The Roots Runaround

Apparently, while the venerable ?uestlove practices deadpan rim shots for Jimmy Fallon’s new late night show, he and the rest of the Roots surround themselves with a dense web of management bureaucrats to prevent the scheduling of interviews with cute student-run publications. I don’t know how many uninformed people with telephones they need. I’ve never been transferred so many times in my life. I couldn’t even finish sentences. ROOTS, CONCERT, EUGENE, STUDENT-RUN, STUDENT, RUN! I just may have talked Jimmy Fallon.

Eventually, someone gave me an email and of course it didn’t work. Got another one and it did. They’ll see this when they’re vetting us, but oh well. I bet it’s not this hard to talk to Max Weinberg.

Anyway, The Roots 4/11/2009 McDonald Theatre


In other news: bad poetry

Changing the subject.
I found a scrawled note sitting on top of a stack of OVs in the j-school:

“You said love is a temple, love the higher law. you asked me to enter then you made me crawl + I just can’t keep holding on to what you got when all you got is hurt.”

Voice secret admirer? Anonymous creative issue submission? Butt-hurt Emerald staffer?


Newsies

  • Posted by Cori
  • on March 6, 2009
  • Filed in: Campus

Let’s just all get along, seriously. Poor Grace getting the flack for whatever those crazy newsies are trying to get out of this “strike.”

Were all brothers and sisters here in the J-school and we all hear about things in those labs that we spend our days and hard nights in.

So read our magezine and be our friends, not enemies because here at the OV we just want to have fun!

 

And produce quality hard-hitting journalism.


Cake is the only language I speak

This is an apology:
From me (Grace), not from any organization.
To Hannah Hoffman and Lauren Fox, not to any organization.
DSC03082
DSC03083

The cakes are yours as soon as I can get them to you, whether you forgive me or not.

On a more positive note, I’m glad to hear that the OV blog is finally getting some traffic.


The Emerald Strikes Back

  • Posted by Scot
  • on March 4, 2009
  • Filed in: Campus

As a publication, the Oregon Voice stands behind its writers in print and online. Our blog post in response to the widely publicized and intellectually taxing Oregon Daily Emerald strike has apparently been a source of controversy for both the people involved and the one that wrote it. The fact that relationships between students [Get that? we're students] are being affected by this petty, bombastic strike is disheartening and doesn’t bode well for the future of journalism. Are these upset Emerald-ers that out of touch with what really matters? Have they already bought into the bickering journalism for journalists machine? At this age?

For shame.

Scot


Want some clips? Feeling scabby?

Journalists love to tell stories. I can’t remember the last time the Daily Emerald told one that was truly engaging, though this morning’s bold, red headline sucked me in: EMERALD NEWS STAFF STRIKES. ASUO sandbox politics were getting boring, I guess, so the reporters made their own scandal. They put off the strike until this morning so they could make news about it, as in, “I’m going to give you the silent treatment starting…right… NOW.”

Of course, the buzz started long before the headline. The photographers, who are total anarchists, let the cat out of the bag yesterday, and the cat slinked away into the night. Pretty soon people were talking about it in places where people should never talk about the Daily Emerald, ie the Lorax.

This morning I sat in Roma with then intention of telling an actual story. I had my notebook and latte all set up on the table, and I strategically threw my jacket on the opposing seat to ward off conversationalists. I was quickly distracted, however, when Emerald staff reporters Hannah Hoffman and Lauren Fox sat down two tables adjacent to mine. They had their firey headline on display, and they were all smiles, apparently not as desperate to return to work as their front page diatribe suggested: “We want desperately to return to work, but we cannot do so quietly and against our journalistic values.”

“Secretly,” said Hoffman, “I’m really glad that I have to write two less articles this week.”

Secretly? My friend, you are in a crowded coffee shop, in the presence of other semi-journalists.

Fox’s eyes bulged a little. “Is it wrong that I’m happy right now?”

I am, so why shouldn’t you be?

Fox was trying to do her homework, but she was too lathered up. And I was too busy eavesdropping… Not eavesdropping, exactly, since I moved over to the table next to them and bluntly asked Fox for her full name.

“We should have picketers!” she continued. “Every good strike has picketers.”

They started to discuss the possibility of the Register Guard covering the strike, or maybe even–gasp– the New York Times. I imagined the “Daily Emerald Staff Strike” headline underneath the one about suicide bombings in Pakistan.

“You know who wants to know about this?” said Fox. “Anne Curry.” She then proceeded to call another staffer (lets call him “Robert,” because that was his name) and rant about the possibility of notifying Anne Curry about the strike.

“You should call them! And if the Today Show needs someone to talk to, I’d be totally willing!”

Eventually, Fox and Hoffman expressed mild concern about the possibility of losing their jobs. They didn’t seem too worried, though. Even Fox’s somewhat conservative sorority sisters have assured her that no one would have the nerve to work for the Daily Emerald under the leadership of Steven Smith.

She’s right that no one wants to be a scab for the Daily Emerald. In fact, we were all secretly on strike already, and the current staff was all scabbed over until this morning. The ODE kids created the story, but they have no control over how the rest of us retell it.


Cute as fuck robot

In honor of this youtube gem, I am rewriting Asimov’s three laws of robotics.

First law: hit dat toaster
Second law: make em dance
Third law: shake it


VD is for everybody, apparently

While perusing the Prelinger Archives I discovered this little gem.  I tried to find words to describe it but I really couldn’t.  You’ll just have to watch it for yourself and see what I mean (I mean, like, really?)  When you’re done check out the rest of the site, it has a lot to offer.

But really, see a doctor.
 





Twitter Feed

  • Tonight @ Stonehenge (2841 Central Boulevard): Maggie Morris and Ghosties, 8 p.m. It's free! 2009-08-11
  • Annie Staninec, Fred E. Boom Boom, Jodie Manross, Michael Dean Damron tonight @ Sam Bond's Garage 2009-08-06
  • Tonight @ DITCH PROJECT: 20 Experimental Films, 2 female curators and 1 opening band + a jolly good time! 2009-08-05
  • Getting into the twitter game! Follow us! 2009-08-05
  • More updates...


ADVERTISEMENT




ADVERTISEMENT