled stands Obama took in the primary.</span></p><p><span class="bodyText">Her argument wins over those in the room, but before switching strategies, one of the ex-establishment groupies has a question: “Do we still work for Obama?” The progressive’s answer: “No! He works for us. He always did.”</span></p><p><span class="bodyText">Sure, it’s just the opening skit of the most recent Liberty News TV episode, a progressive news-and-commentary program written and filmed in Portland and distributed on public-access cable channels nationwide. The Illinois senator and his campaign staff need to sit up and take notice anyway, not because it’s a suggestion of a path to victory, but because the clip lays out his only path to victory.</span></p><p><span class="bodyText">There are a lot of people giving Obama advice about what he should do to beat John McCain. (See “Winning at the Grassroots Level” for a list of books offering similar advice for progressive activists.) But only one of them is offering advice based on an actual analysis of long-term voting and polling data to determine what voters really really want. And what they want is not someone who follows the polls and gets pushed around by the media, but someone who knows what he believes, says so, and stands up for it even in the face of criticism.</span></p><p><span class="bodyText">In his primary campaign, Obama staked out the progressive, aggressive, principled high ground, and attracted millions of passionate supporters. Having created the movement, and having been selected as its head, he should now follow his people — which almost certainly means doing something more dangerous than any major candidate has ever done: ditching the party establishment.</span></p><p><span class="bodyText">The people who back Obama may be energetic young progressives, but they are not unlike the vast majority of Americans when it comes to what they look for in a candidate. Glenn Hurowitz, a longtime progressive activist, explains in his book Fear and Courage in the Democratic Party that a major factor determining any voter’s choice is whether the candidate fights well (a characteristic described in polling data as being a “strong leader”).</span></p><br/><a href="/Portland/News/65616-Too-scared-to-win/">Read more</a> http://thephoenix.com/Portland/News/65616-Too-scared-to-win/ News Features JEFF INGLIS http://thephoenix.com/Portland/News/65616-Too-scared-to-win/ Wed, 13 Aug 2008 21:31:10 GMT After the fall <strong> Press releases </strong><br/> The bad news for the Portland Press Herald just won't stop. <br/><p><span class="bodyText">The bad news for the <em>Portland Press Herald</em> just won't stop.</span></p><p><span class="bodyText">The layoffs slated for August 18 — the third staff-reduction this year — will leave a demoralized, overworked crew, with 20 percent fewer staffers overall than at the same time last year.</span></p><p><span class="bodyText">The company’s predictions suggest advertising revenue might be down as much as $200,000 per month, as compared to 2007. And publisher Chuck Cochrane admitted in the pages of his own paper that the company will lose money this year.</span></p><p><span class="bodyText">Circulation dropped by more than 10 percent in the six months between September 2007 and March 2008, according to records filed by the paper with the Audit Bureau of Circulations.</span></p><p><span class="bodyText">The paper is for sale, but the deal — if it happens — won’t come soon enough to prevent the Seattle Times Company (the <em>Press</em><em>Herald</em>’s corporate parent), from failing to make its September payment on the loans it took out to buy Maine’s largest daily and its two sister papers (in Waterville and Augusta) 10 years ago.</span></p><p><span class="bodyText">It’s time to ask: Could the <em>Portland Press Herald</em> go under? The future of daily newspapers has been in question since the dawn of the Internet age. But the questions are only getting louder. The <em>Albuquerque Tribune</em>, a daily newspaper founded in 1922, closed in February. Closer to home, the <em>Argus Champion</em>, a 185-year-old weekly in central New Hampshire, announced two weeks ago that it would close at the end of July.</span></p><p><span class="bodyText">So far in Maine, most newspaper closings have been like those announced by Rockland-based VillageSoup in June: after buying six papers from Courier Publications, the company condensed those six and its previous two papers into five publications.</span></p><p><span class="bodyText">But in the June-July issue of<em> American Journalism Review</em>, senior contributing writer Charles Layton explained “why a lot of newspapers aren’t going to survive.” It’s not a pretty picture: with print-advertising revenue dropping precipitously, and online revenue-growth slowing, “we may begin seeing, pretty soon, big American cities with no daily newspaper,” he writes.</span></p><p><span class="bodyText">One industry analyst Layton interviews says some dailies will survive — “small local newspapers . . . with circulation under 25,000,” and some very large dailies, such as the <em>Washington Post</em> and the <em>New York Times</em>. But many of the rest — including possibly papers as large as the long benighted <em>San Francisco Chronicle</em> and the <em>Chicago Tribune</em> — may close down.</span></p><br/><a href="/Portland/News/65661-After-the-fall/">Read more</a> http://thephoenix.com/Portland/News/65661-After-the-fall/ News Features JEFF INGLIS http://thephoenix.com/Portland/News/65661-After-the-fall/ Wed, 30 Jul 2008 21:47:05 GMT Trying out an anti-demonstration ‘sonic cannon’ <strong> Non-lethal weapons </strong><br/> The Maine Marine Patrol is considering purchasing a “sonic cannon” capable of broadcasting earsplitting, “disorienting” sounds, like those that have been used to break up peaceful demonstrations in public spaces in Iraq and the country of Georgia. <br/><p><span class="bodyText">The Maine Marine Patrol is considering purchasing a “sonic cannon” capable of broadcasting earsplitting, “disorienting” sounds, like those that have been used to break up peaceful demonstrations in public spaces in Iraq and the country of Georgia.</span></p><p><span class="bodyText">The device, called a “long-range acoustic device” (LRAD), is described by its manufacturer, the California-based American Technology Corporation, as having the ability to emit an “attention-getting and highly irritating tone for behavior modification.” (The company’s Web site helpfully adds that the device, which costs roughly $20,000, is two feet in diameter, and weighs 60 pounds, has been used “in combat since December 2003.”)</span></p><p><span class="bodyText">A demonstration model on loan from the manufacturer was tested in Maine over the July 4 holiday weekend by Marine Patrol officers interested in another aspect of the device: its capability to broadcast highly directed sound that can reach people as far as a mile away — for example to communicate with a boat approaching a security zone, according to Marine Patrol Major John Fetterman.</span></p><p><span class="bodyText">That was one of the intents of the device when it was invented for the US military in response to the failure of a security zone to protect the USS <em>Cole</em> from a suicide-bomber’s attack in a Yemeni port in 2000. That attack killed 17 sailors.</span></p><p><span class="bodyText">But it wasn’t the LRAD’s only purpose, nor the most worrisome to those who might be more inclined to peaceful assemblies than attacks on warships. The manufacturer’s Web site touts another “feature” of the LRAD — its “warning” sound. That tone can be as loud as 151 decibels, which is enough to cause permanent hearing damage to a person as far as 1000 feet away after just a few seconds of exposure. So if a Marine Patrol officer even <em>accidentally</em> switched the device over to “warning” mode from its more benign “communication” mode, it could literally and permanently deafen anyone in its line of fire.</span></p><p><span class="bodyText">According to news reports, the warning tones from LRADs, which can be mounted on trucks as well as boats, have been used against civilians by Iraqi police and US troops in Iraq over the past few years, and were used in November 2007 by police in Tblisi, Georgia, to disperse an anti-government rally. (The New York Police Department deployed at least one LRAD near a demonstration outside the Republican National Convention in September 2004, but didn’t use the warning tone.)</span></p><p><span class="bodyText">The most-often touted “success” of the device’s warning tone was in defense of a Carnival Cruise Lines cruise ship attacked by pirates firing assault rifles and rocket-propelled grenades off the coast of Somalia in 2005. While it did repel the attack, one of the two men who used the device against the pirates says he has lost some of his hearing as a result.</span></p><br/><a href="/Portland/News/64997-Trying-out-an-anti-demonstration-‘sonic-cannon/">Read more</a> http://thephoenix.com/Portland/News/64997-Trying-out-an-anti-demonstration-‘sonic-cannon/ This Just In JEFF INGLIS http://thephoenix.com/Portland/News/64997-Trying-out-an-anti-demonstration-‘sonic-cannon/ Wed, 16 Jul 2008 21:31:01 GMT We told you so <strong> FairPoint’s phone-line takeover is as bad as regulators feared. </strong><br/> FairPoint’s transition has been slow, and is already four months behind schedule. <br/><table class="show_design_border" align="center"><tbody><tr><td><img title="feat_fairpoint_inside.jpg" alt="feat_fairpoint_inside.jpg" src="http://cache.thephoenix.com/secure/uploadedImages/The_Phoenix/News/News_Stories/feat_fairpoint_inside.jpg" border="0" /></td></tr></tbody></table><p><span class="bodyText">We knew it would be bad. Heck, beyond all the ink in all the other newspapers, we at the <em>Portland Phoenix</em> printed 4500 words over the course of six months explaining what was wrong with the Verizon-FairPoint merger, in which a North Carolina-based little-phone-company-that-could spent $2.3 billion of mostly borrowed money to take over the northern New England operations of one of the world’s largest telecommunications companies (see “A Bad Idea Triumphs,” by Jeff Inglis, February 29).</span></p><p><span class="bodyText">But it is with a distinct feeling of dismay (though perhaps just a touch of schadenfreude) that we report that the change-over has been more disastrous than even we thought: FairPoint is performing terribly now, and all signs point to the situation getting far worse, and probably never getting better.</span></p><p><span class="bodyText">Let’s move past the <strong>MISSING ONLINE BILLING SYSTEM</strong> that has customers in Maine, New Hampshire, and Vermont upset at having to buy stamps to mail in their payments for phone service. That’s still not resolved, but it’s relatively minor — and the company says it’ll be fixed by late fall. Liberty Consulting Group, the Pennsylvania-based company monitoring FairPoint’s transition for regulators in all three states, says it shouldn’t be a big problem. (You’ll see shortly that neither FairPoint nor Liberty is establishing a very good track record for this sort of promise, but there are much bigger fish to fry than complaints about adding 42 cents to everyone’s phone bill.)</span></p><p><span class="bodyText">We can less easily dismiss the fact that more workers have left the company than FairPoint predicted, leaving the new outfit <strong>SHORT OF EXPERIENCED WORKERS</strong> at a time when customers need reassurance — which usually comes in the form of speedy, competent service. That goes for both in-person physical repair work and over-the-phone support.</span></p><p><span class="bodyText">FairPoint had said that, upon closing the deal, it would hire an additional 675 employees in northern New England. But as of March 31, according to a report from Liberty, the company had 10 percent<em> fewer</em> employees than Verizon had had 10 months earlier, meaning it needs to hire replacements for roughly 270 people before economic-development number-crunchers can even begin to count any “new” workers. FairPoint corporate communications manager Jill Healey Wurm says the company needs to hire a total of roughly 900 people, but wouldn’t give a reason for the increased number. The company had hired 260 people as of the end of April, the most recent numbers Liberty or FairPoint have disclosed.</span></p><br/><a href="/Portland/News/64296-We-told-you-so/">Read more</a> http://thephoenix.com/Portland/News/64296-We-told-you-so/ News Features JEFF INGLIS http://thephoenix.com/Portland/News/64296-We-told-you-so/ Wed, 02 Jul 2008 20:34:54 GMT Herald or harbinger? <strong> Press releases </strong><br/> Those of us fascinated by the rapidly deflating balloon that is the Portland Press Herald/Maine Sunday Telegram have had a lot to chew over from a lot of sources lately. <br/><p><span class="bodyText">Those of us fascinated by the rapidly deflating balloon that is the <em>Portland Press Herald/Maine Sunday Telegram</em> have had a lot to chew over from a lot of sources lately. (Not surprisingly, one of the worst sources of information on this topic was the <em>PPH</em> itself.) Here’s a roundup of what you might have missed in the flurry.</span></p><p><span class="bodyText"><strong>Layoffs</strong> Effective July 1, 31 fewer people work at the <em>Press Herald</em> (including reporters Paul Carrier, Kevin Wack, Tess Nacelewicz, Seth Harkness, Josie Huang, and Jonathan Kaplan). Some of them took "voluntary severance" packages, while others were just laid off. Six already-vacant positions were eliminated, and five more layoffs are in the works. All four of the paper's satellite news bureaus were closed — including the ones watching the Maine State House and Washington DC. Also gone? The day and night editors (Andrea Nemitz and David McNabb) and a copy editor (Gary Christian).</span></p><p><span class="bodyText"><strong>Critiques</strong> Those who remain are again subject to the sometimes-withering criticism of the pseudonymous "T. Cushing Munjoy" at the PressingTheHerald blog (see "Pressure Is On," by Jeff Inglis, March 12). He quit posting when the papers went up for sale, figuring it made little sense to attack a retreating enemy, but returned to the fray when the sale was delayed.</span></p><p><span class="bodyText"><strong>Low bids</strong> According to media watcher (and <em>Phoenix</em> political columnist) Al Diamon, none of the <em>Press Herald'</em>s three potential short-list buyers offered enough money to make owner Frank Blethen happy. Let's take a stab at a rock-bottom price: the major properties — land and buildings — the company owns are assessed by tax officials in their respective cities (Portland, South Portland, Augusta, and Waterville) at a total of nearly $30 million. That leaves out multi-million-dollar printing presses and "intangible assets" such as the newspapers’ names, Web site addresses, customer and advertiser databases, and what is called “goodwill” (the reputation the company has in the community).</span></p><p><span class="bodyText"><strong>Who's in?</strong> Possible buyers named by Crosscut Seattle (at crosscut.com, a must-read Web site for PPH watchers) were Black Press, which owns more than 150 newspapers in the US and Canada, where it's based; Gatehouse Media of New York state, owners of nearly 400 daily and weekly newspapers across the US; and Wilkes-Barre Publishing Holdings of Pennsylvania, whose flagship paper is the <em>Wilkes-Barre Times Leader</em>.</span></p><p><span class="bodyText"><strong>Union woes</strong> The <em>Press Herald</em> has sued its employees' union over the workers’ insistence that any buyer agree, as a condition of purchase, to take over the existing union contract, which runs through 2010. In the suit, the Blethens ask for a federal judge's ruling that no such promise is required. Court documents include a letter from one Blethen executive expressing concern about “whether a sale is possible” if the contract must be preserved.</span></p><br/><a href="/Portland/News/64269-Herald-or-harbinger/">Read more</a> http://thephoenix.com/Portland/News/64269-Herald-or-harbinger/ News Features JEFF INGLIS http://thephoenix.com/Portland/News/64269-Herald-or-harbinger/ Wed, 02 Jul 2008 20:12:27 GMT He ain't heavy — well, maybe a little bit <strong> Performance art </strong><br/> For Armen Moradians's "100 Carry Project," he plans to carry 100 people — one by one, piggy-back style — along a two-mile route through downtown Portland. <br/><table class="show_design_border" width="0" align="center"><tbody><tr><td><img title="tji_carryproject_inside.jpg" alt="tji_carryproject_inside.jpg" src="http://cache.thephoenix.com/secure/uploadedImages/The_Phoenix/News/This_Just_In/tji_carryproject_inside.jpg" border="0" /><br /><span class="cutlineText">ALTERNATIVE TRANSPORTATION: Carried by a bus.</span></td></tr></tbody></table><p><span class="bodyText">In the legend of Robin Hood, when Robin meets Friar Tuck, he gets Tuck to carry him across a stream. In the middle, for reasons that vary with the source of the story, Tuck drops Robin in the water, which provokes a swordfight that ends in a stalemate, after which Robin invites Tuck to join Robin's band of Merry Men.</span></p><p><span class="bodyText">That story, modified by artistic idealism and hope, is one of the inspirations for Armen Moradians's "100 Carry Project," in which he plans to carry 100 people — one by one, piggy-back style — along a two-mile route through downtown Portland.</span></p><p><span class="bodyText">His hope is that his project will be a nonviolent way to bring strangers together, by putting themselves through a physical and mental ordeal that will lead to an increased feeling of mutual understanding — without dropping anyone in water or any sort of swordfight.</span></p><p><span class="bodyText">Moradians, a dancer and performer who lives near Deering Oaks Park, has carried 12 people since late November — this past Sunday, I was the 12th. We met on Friday at a coffee shop, partly to talk over what we were going to do, and partly for him to size me up and determine whether he could, in fact, carry me. (I am, so far, the heaviest person he has carried; at 185 pounds, I outweigh Moradians himself by 40 pounds.)</span></p><p><span class="bodyText">His first point was that being carried is anything but a passive role: I would have to hang on to him with all my strength if we were to succeed. My task was to use my energy to keep us together, while most of his energy moved us from the George Cleeves memorial on the Eastern Prom to Monument Square and back. And, as he predicted, I was nearly as exhausted as he was at the end, though we were both also elated and relieved to have finished.</span></p><p><span class="bodyText">It is exactly the type of symbiotic relationship Moradians had in mind when he dreamed up the project — a voluntary undertaking to suffer in the search for some sort of greater learning. (What the people he has carried have learned is described, in part, in their post-carry entries on his blog. What he learns will be collected in a project-culminating performance when he's done.)</span></p><p><span class="bodyText">His second point, there at the coffee shop, was that he didn't know what would happen during the carry. In addition to never having hefted my weight before, the route itself bore unforeseen, and unpredictable, physical perils — weather, sidewalks, traffic, other pedestrians, that kind of thing.</span></p><br/><a href="/Portland/News/63791-He-aint-heavy-—-well-maybe-a-little-bit/">Read more</a> http://thephoenix.com/Portland/News/63791-He-aint-heavy-—-well-maybe-a-little-bit/ This Just In JEFF INGLIS http://thephoenix.com/Portland/News/63791-He-aint-heavy-—-well-maybe-a-little-bit/ Wed, 25 Jun 2008 16:29:50 GMT