Arts
AS SEEN IN VT: Over The Hills - Songwriter Lucy Kaplansky Comes To Mad River
Submitted by Rob Williams on Wed, 10/15/2008 - 7:16am.
“A truly gifted performer, full of enchanting songs,” gushes The New Yorker.
“The troubadour of modern city folk,” exclaims The Boston Globe.
“As warm and tasty as cinnamon tea, as hopeful as daybreak,” proclaims Rolling Stone.
MUSIC FOLK-US: Frigg-ing Awesome! Nordic “Power String” Music Arrives In Vermont
Submitted by Rob Williams on Sun, 10/12/2008 - 7:38pm.
What do you name a seven-piece power string band with enough acoustic groove to set the fjords on fire?
How ‘bout, well…
“Frigg?”
Stay with me here.
Yes, this band’s name is Frigg.
I know.
A bit strange, perhaps, until you consider their home turf: Scandinavia.
Frigg, as any self-respecting Scandinavian will gently remind you, is the Norse goddess of love and fertility.
BOOK REVIEW: Eugene Jarecki - The American Way Of War
Submitted by Rob Williams on Tue, 10/07/2008 - 7:58pm.
BOOK REVIEW: Building Community Through Cooperation - Designing as if People Mattered
Submitted by Rob Williams on Mon, 08/25/2008 - 1:09pm.
Read and view this book at Amazon.com.
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Vermont Vox Pop: Shout It Out! An Interview with Filmmaker Bess O'Brien
Submitted by Rob Williams on Tue, 07/08/2008 - 2:41pm.
Bess O’Brien is a filmmaker who lives in Vermont’s Northeast Kingdom. Her newest film, Shout it Out, is in many ways a collaboration with its cast, a group of teenagers whose thoughts about being young in Vermont helped form the script. The movie will be touring the state this summer. Vermont Commons editor Rob Williams conducted this interview.
VC: Describe the genesis of the Shout it Out, “The Voices Project” movie. Where did the idea come from?
COMMON SENSE: Summer Fun in Vermont
Submitted by Common Sense on Sat, 06/21/2008 - 8:34am.
by Jane Dwinell and Dana Dwinell-Yardley
Worried about high gas prices affecting everything from food to fun? Wondering what to do about your summer vacation? Try having one close to home. There are so many things to do in Vermont — so many reasons people from everywhere else to want to visit here. It’s your turn to discover Vermont.
RELOCALIZING VERMONT: A book too good to wait for
Submitted by Carl Etnier on Thu, 06/05/2008 - 9:25pm.
Rob Hopkins' The Transition Handbook is a new, tremendously useful, and inspiring book on how to move, as the subtitle says, "From oil dependency to local resilience."
Richard Heinberg has spent a lot of time visiting Transition Towns in the UK, and he describes the movement as looking "more like a party than a protest march."
And it is a party, not a protest. The Transition Town philosophy is about making change where you are, with the people around you, not pressuring someone else to make the change for you.

Here's one small way this book has helped me:
I give a lot of peak oil slide shows, and I was intrigued by his suggestion for a "do-it-yourself" peak oil slideshow. You create the slideshow by printing up each slide on a piece of 8.5x11 paper, with circles and arrows (or, in any case, a paragraph) explaining the slide on the back of each one, and then hand the cards out to the audience. Each person's job is to meet every other person in the room and explain the slide he or she has. By the time everyone has met everyone else, they have had quite an introduction to peak oil. It really gets people invested in the ideas and helps them get to know each other!
I haven't tried the full DIY slideshow yet, but the idea has inspired me to cut off the final part of my standard slideshow and replace it with a visioning exercise about the future of Vermont. I then ask the audience to break up into small groups and share their visions. The room comes to life when they do it!
Though the book came out in March or so in the UK, it's not scheduled to be distributed in the US until September.* Normally, I try to buy books at local bookstores. This one is too good to wait that long for. You can order it online, with quick and surprisingly inexpensive shipping from the UK.
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THE DAILY MAUL 4.26.08 - Ethan Allen Lives in Montpelier!
Submitted by Rob Williams on Sat, 04/26/2008 - 8:21am.
Ethan Allen lives!
Be sure to catch Jim Hogue's stirring live performance celebrating Vermont's mythical founding father.
(M)ORAL ARGUMENT: Secession is the Answer - from Harwood Union High School
Submitted by Rob Williams on Thu, 10/11/2007 - 9:08pm.
Secession is the Answer
Sent by Travis Hannon
Harwood Union High School;
Mad River Valley, Vermont
In 1776 a document was written and signed. This document was a symbol of freedom and liberty, at least for the rich white, land owners. The document was called the United States Declaration of Independence. A year later, in 1777, a Constitution was created. I'm not talking about the United States Constitution, but the Vermont Constitution. It was formed with forward thinking liberal ideas, the same liberal ideas that we need to have today. However, the United States government has lost sight of those ideas, and there is not much hope for them changing.
Garrison Keillor - Vermont should "pull out and follow its own path."
Submitted by Rob Williams on Fri, 12/08/2006 - 10:38am.
Rob's Note - I've never much cared for Garrison Keillor's stuff, until I saw last summer's film by Robert Altman (may he rest in peace) about the "Prairy Home Companion."
And now, the man from Minnesota has won my heart. Read on..
40 states is plenty
Who needs Wyoming, Utah, Texas or Vermont? Senate seats should go to states that matter.
By Garrison Keillor
Nov. 15, 2006 | I'm sitting under a banyan tree in Honolulu with a big glass of pomegranate juice, and the sea is glittering and surfers are skimming in on low waves, and the election is over, so let's all relax and quit irritating each other. OK? Nancy Pelosi, the she-wolf from Sodom, is about to become the madam of the House, so you Republicans just get over it. Cash in your blue chips and invest in gold ingots and maybe real estate in Costa Rica. The black helicopters have landed. Live with it.
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