Until the dolphin flies and parrots live at sea... [entries|archive|friends|userinfo]
Alejandra (Lady Baroness of Xternetsa)

[ website | superaleja.org ]
[ userinfo | livejournal userinfo ]
[ archive | journal archive ]

GimpGirl Community On-line Dance Party, 7/31, 6 PM SLT/Pacific [Jul. 31st, 2008|06:28 am]
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This is an online, international event that will be held in Second Life, but is accessible to those not on Second Life via IRC chat. See below for details. This event is also on our calendar.
***

GimpGirl Community is having an end-of-the-month party on Thursday night! Our fave GimpGirl Ally Second Life DJ Namav will be playing his mix of rock, blues, funk, and your requests! May be a contest or two! EVERYONE is welcome.

Thursday, July 31 from 6:00 - 8:00 PM SLT/Pacific.
(9:00 PM Eastern Time, for other timezones, click HERE)

Second Life Location:
http://slurl.com/secondlife/3DE/172/24/23
You should land on the dancefloor on our roof!


IF YOU DON'T HAVE ACCESS TO SECOND LIFE:
You can still attend this party online via IRC, and listen to the music (see below). To visit our IRC/Second Life chatroom, go to:
http://chat.on.quickfox.net/GimpGirl

To LISTEN TO THE MUSIC online (if you're not on SL), go here:
http://purple.neostreams.info:11188/listen.pls
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Un verano en nueva york [Jul. 18th, 2008|06:04 am]
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[Current Music |"Un Verano en Nueva York", El Gran Combo]


If you grew up as a Spanish speaker, you're probably going to know this song.  Particularly if you grew up in the U.S., and especially, well, in New York.  The title, after all, translates to "(A) Summer in New York".  The video is a lot of 70s Gran Combo love, which is okay, because without them, every kid who ever went to a hispanic house party three generations later wouldn't have this song in their blood.  I can almost see little old me blasting this one out of a slow-moving car, because that's what you're supposed to do.
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Pug, pug [Jul. 12th, 2008|04:20 am]
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[Current Mood | amused]

I want to catch up with the show Extras now.  Or have Bowie write a terrible song about me.

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Barack Obama on Religion [Jun. 15th, 2008|05:34 pm]
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[Current Mood | optimistic]

 I'm not sure exactly when  or where this speech was delivered, but the YouTube video (via [info]ishottheserif) was uploaded at the end of May:

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Next @ the disTHIS! Film Series: HEAVY LOAD: A FILM ABOUT HAPPINESS (Wed, June 18) [Jun. 11th, 2008|04:13 pm]
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Next @ the disTHIS! Film Series: disability through a whole new lens

HEAVY LOAD flyer image

HEAVY LOAD: A FILM ABOUT HAPPINESS
Followed by Q & A the band and gig with 4 Wheel City @ Arlene's Grocery!
SPECIAL DATE: Wednesday, June 18th!
Link: http://www.disthis.org/June-18-2008.htm

Join disTHIS! for the NY premiere of HEAVY LOAD: A FILM ABOUT HAPPINESS, a feature documentary about the UK’s only 'mixed-ability' punk band prior to the movies premiere on the Independent Film Channel (IFC), June 23rd!  IFC and other  media outlets will be there to document the film screening and post-screening concert at Arlene's Grocery for broadcast!
 
HEAVY LOAD: A FILM ABOUT HAPPINESS opened to rave reviews last March at the SXSW Festival in Austin, TX. Rural England’s answer to the Ramones, the band includes musicians with and without developmental disabilities. True to their punk roots, the band was recently considered “too hardcore for BBC Radio Four” (the English equivalent of NPR) when a segment on the band was axed from a story about disability and self-determination.
 
The movie chronicles a year in the life of the band as they hit the road and attempt to navigate a combustible flux of ego, ambition, and fantasy that fuels any emerging act on tour.
 
The band will also be bringing their STAY UP LATE campaign to the United States. STAY UP LATE fights for disabled folks who want to go out to clubs, etc. but often end up going home early because their support workers don't want to work late. Fight for your right to party!  Be sure to catch the band's first gig in NYC. This will be a rare opportunity to attend one of their energetic, and sometimes chaotic, live performances stateside - which has earned them a cult following in the UK!
 
SPECIAL DATE:  Wednesday, June 18th
WHERE: DCTV, 3rd Floor Screening Room
87 Lafayette Street (By Subway: 6, N, R, Q, W, J, M, Z to Canal Street; go two blocks south) between Walker & White.
START TIME: Doors open 5:30pm. Screening begins promptly @ 6pm!
DONATION: A bargain @ $5!!!
DON’T MISS OUT! To RSVP and reserve YOUR seat, call: 212.284.4160 or email: disthis@dnnyc.net
 
“Don’t be misled by the title. HEAVY LOAD: A FILM ABOUT HAPPINESS plays like Metallica’s SOME KIND OF MONSTER meets HOW’S YOUR NEWS,” says disTHIS! curator, Lawrence Carter-Long. “It’s everything you want in a band movie with a disability twist. Not to be missed!”

disTHIS! movies, talkback sessions and related events are open to the public. $5 donation. There will be a discussion with the band and film director following the screening! HEAVY LOAD: A FILM ABOUT HAPPINESS is captioned. ASL interpretation available upon request. Space is wheelchair accessible. There is a cash bar for drinks, but space is limited to the first 65 people!  Presented in association with the Realabilities NY Disability Film Festival.
 
After the screening, STAY UP LATE with HEAVY LOAD as the guys make their NYC concert debut @ Arlene’s Grocery (95 Stanton Street) with local krip-hop favorites FOUR WHEEL CITY!!!  Concert tickets only $8! Get directions here:
http://www.hopstop.com/route?zip2=10002&address2=95+STANTON+ST&mode=s

About us: The disTHIS! Film Series, a program of the Disabilities Network of NYC in association with DCTV, is a showcase of festival quality independent and international short, documentary and feature films with disability themes beyond clichés. disTHIS! movies are always provocative; never what you’d expect. No handkerchief necessary, no heroism required. This is disability through a whole new lens!
 
The disTHIS! Film Series is made possible by the generous support of The Christopher & Dana Reeve Foundation, the Screen Actors Guild, the NYU Community Fund, the United Way and our members.
 
For more information & to sign up for exclusive email updates, go to: http://disthis.org

Heavy load profiles image
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Nick's Crusade [Jun. 9th, 2008|02:45 pm]
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Nick's Crusade
Originally uploaded by superaleja.
In 2003, Nick Dupree made a major impact with his campaign to change Medicaid in his home state of Alabama (U.S.), so that he and others like him could continue living in the community and out of a nursing home, dubbed "Nick's Crusade."

Though he has worked hard, Nick realizes that he needs to find a new place to live safely and independently so that he can continue to work towards his goals as an individual and an activist for change in the disability community.

Learn more about his new campaign at Nick's Crusade : Project Freedom. Your thoughts and ideas are welcomed!

(Photo credit: Kii Sato, Mobile Register)
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Women with disabilities and healthcare - a discussion (cross-posted) [May. 1st, 2008|08:28 pm]
In May, GimpGirl Community (AKA [info]gimpgirl ) will be talking about women with disabilities and healthcare. We'd also like to open the topic to others outside our group.

What are your experiences with healthcare as a woman with a disability? Tell your story, or learn from others. Share resources, opinions, myths, and facts.

Healthcare for women with disabilities varies greatly from place to place, and culture to culture. Most agree that women with disabilities are still greatly underserved. And our needs are as complex as we are, varying by age, disability, and access to healthcare, among other things.

We want to talk about the issues surrounding women with disabilities and healthcare. During the month, we'll also have a chance to make our opinions known to people in the medical profession (based in the U.S.), and those who are studying to become medical professionals. We can give them a head start to understanding the needs and barriers faced by women with disabilities when it comes to receiving respectful and appropriate healthcare.

Feel free to share your thoughts in this forum, or any of our communities online (see GimpGirl Communities for a list of where you can interact).

We'll be having our first online support meeting of the month on Friday, May 2 (see our website calendar or this post for details). Join us and start the conversation, which will undoubtedly lead to many other topics along the way.

Here are a few links which may be useful, or worth discussing. Feel free to suggest others (particularly with info about issues outside of the U.S.):

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GimpGirl Presentation @ Dreams Fair on Second Life [Apr. 20th, 2008|11:32 am]
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GimpGirl Presentation
Originally uploaded by complicitytheory.
Here is a picture of me, in front of our giant TV screen, as [info]jennylin and I talk about [info]gimpgirl (AKA GimpGirl Community), at the Third Annual Dreams Community Fair in Second Life.

"The Third Annual Dreams Community Fair highlights health/support, educational, and artistic groups in SL. There are over 60 informational booths and close to 80 events scheduled by those groups and others."


More photos in the GimpGirl Community Flickr group.
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In solidarity [Apr. 3rd, 2008|06:20 pm]
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[Current Mood | tired]

With my Canadian friends (slightly NSFW)...



I love you all.
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Online Avatar & Identity Presentation (3/30) [Mar. 14th, 2008|06:03 pm]
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f you're interested in Second Life, IRC, and/or issues of identity (with and without disability), you are invited to an online seminar I am co-hosting (with [info]jennylin, but not presenting) entitled:

"Avatars, Identity, and the Expression of Disability" on Sunday, March 30th from 12:00 - 1:30 PM SLT/Pacific Time (3:00 PM Eastern Time)
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"LOL" [Mar. 1st, 2008|02:48 am]
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[Current Mood | amused]

The "Blog" of "Unnecessary" Quotation Marks


Image of sign - Caution: 'SLIPPERY' when wet

Image of sign in a store: 'Parents' You Are Responsible For Your 'Childrens' (SAFETY) Do not let them Run 'Free' or 'Leave' them 'Unattended' 'In Shopping Carts' While Shopping.

Image of sign: PLEASE 'LOCK' RESTROOM 'BEHIND' YOU

(via Catspaw)
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I need to be like this guy [Feb. 22nd, 2008|04:29 pm]
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[Current Mood | snow]

Man Uses Wheelchair To Shovel Out

You'd think this is an accessory that would be semi-available by now, but it isn't. Anyone want to help me turn into a snowplow? I'm only half joking... when it snows in any significant amount, I'm messed up for a week or more (along with plenty of other PWDs) because snow gets piled at curbs and bus stops, making it hard to get anywhere.

The article is old and the video link is dead, but
he has the video on his website. Here someone else on YouTube also using a motorized chair as a plow.
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As posted to [info]gimpgirl: Topic of the month: What does GimpGirl mean to you? [Feb. 17th, 2008|11:43 pm]
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[Current Mood | calm]

As posted to [info]gimpgirl and [info]no_pity (in edited form):

GimpGirl celebrates its 10th Anniversary!


Started in February 1998, the GimpGirl Community has been a long-time resource for women with disabilities.  We are currently gearing up to re-launch our new website, which has been on a bit of a hiatus. We're also becoming active on Facebook, as well as MySpace and the virtual community of Second Life. (See our website for more details, including how to get to our Second Life Open House, happening TODAY at 4:00 PM SLT/Pacific)

Our awesome LiveJournal community has been our mainstay for a long time, and we'd like to hear your thoughts as we move into our next decade...

TOPIC OF THE MONTH: What does being a "gimp girl" (AKA woman with a disability) mean to you?

For as long as the GimpGirl Community has been around, and long before that, people with disabilities, and especially women, have thought, written and talked about their identities -- how having a disability and identifying as a woman shapes (or doesn't shape) their lives.

What does it mean to be a GimpGirl for you? GimpGirl is a phrase used by our community, and of course it's not one that everyone uses. If you prefer a different phrase, what is it, and why?

EDIT: 
Look under the cut to find out more about today's excellent GimpGirl open house event on Second Life!

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Carol Burnett, Julie Andrews, Groucho Marx [Feb. 1st, 2008|03:40 pm]
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[Current Mood | amused]

I was looking at random journals, thanks to the no-doubt soon to be controversial new Explore LJ feature, and stumbled across [info]oldhollywood.  As with many communities, not every post is great, or even good.  But folks have linked to some nifty things, like:

Carol Burnett and Julie Andrews at Carnegie Hall (1962)


and

Groucho Marx in a scene from "Monkey Business"



I could watch this kind of stuff all day... which doesn't really mean anything, because both are very different kinds of performances, with the common thread being "made well before I was born".  Which includes just a few years of television and media, you know? 
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Don't you cry no mooooore..... [Jan. 29th, 2008|11:58 pm]
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[Current Mood | amused]
[Current Music |Kansas, of course]

Please watch the following video from Japan (via [info]lilituc):



You're welcome.
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Wi-Fi in the dark [Jan. 29th, 2008|04:27 pm]
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Wi-Fi in the dark
Originally uploaded by superaleja.
Apparently I've become one of those people who seeks approval by submitting photos to groups on Flickr.

Well, only one group (so far, the Diabolic Lovers of Low Res and Booze). And only my "low-res" (camerphone) photos. My "real" photos, from the real camera, are not yet fit for judgment, even from a fairly easygoing group like the DBOLRLers (who only do low-res anyway).

They liked this photo I took on the bus, at night from San Jose to Santa Cruz, but they voted out my Big M at the Santa Cruz Museum of Art and History.  Who knows how my next submission will fare...
 
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The Library of Congress put over 3100 pictures on Flickr [Jan. 17th, 2008|01:00 pm]
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[Current Mood | curious]

The Library of Congress put over 3100 pictures on Flickr:

Library of Congress staff often make digital versions of our popular image collections available online as quickly as possible by relying primarily on the identifying information that came with the original photos. That text can be incomplete and is even inaccurate at times. We welcome your contribution of names, descriptions, locations, tags, and also your general reactions.

It's divided into two different sets:

1930s-40s in Color:

These vivid color photos from the Great Depression and World War II capture an era generally seen only in black-and-white. Photographers working for the United States Farm Security Administration (FSA) and later the Office of War Information (OWI) created the images between 1939 and 1944.

News events in the 1910s:

Welcome to the daily news scene from almost a hundred years ago, as photographed by the Bain News Service in about 1910-1912. We invite your tags and comments! Also, lots more identification information. (Most of these old photos came to the Library of Congress with very little description.)

This selected set of 1,500 photographs is from a large collection of almost 40,000 glass negatives. The entire collection spans 1900-1920 and richly documents sports events, theater, celebrities, crime, strikes, disasters, and political activities, with a special emphasis on life in New York City.
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Facebook says... [Jan. 5th, 2008|01:24 pm]
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[Current Mood | indifferent]

You have a How are you disabled invitation.

__________________ sent an invitation using How are you disabled?:
______________ wants to share the "How are you disabled?" quiz with you. How disabled are you?



Um... no.

I'm for the disability experience being a part of social networking, but that just rubs me the wrong way.

Should it?
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Ready to Flock [Dec. 22nd, 2007|02:54 pm]
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[Current Mood | curious]

So [info]gomer43, my lovely adopter-of-all-things-geeky friend.. has convinced me to try using Flock as my browser.  Flock integrates all the social networking sites and feeds that everyone is hip to at the moment -- Flickr, Facebook, Twitter, YouTube, del.icio.us, etc. And even this here LiveJournal, to which I am posting through the Flock interface. It's not fully integrated, but not that bad either...

Since I actually have accounts on many of the sites and services it works with, good internets sheep that I am, and at least 100 sites I read via RSS, I figured I might as well give it a try.  It feels a little like overload at the moment, but the truth is that I usually have a ridiculous number of tabs open in Firefox, plus an extra application or 2, to keep up with those things anyway.  Everything in one place can't be that bad an idea, at least in principle.

Anyone else managing their information overload with Flock, or another all-encompassing method?


Blogged with Flock

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Peace of Heart Choir - Winter 2007 Celebration Fundraising Concert (12/16/07) [Dec. 3rd, 2007|02:48 pm]
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[Current Mood | busy]

Want to come hear me sing?  Great group, great cause, and.... me!!    Check us out, and feel free to spread the word even if you can't attend.  Donations/volunteers always welcome!




POHC Winter logo
Sunday 
December 16, 2007
2:30 – 4:30 PM

Hunter College, North Building,
Room 424
Entrance on East 69th St., near Lexington Ave.          
New York City

The Peace of Heart Choir formed in response to the tragedies of 9/11 and performs multiple free concerts for NYC non-profits, shelters, service providers, hospitals, and events, as part of our mission of providing healing, diversity, community building and mutual understanding through music.

 

 

You are cordially invited to our Winter 2007 Celebration Fundraising Concert

ROCKIN' IN THE NEW!

Proceeds enable us to continue giving multiple free performances
for non-profits, shelters, hospitals, service providers and cultural events.

Performing our Winter 2007 a cappella repertoire from the following traditions:


*Holiday Songs from Latin American, Caribbean
& African Traditions
*
*Hebrew & Ladino*
*American Pop & Soul*
*Original Compositions*

And featuring:
The POHC Bake Sale and POHC Souvenir Merchandise!

Tickets:
$18 in Advance; ($19 online)
$20 at the Door

General seating; wheelchair access

For advance sale tickets: Click here
email: peaceofheartchoir@yahoo.com;
or call: 212-252-3191

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Next at the disTHIS! Film Series -- Wednesday December 5th! [Dec. 2nd, 2007|01:37 am]
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Next at the disTHIS! Film Series -- Wednesday December 5th!
The Keys To The House (Le Chiavi di Casa)

Favoring subtlety over cheap sentimentality, Italian director Gianni Amelio tackles difficult material with a sublime touch, and offers a powerful cinematic treatise on mental illness, physical disability and child abandonment in the award-winning, THE KEYS TO THE HOUSE.

Gianni (Kim Rossi Stuart) plays a father who abandoned his mentally and physically disabled son, Paolo (Andrea Rossi), at birth. Paolo’s mother died during childbirth, so an aunt and uncle raised him. Fifteen years later, a guilt-stricken Gianni gets back in touch with the son he’s never met, offering to accompany him on a medical tip to specialist clinic for disabled children in Berlin. Paolo cautiously agrees, but the reunion is anything but easy. At the clinic, Gianni meets the mother of another disabled child and the interaction between the parents and children provides a thought provoking, thoroughly unsentimental dissection of the effects of disability on every member of the family.

KEYS TO THE HOUSE triumphs in many ways, not the least of which by giving rarely afforded screen time to two real disabled actors. Andrea Rossi is the disabled actor who plays Paolo. The other child also has c.p. and is played by the protagonist of the book on which the film is based, Born Twice by Giuseppe Pontiggia.

Throughout the film, director Amelio handles potentially touchy subject matter with rare dignity and respect, emotionally honest but never condescending, and ultimately offers a cogent statement that lingers long after the final credits roll.
Kenneth Turan of the Los Angeles Times wrote:
"Takes a story that could be turned into the most florid kind of tear-jerker and ... tells it with an exactness and restraint that makes it powerfully effective."

Tom Dawson of the BBC reported:
"Intelligently steers clear of lachrymose speeches, swelling orchestral music, and cheap redemption."

V.A. Musetto of the NY Post concluded:
"Deals with the sensitive subject in a mature manner, refusing to descend into Hollywood-style schmaltz."

Awards & Recognitions
-- Best Foreign Film, Turia Awards (2006)
-- Best Director, Italian Nat’l Syndicate of Film Journalists (2005)
-- Best Film in 2 categories, Venice Film Awards (2004)
Keys To The House (Le Chiavi di Casa)
Italy, 2004

Running Time: 1:11
Language: Native Italian with English Subtitles
Director: Gianni Amelio
When: Wednesday, December 5th
Where: DCTV, 3rd Floor Screening Room. 87 Lafayette Street (By Subway: 6, N, R, Q, W, J, M, Z to Canal Street; go two blocks south) between Walker & White.
Time: 6:30 to 10:00 pm. Screening starts @ 7pm
Suggested Donation: $5
disTHIS! movies, talkback sessions and related events are open to the public. $5 suggested donation. This film is presented in native Italian with English subtitles. ASL interpretation available upon request. Space is wheelchair accessible. Snacks are provided and there is a cash bar for drinks, but space is limited to the first 65 people! Recent articles in the Tribeca Trib, New York Nonprofit Press and the NY Times -- and YOUR support -- have filled screenings to capacity. DON’T MISS OUT! Call 212.251.4092 to reserve YOUR seat or email: disthis@dnnyc.net

The disTHIS! Film Series, a project of the Disabilities Network of NYC in association with DCTV, is a monthly showcase of festival quality independent and international short, documentary and feature films with disability themes audiences are unlikely to see elsewhere. disTHIS! movies are always provocative; never quite what you’d expect. No handkerchief necessary, no heroism required. This is disability through a whole new lens. disTHIS! is made possible the generous support of The Christopher & Dana Reeve Foundation, members of the Disabilites Network of NYC and our audiences.
For more information and to sign up for regular email updates, please go to:
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Song of the Day: [Nov. 30th, 2007|01:07 pm]
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[Current Mood | amused]

Re: Your Brains, by Jonathan Coulton

Heya Tom, it’s Bob from the office down the hall
Good to see you buddy, how’ve you been?
Thing have been OK for me except that I’m a zombie now
I really wish you’d let us in
I think I speak for all of us when I say I understand
Why you folks might hesitate to submit to our demand
But here’s an FYI: you’re all gonna die screaming

All we want to do is eat your brains
We’re not unreasonable, I mean, no one’s gonna eat your eyes
All we want to do is eat your brains
We’re at an impasse here, maybe we should compromise:
If you open up the doors
We’ll all come inside and eat your brains


Listen and read more: here, and all about the new French version here.
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[cross-posted] EARN Recruiting Jobseekers with Disabilities (U.S.) [Nov. 30th, 2007|11:35 am]
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EARN Recruiting Jobseekers with Disabilities
for
Federal Government Careers with Equal Employment Opportunity Commission


  
EARN, a nationwide free service of U.S. Department of Labor’s Office of Disability Employment Policy, is here to connect employers with workforce talent and disability employment resources.    

Jobs Available In:

       




To view full job descriptions and search other jobs posted: jobsource.earnworks.com 



EARN Ph:    1-866-327-6669 (v/tty)
Email:    earn@earnworks.com
Website:    www.earnworks.com
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Travel and people with disabilities (cross-posted) [Nov. 20th, 2007|03:23 pm]
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[Current Mood | curious]

It's a topic I often wonder about.  And I know other people are thinking about it as well, given the number of sites, blogs, and other activity that has cropped up online around accessible travel.

Specifically (as a woman in fairly decent health who uses a motorized wheelchair and lives in the U.S.), my interest in travel was rekindled recently when I came across the website of a group called Wilderness Inquiry.  Paragraphs like this one caught my eye:

Our trips are integrated, meaning that each group typically includes people who have a disability and those who do not. What brings them together is their interest in doing a wilderness adventure. We do whatever it takes to make our trips accessible, but disability is not the overt focus. We just want to get out there and enjoy the wilderness together.

Actually, if their trips really work that way, it kind of blows my mind.  And they even have a financial aid program.  So now I am definitely interested in exploring this as a possibility.

I have traveled a bit in the last few years, within the country for less adventurous reasons, and internationally (to the U.K.) on an exchange sponsored by a disability-oriented organization called Mobility International USA.  But I don't think I've found a travel situation that seemed just the right mix of adventure and inclusion (and affordability) yet, and I'd like to try.

So I wonder about other people's travel experiences... with either of the groups mentioned, with other groups, or independently.  Within your country, or internationally.  Or if you haven't traveled, what you'd like to be able to experience...

I know I'm not the only one with an itch to travel.
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The Harrow Anthology: Midnight Lullabies [Nov. 10th, 2007|11:05 am]
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[Current Mood | pleased]

My friend Jason ([info]complicittheory) is an editor of this anthology published by The Harrow, a literary magazine devoted to publishing original and complete works of fantasy and horror.  It is now available on Amazon, and all proceeds go to Doctors without Borders.  Check it out!



picture-5.jpg


Midnight Lullabies features 15 poems and 14 stories revolving around the theme of childhood nightmares that continue to haunt into adulthood. Children's book author Tim Wynne-Jones wrote the introduction for us. Like our previous anthology, Fear of the Unknown, (published by Echelon Press), this anthology is illustrated, this time with classic — and creepy! — children's book illustrations kindly donated by The Osborne Collection of Early Children's Books.



Amazon.com: Midnight Lullabies; Kfir Luzzatto, Dru Pagliassotti, Tyra Twomey, Jason Nolan and Yuka Kajihara editors.



List Price:$15.99
Paperback: 246 pages

Publisher: The Harrow Press (October 29, 2007)
Language: English
ISBN-10: 1419679783
ISBN-13: 978-1419679780
Product Dimensions:
8 x 5.2 x 0.6 inches
Shipping Weight: 12.2 ounces (View shipping rates and policies)
Amazon.com Sales Rank: #95,720 in Books (See Bestsellers in Books)



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LJ Mobile, you say... [Nov. 8th, 2007|01:44 am]
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So here's my test of the new LJ mobile client for the Palm platform. So far, way better than trying to navigate the LJ update page on the mobile browser. And better than text LJ. But I'm sure I'll find something to complain about soon.

Hey, private messaging and editable comments are here, too. About time.
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Remember to fall back... [Nov. 3rd, 2007|10:34 pm]
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[Current Mood | cold]

It's been a little confusing this year...

At 2 a.m. on November 4, 2007, groggy Americans will turn their clocks back one hour, marking the end of Daylight Saving Time (DST).

The federal law that established "daylight time" in the United States does not require any area to observe daylight saving time. But if a state chooses to observe DST, it must follow the starting and ending dates set by the law. From 1986 to 2006 this was the first Sunday in April to the last Sunday in October, but starting in 2007, it is observed from the second Sunday in March to the first Sunday in November, adding about a month to daylight saving time. (See: New Federal Law.)


Source: http://www.infoplease.com/spot/daylight1.html


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Report: Many U.S. Parents Outsourcing Child Care Overseas [Nov. 1st, 2007|02:16 pm]
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[Current Mood | amused]

Report: Many U.S. Parents Outsourcing Child Care Overseas


Oh, you crazy Onion.
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Next @ disTHIS! Dance Inferno - Wednesday, Nov 7th [Nov. 1st, 2007|01:21 am]
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Image: Phoenix DanceImage: Outside InImage: Bruce


When:

Wednesday, November 7
Time:
6:30 to 9pm.
Screening starts promptly at 7pm.
Where:
DCTV @ The Firehouse
3rd Floor Screening Room
87 Lafayette St (between Walker & White)
Closest subway stops: N/Q/R/W, J/M/Z, or 6 to Canal Street. DCTV is located two blocks South of Canal Street in NYC.
VIEW MAP
Cost:
$5 Suggested Donation

Join disTHIS! Wednesday, November 7th as we showcase a series of acclaimed short films that remind us "dis can dance." Culturally speaking, disability is thought to be many things ... tragic to some, heroic by others, inspirational by almost every reporter to ever take up a pen, but do the words celebratory, joyous, funky, sexy or exciting come to mind? In short, has "Gimp Got Groove?" You bet!

Full info:  http://disthis.org/November2007.htm
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[cross-posted] Music Within - In Theaters October 26 (U.S.) [Oct. 24th, 2007|10:01 pm]
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Music Within traces the true story of Richard Pimentel, a crusader for human rights who was instrumental in getting the Americans with Disabilities Act passed into law. When he didn’t make a college debate team, Richard (played by Ron Livingston) headed to Vietnam for a tour of duty. There, a bomb blast caused him to lose his hearing. Learning to read lips, Richard returned to college and met and became close friends with Art Honneyman (played by Michael Sheen), an intelligent -- and funny -- man with cerebral palsy. After witnessing how Art was treated in public, and after seeing how difficult it was for his fellow Vietnam Vets to get help with their problems, Pimentel decided to dedicate his life to raising awareness about the needs of people with disabilities.

Official Site (uses Flash, not fully accessible):
http://www.musicwithinmovie.com/

The official site says: Call 800-445-4641 or email jpapier@mgm.com for more information on how to buy block tickets or buy out a screening for your organization, family, and friends.
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The Good, the Bad and the Ugly [Oct. 13th, 2007|05:57 pm]
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[Current Mood | amused]

Listen:




For reference:

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Lookwell [Sep. 27th, 2007|11:42 am]
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[Current Mood | amused]



I'm behind the curve, so I've just found out about Lookwell, a kooky television pilot written and produced by Conan O'Brien and Robert Smigel in the early 90s.  The internet likes it, but the internet always likes Adam West.  I'd watch it, too.
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QotD [Sep. 3rd, 2007|09:55 pm]
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[Current Mood | amused]

"Also, there's not a tactful way to translate lyrics like 'nature's body lotion'"

No, I don't think many languages have a simple way to convey the smoothness of one Mr. Barry White.
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It's Telethon time... [Sep. 3rd, 2007|01:14 pm]
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[Current Mood | thoughtful]

Kay at The Gimp Parade says:

Sigh. It's that time of year again. Miss Crip Chick and Kara Sheridan are leading the online protest against this tiresome Weekend of Celebrating Pity through the Jerry Lewis MDA telethon by asking bloggers to write about charity, pity, the medical model of disability, the tyranny of the belief that we all need a cure, and the asshattery of Jerry Lewis. That's for tomorrow, Monday, the United States' Labor Day.


Miss Crip Chick explains:

Jerry Lewis is the host of the Muscular Dystrophy Association’s Annual Telethon, a telethon that occurs every Labor Day to raise funds for cures by using disabled people as posterchildren. Disabled people protest the telethon because of its outdated, negative portrayal of disabilities. These images that the telethon promotes sticks in people’s minds and continually serve as a barrier for disabled people. Disability is not the problem, but rather the attitudes and barriers that society places on us.

What can we do? Protest. Write a Letter to the Editor. Tell people about the charity, medical, and social model of disability. Blog. Kara and I, along with the Disability Activist Collective (website coming soon) are organizing a campaign against the telethon and the charity model of disability. We need bloggers (not only disability bloggers but all! feminist, queer, woc, environmentalist, activists, great time to build alliances) who will agree to write about this! The campaign will work much like a blog carnival and will be heavily publicized in listservs and other sources of media.


And so is born:

Protest Pity

Welcome to the first annual Anti-Telethon Blogswarm (online gathering of bloggers to bring attention to an important issue). By stopping by, you’ve joined our protest against pity. We are excited to share with you the thoughts, feelings, and words of power expressed in the links below. This unique way to voice opposition will allow our chants to be heard across the world and we invite you to join us in solidarity! If you didn?t have time to write, didn’t know what to say, or weren’t sure how you felt before today, there are still opportunities to act. Post a comment, forward our link, write a newspaper, tell your friends, or educate someone in the community about why your life isn’t defined by pity. Thank-you so much for joining us and LEAD ON!


I am someone who agrees with this sentiment 1000%.  However, the opinions linked to and shared on that site are worth viewing by anyone who is against pity, regardless of how you feel about the telethon.  Many thanks to everyone involved in putting it all together for all the world to see and discuss.

 

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Normal = Canadian [Aug. 28th, 2007|02:18 pm]
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[Current Mood | amused]

Recalling a voice post I made some time ago:

[info]complicittheory: didn't sound american, you didn't
[info]aleja: instead?
[info]complicittheory: just normal
[info]aleja: ha
[info]complicittheory: i.e. canadian

Good to know, eh?
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I can has yoga [Aug. 26th, 2007|12:30 pm]
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[Current Mood | sleepy]

In lieu of... anything, some recent-ish photos of me doing yoga things, taken from RehabYoga slideshows.

Caption says: Sitting posture, in preparation to standing (There are ropes behind my upper and lower back which are being pulled forward)
Caption: Elongation of hip and knee flexors ALTERNATE LEGS in preparation to standing

Supported standing in half Uttanasana
 
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[cross-posted] Founder of Disaboom on NYC radio, 8/26/07 [Aug. 25th, 2007|03:59 pm]
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Does anyone have experience with or thoughts on this social networking community for people with disabilities called Disaboom?


Disaboom on CD101.9 Sunday

Disaboom CEO J.W. Roth to Be Featured Guest on New York's CD101.9's Dialogue With Host Mark Farrell Sunday, August 26th

Aug 24, 2007 06:30 ET

DENVER, CO--(Marketwire - August 24, 2007) - Disaboom, Inc. (OTCBB: DSBO), which is developing the first online community for people living with or directly affected by disabilities or functional limitations, today announced that CEO J.W. Roth will be a featured guest on New York City's CD101.9 Dialogue radio talk show with host Mark Farrell on Sunday, August 26, 2007 at 6:00am ET. An audio archive of the segment will be available at: http://aboutus.disaboom.com/Press-Room/Media-Room.aspx.

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Kool-Aid pickles, yum. [Aug. 21st, 2007|12:33 am]
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[Current Mood | curious]
[Current Music |Silence is good lately]

In exchange for something I did, a friend (from the South) said:

"I owe you something southern, like deep fried twinkies or kool aid pickles."

Now, I've seen deep fried Twinkies, on TV and such.  Kool-Aid pickles... those are harder to wrap my brain around.  I'm not a fussy eater (and I like pickles!), but can't imagine eating one and enjoying it.  Nope.  And yet, the fancypants NY Times caught on and wrote all about them a few months ago.

Maybe I just need to expand my palate.  In the meantime, what are some other Southern things I could be owed?  I'm open to both edible and non-food suggestions.


picture of a kool aid pickle
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"Dance Me To My Song" @ disTHIS! (Wed. Sept. 5th) [Aug. 13th, 2007|02:49 pm]
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Dance Me To My Song



Australia, 1998
Running Time:
1:45
Rating:
Nudity, sex, mature themes
Language: English
Director: Rolf de Heer
Suggested Donation: $5

When: Wednesday, September 5
Time: 6:30 to 10pm.
Screening starts promptly at 7pm.
Where:
DCTV @ The Firehouse
3rd Floor Screening Room
87 Lafayette St (between Walker & White)
Closest subway stops: N/Q/R/W, J/M/Z, or 6 to Canal Street. DCTV is located two blocks South of Canal Street in NYC.
VIEW MAP

Cost:
$5 Suggested Donation

Read more... )

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On Ruben Navarro [Aug. 10th, 2007|10:15 pm]
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[Current Mood | nauseated]

Via The Gimp Parade:

If you read just one thing this week about disability in America, read this.

I briefly mentioned Navarro's case