Wade on Birmingham

Archive for November, 2009

‘Rogue’ recon: Sarah Palin to sign new memoir in Birmingham on Nov. 23

Tuesday, November 10th, 2009

“Going Rogue: An American Life,”* the new Sarah Palin memoir, will be out in a week. And on Nov. 23, Palin herself will be in Birmingham for a book signing.

Sarah Palin - Going Rogue: An American Life*Note: affiliate link

The former governor of Alaska and 2008 Republican vice presidential candidate will stop by Books-A-Million at Colonial Brookwood Village in Homewood [map] at 7 p.m 4:30 p.m. Line numbers will be handed out starting at noon Nov. 22.

Palin received $1.25 million for the book, which covers her life in Alaska since childhood through her career in politics. HarperCollins will print 1.5 million copies after having moved the release date from spring to this month when ghostwriter Lynn Vincent finished ahead of schedule.

Birmingham marks the ninth stop on Palin’s tour.

Also:

Update: You’ll need a receipt or voucher to get a wristband; only two copies signed per wristband; plus more rules for the signing.

Vote 2009: Carole Smitherman running for mayor

Tuesday, November 10th, 2009

Carole Smitherman, who has been serving as interim mayor for the past 2 weeks, wants a shot at the real thing.

Carole SmithermanSmitherman announced today her intent to enter the race, after having run unsuccessfully in 2003 and 2007. She said her official announcement is coming, but only after she takes care of more city business.

And she has been busy. As city council president, she automatically became mayor with former mayor Larry Langford’s conviction in October. She fired chief of staff Deborah Vance-Bowie and accepted the resignation of finance director Steve Sayler, all related to the city budget which may be missing $20 million.

Vance-Bowie countered Smitherman’s claim that Vance-Bowie was partially responsible for the city’s budget problems, sharing a series of e-mails between her and Sayler to illustrate Sayler’s lack of cooperation.

Smitherman, an attorney, has served on the council since 2001. Before that, she served as a circuit court judge, municipal court judge and prosecutor for the City of Irondale.

Her candidacy makes for a field of six, including Emory Anthony, Patrick Cooper, Stephannie Huey, Edith Mayomi and Jimmy Snow.

Her campaign site, SmithermanforBirmingham.com, from her 2009 council bid is still online.

The election takes place Dec. 8.

• • •

More Vote 2009 coverage.

birmingham renewed: what we have

Monday, November 9th, 2009

Good people, good food,
stubbornness, sense of humor
and stories galore.

• • •

Read more haiku.

‘Supernanny’ casting in Alabama starting Saturday

Monday, November 9th, 2009

The ABC reality show “Supernanny” is returning to Alabama for casting. Is your family screwed up enough to make the cut?

Jo Frost - SupernannyThe show brings nanny Jo Frost to homes across America to help parents in need learn to raise their children right.

Producers will be in Alabama Saturday through Nov. 21, though locations have not been disclosed. A flyer by Alabama Casting services says the show will be looking especially for …

  • families with unique interests;
  • parents who have ordinary and extraordinary circumstances;
  • teen moms;
  • siblings raising siblings;
  • grandparents raising grandchildren;
  • single parents;
  • same-sex parents;
  • parents with mean girls or bullying boys;
  • culturally diverse parents;
  • and blended families where both sides are seeking help.

To apply, e-mail renee@alabamacasting.com or call (334) 318-9552. Parents can also  apply online at supernanny.com. For more information, call (877) 626-6984 or e-mail Supernanny@ricochettelevision.com.

• • •

Also, “Supernanny” visits the Phelps family of Hayden. See our review.

‘Supernanny’: And the hits keep coming

Monday, November 9th, 2009

Review: Reality show comes to Hayden to take on spanking mom

Review at a glance: “Supernanny” Jo Frost works with the Phelps in Hayden to help them discipline the kids without resorting to spanking.

I’ll admit it: I have a slight crush on Supernanny, a k a Jo Frost. She just has a way of saying “Birmingham” and “naughty spot” in her British accent that slaps my tickle. I might even follow her into hell and back, or in this case, Hayden.

Back in May, Jo came to visit the Phelps family to tape a sixth-season episode of “Supernanny,” which aired Friday. The ABC reality show visits families in need of parental training. This was her first visit to Alabama.

Video: The Phelps family on “Supernanny”

Amy and Jimmy Phelps are at odds. She’s a stay-at-home mom, and he works outside of the home. They have three boys: Jacob, 9; Brody, 5; and Aiden, 2 1/2.

SuperNanny - Phelps family

From left, Aiden, Brody and Jacob.

And like any three boys, they’re a handful. They eat junk food, they talk back and they’re rambunctious. Amy’s solution? A good old-fashioned spanking. Or 12.

Jimmy and Amy don’t see eye to eye on a lot of things, including the spankings. He’d rather find another way to discipline the boys, while she feels it’s an effective tool.

SuperNanny - Phelps family

Amy raises her voice to Brody.

Jo makes it clear that her bag of tricks doesn’t include spanking. But throughout the episode, Amy resists the challenge to try timeouts instead of spankings.

But it wouldn’t be “Supernanny” if Jo’s patience and chiding don’t win out in the end. Along the way, we’re treated to couple’s drama, too, as we see how Amy and Jimmy argue more than listen.

SuperNanny - Phelps family

Jo has the family set rules for children and parents.

Jimmy comes off as the sometimes naive, sometimes passive dad. Amy comes off as the frustrated wife and mom.

Jo insists that Aiden start sleeping in his own bed, which lays bare Amy’s pain. She had been using her baby boy to fill an emotional hole, even as he needed to sleep on his own.

SuperNanny - Phelps family

Jo gives Amy a pep talk.

We’re also treated to a reboot of family meals, as Jo tells Amy she’s lazy for not fixing proper meals; the kids usually do prepackaged lunches, and then, only the dessert. The boys help choose and make a balanced dinner. Yes, okra, too.

SuperNanny - Phelps family

Jimmy, left, and Jacob prepare okra for dinner.

In the end, it appears Amy has begun, reluctantly, to use timeouts whenever the boys misbehave. Jimmy says he feels more confident as a father.

It was a typical episode, but one that raises questions about whether corporal punishment really works, and if parents have alternatives.

Also: “Supernanny” is looking for additional Alabama families starting Saturday.

• • •

Other Alabamians on reality television:

Plus, another review from Reality TV Magazine.

• • •

Did Jo have the right solution? Did Amy know best?

Vote 2009: Also running for mayor

Monday, November 9th, 2009

Also running for Birmingham mayor, besides Emory Anthony and Patrick Cooper, are …
Wade on Birmingham - Vote 2009

  • Stephannie Sigler Huey, who ran for mayor in Denver, and also finished in 14th place running for mayor of Birmingham in 2003. Huey is a teacher in the Birmingham school system and a pastor with the God’s Holy Tabernacle Church. She wants to reduce crime and make schools safer.
  • Edith Mayomi, an employee at Jefferson State Community College.
  • Jimmy Snow, an Avondale resident who wants to reform City Hall. He told the Birmingham News: ”I really do not care to be mayor, but I am willing to do what needs to be done.”

The election takes place Dec. 8.

• • •

More Vote 2009 coverage.

birmingham renewed: vulcan says

Sunday, November 8th, 2009

The god of the forge
leapt from the mountaintop to
keep watch from up close.

• • •

Read more haiku.

birmingham renewed: smash cynicism

Sunday, November 8th, 2009

Begone, cynics and
sycophants. Let us begin
with true dialogue.

• • •

Read more haiku.

Vote 2009: Mayoral candidate No. 2? Emory Anthony

Sunday, November 8th, 2009

Defense attorney Emory Anthony is entering the race for mayor in Birmingham. This makes him the second candidate to announce, following Patrick Cooper’s kickoff on Thursday.

Emory AnthonyAnthony’s focus will be on education, jobs and transportation. He also says he’ll check the city’s finances to determine whether the domed stadium and Fair Park redevelopment can continue.

Previously, Anthony served as dean of Miles College Law School, municipal judge and prosecutor for the Jefferson County District Attorney, and a legal adviser to then Mayor Bernard Kincaid. This is his third run for mayor; he also ran once unsuccessfully for state Senate.

The election takes place Dec. 8.

Also:

• • •

More Vote 2009 coverage.

birmingham renewed: let’s undo something

Friday, November 6th, 2009

The mistrust, the lies,
the hopelessness, the rancor,
the path to nowhere.

• • •

Read more haiku.

EXCLUSIVE – Sidewalk 2009: September success brings $20,000 surplus

Friday, November 6th, 2009

Film festival combines budget cutting, increased sales and speedy fund-raising

Sidewalk Moving Picture Festival 2009 - Alabama Theatre

Almost showtime: Before a screening at the Alabama Theatre
during the 2009 Sidewalk Moving Picture Festival.

In a year of troubled festivals in Birmingham, one event managed a storybook ending despite the odds. The 2009 Sidewalk Moving Picture Festival had a new executive director, a budget shortfall and a ticking clock.

Wade on Birmingham - Sidewalk Moving Picture FestivalHere’s what didn’t happen: The 11-year-old film fest didn’t shut down before opening night. It didn’t leave vendors unpaid. And it didn’t file for bankruptcy.

Instead, Sidewalk finished $20,000 in the black and pulled in roughly 13,000 attendees, despite a troubled economy.

In this exclusive interview, executive director Chloe Collins shares how the two-person staff and their 425 volunteers not only survived, but succeeded.

Budget breakdown

With Collins’ arrival in April, she faced two common obstacles: time and money. She had less than 5 months to get the festival ready and a $10,000 deficit cutting into her resources.

“It’s really hard to get people excited about doing less,” she said. “It’s an easier sell to say, ‘Look at the stuff we’re adding.'”

Her goals were to just see if she could do it, to put on the event with the same level of quality as previous years without more debt, yet still improve the programming.

Organizers went throughout the budget line by line, cutting expenses like Collins’ travel budget and saving money by switching insurance companies and partnering with sponsors for the event’s parties.

In addition, the Alabama Moving Image Association, the actual entity that runs the festival and other Sidewalk events, changed the membership program and held an online fund-raiser called Kick the Bucket. The 3-week goal was $10,000, but the total raised was $5,864.

And yet, it was nearly $6,000 that the festival didn’t have before, from a campaign in August, right in the heat of actual event preparation.

Collins has created 100 proposals for both local and national sponsors. She has also invested time in applying for grants. Melissa Kendrick, who had been hired with grant money as the association’s part-time development director, instead took a job as chief executive officer of the American Lung Association of Alabama.

Not only was Collins learning the ropes as executive director but also was filling in as development director along the way.

The event had no title sponsor as it had in 2008. But it did have one other triumph: more ticket sales.

All combined, the festival wrapped with $20,000 extra, 20 percent over the goal for the year, according to preliminary figures from Collins.

Room to breathe

Collins points out that the festival has run lean over the years, so the surplus gives Sidewalk some breathing room. The association paid all its vendors in full by October, including any from 2008 who still hadn’t been fully reimbursed.

“We’re in a better place than I thought we would be in back in June or July,” Collins said.

Still, the festival was not without a hiccup or two. For example, a new audience tracking system didn’t fully live up to expectations.

Attendees who bought online tickets and filled out demographic info would have their passes scanned at each screening. The data collected would not only give an attendance figure, but also reveal which movies were popular with specific groups. (In past years, volunteers would count audience members upon entrance using hand clickers.)

Instead, glitches human and otherwise generated an incomplete picture. Based on the preliminary data, organizers estimate 13,000 attended the three-day event in September. They plan to look deeper into the numbers over the coming months.

Past years’ attendance figures — around 10,000 to 13,000 — have been rough estimates, based on ballot and clicker counts.

Coming soon

The event itself “went off without a hitch,” Collins says, in part because of festival producer Denise Koch of McMillan Associates. The Birmingham-based agency has worked with Sidewalk since 2007. Collins had nothing but praise for Koch: “I feel comfortable with Denise. … Denise did a really good job for us. She was committed to the festival.”

Koch and her boss George McMillan are facing arrest warrants for bad check charges related to their work on City Stages. The downtown music festival declared bankruptcy after a lackluster showing in June, leaving dozens of vendors unpaid.

Collins signs all checks and contracts related to Sidewalk, rather than an outside representative.

Meanwhile, Collins is preparing the 2010 budget for board approval. With one festival completed, she has been looking ahead to improvements for next time, including possibly adding another staff member and reassigning duties within the office.

“We’re so blessed to have repeat customers (as volunteers) and new volunteers,” Collins said. “I feel really blessed that we’ve gotten to this point, and that we have such huge community support.”

• • •

Action! Complete Sidewalk Festival coverage.

Photo by Ali Clark / aliclark.org

Vote 2009: Patrick Cooper enters mayoral race

Thursday, November 5th, 2009

The runner-up has returned for a rematch, of sorts.

Patrick CooperAttorney Patrick Cooper, who ran unsuccessfully for mayor of Birmingham in 2007, announced his run today. This makes him the first candidate to announce for the race to fill the spot vacated by convicted former mayor Larry Langford.

Cooper finished in second place last time, earning 29.5 percent of the vote.

Video: Cooper announces his candidacy and platform

Cooper promised to hire more police officers, citing a shortage of 200. He also wants to fund pre-kindergarten programs, and put people to work with public works programs.

His previous campaign site, CooperForMayor.com, has gone dormant, while his Facebook campaign page has not been updated, save for supporters’ comments.

Update: His new campaign Web site, CooperForBirmingham.com, has launched.

The election takes place Dec. 8.

• • •

More Vote 2009 coverage.

birmingham renewed: the reins

Thursday, November 5th, 2009

The reins are tattered,
yet still tethered to horses,
strong but unguided.

• • •

Read more haiku.

Mountain Brook native Kent Haines to appear on Comedy Central

Thursday, November 5th, 2009

Comedian and Mountain Brook native Kent Haines will be on the lineup for Friday’s season premiere of “Live at Gotham.”

Kent HainesHaines, who has appeared in the Web series “That Guy,” lives in Philadelphia, where he was named “Philly’s Phunniest Person” by Helium Comedy Club.

The hourlong show, which features comics at Gotham Comedy Club in New York, airs at 10 p.m. Friday, repeating at 6 a.m. Saturday, on Comedy Central.

Video: Haines in “Charades, Pt. 1” from “That Guy”

Undue recognition: Why the Birmingham Leadership Awards promote divisiveness

Wednesday, November 4th, 2009

Young Professional Reception 2009 logo

The nonprofit groups came together at one point, back in 2006, to meet, to share, to collaborate. A new idea was taking hold: Birmingham-area volunteers and board members could find ways to help each other out. It was called the YP Roundtable.

In October, that same group decided it was time for a pat on the back. Several in fact. The group has partnered with the Birmingham Regional Chamber of Commerce over the past three years. Now that the chamber is dead, the Birmingham Business Alliance has pushed for a new program, the Birmingham Leadership Awards.

Want to win the fawning praise for your formerly selfless good deeds? Let’s go through the process:

1. You nominate yourself. You fill out the form on behalf of yourself, in one of two categories: more than or less than 5 years “in the Young Professional scene.” Or you can nominate your own organization (the three categories divide entrants by size of group). You talk about yourself, your accomplishments and even provide two letters of recommendation.

2. Judges pick up to 10 individuals and three groups as winners. Who are the judges? They haven’t been revealed yet. What are their criteria? The form doesn’t say.

3. Bask in glory, noble humble winners. The awards ceremony takes place Dec. 1.

What was once a chance to collaborate has degenerated into unnecessary competition. What was once a chance for those working to help charities and causes through combined effort has become an exercise in self-importance.

When the winners are announced, take a hard look at each one of them. No one plucked them out of obscurity to hold them up as shining examples for a troubled city to admire, even emulate.

Each one of them chose to enter, as if to say, “Look at me. Reward me. Me me me.”

Good works deserve recognition. But did we have to make it so selfishly egotistically uncharitable?

What’s your take? How do we recognize community champions without creating another awards monster?