Showing posts with label consumers. Show all posts
Showing posts with label consumers. Show all posts

Friday, August 06, 2010

The Family is Doomed

A footnote to yesterday's post on separating blog life and private life.  I started reading White Like Me in anticipation of Tim Wise's visit to Anchorage September 13, 14, 15. In the preface he quotes Polish poet Czelslaw Milosz,
"When a writer is born into a family, the family is doomed."
 He goes on,
I hope Milosz exaggerated, but in any event, I should now warn my family members, to whom I did not provide any of this material as I was writing it, before you go any further:  what follows will not always be easy to digest.  Some of it, in fact, will be painful, and not because I am trying to hurt you, but because I am trying to tell the truth, and the truth is sometimes unpleasant.  If it is any consolation, the parts that will make you uncomfortable were as difficult for me to write as they will be for you to read.  But they were necessary to this story, my story, and the larger story of what whiteness means.
Fortunately my ego is such that I don't think there's anything I could write that would be important enough to risk damaging relationships with my family members by writing something about any of them without their approval or at least consent.


A footnote to the another recent post which mentioned that Kenny G tickets in Anchorage started at $84 ($80 discounted).  In today's Anchorage Daily News they are down to $50.  I'd like to think this reflects well on the taste of Anchorage folks, but it's possible that this price was always the Ticketmaster price and I just found other, more expensive, ticket sites.    If so, that should be a warning to be careful when booking tickets on line. 

Tuesday, July 06, 2010

"Costco Reigns as the Biggest Offender"

Two years and 5 days ago I had a post called "Fishing at Costco."  I've updated it today in response to this post at  foodchange based on a new Greenpeace Report:

And while most U.S. supermarkets could stand to improve their sustainable seafood policies, Costco reigns as the biggest offender. Everything at Costco is huge—the same is true of the store's environmental footprint. Of the 22 IUCN Red List species, Costco sells 15: Alaskan pollock, Atlantic cod, Atlantic salmon, Atlantic sea scallops, Chilean sea bass, grouper, monkfish, ocean quahog, orange roughy, red snapper, redfish, South Atlantic albacore tuna, swordfish, tropical shrimp, and yellowfin tuna. The store's fish coolers really serve as a one-stop shop for oceanic destruction. . .
The non-profit's "Oh-No-Costco" campaign asks the store to put three measures in place: One, implement an effective and publicly available sustainable seafood policy. Two, provide transparent labeling so consumers can know what they're buying and where it came from. And finally, Greenpeace wants the store to stop selling all Red List fish, beginning immediately with Chilean sea bass and orange roughy.


Here's their rating for Alaska supermarkets:

[Note:  The formatting was much slicker in the original]

Your local supermarket(s) scorecard:

a.  Rating (max 10) 
b.  Sustainable Seafood Policy (max 100)
c.  Support for Sustainability Initiatives (max 100)
d.  Labeling and Promotion of Sustainable Seafood (max 100)
e.  Number of Red List Seafoods on Sale (max 22)
f.  Seafood Sustainability Score (max 100)
Supermarket (click logo
for scorecard)
a. b. c. d. e. f.
6 70.22 64.75 52 8 63.24
6 63.12 73.78 43.5 11 58.1
4 41.37 50 34.5 12 43.47
4 41.37 50 34.5 12 43.47
3 32 35 38 17 32.25
2 0 19 20 15 18.75



Greenpeace is known to play hardball.  I've tried to find a Costco response online, but Greenpeace seems to dominate this story online at this point.  I also can't find anything on Costco's website.  I tried calling the Debarr store, but it was after hours and no one answered.  You might want to ask your local store manager and fish manager about their sustainable fish policy and that you will decide whether to buy fish at Costco again after you read their response to Greenpeace's report.

UPDATE Feb. 27, 2011:  I did contact my local store the next day and they gave me Seattle contact numbers, but no one ever responded to me.  However, I noticed this in the Alaska Dispatch today:

Costco Wholesale, a major seafood retailer, has revised its seafood sustainability policy to halt sale of several wild species that have been nearly universally identified as at great risk.
The list, released in late February, includes Atlantic cod, Atlantic halibut, Chilean sea bass, Greenland halibut, grouper (Epinephelus morio), monkfish (lophius americanus), orange roughy, redfish, shark, skates and rays, swordfish and bluefin tuna.
Costco officials said they would not resume sales of these species until their sources are certified as sustainable by the Marine Stewardship Council, which has identified itself as the world's leading certification and eco-labeling program for sustainable seafood. . .

Monday, July 05, 2010

Anchorage is Getting Cheesy

Before I forget this, I met Helen Howarth at the Wu Man concert the other night.  She's going to open a cheese shop to be called Fromagio's Artisan Cheese at the O'Malley Centre at O'Malley and Old Seward.  Not exactly in my normal path.  And for health reasons I don't generally eat cheese.  But I know that a lot of people will be interested in this new option.  She's hoping to open late August or early September. 

Wednesday, June 23, 2010

Knife Sex and Penmanship


It was the knife sex that caught my eye. Is it the penmanship that makes it look like an x or is it just my prurient brain?  (That's a rhetorical question.)  Anyway, one advantage of biking and walking is that you get to see these little novellas about modern American life posted here and there.

Saturday, March 27, 2010

What Do I Know? Linked in Craigslist Ad

This is the first time I've noticed that this blog was linked in a Craigslist ad.  What were they selling?  A Maytag washer, of course.  The Maytag post was my first 'big' post.  I got about 22 hits, a one day record at the time.  I did fix the first problem, but eventually, we replaced the 32 year old washer for a much more water and energy efficient one.  But this post still gets regular hits.

Maytag Washer and Dryer - $100 (Eau Claire)


Date: 2010-03-27, 12:54AM CDT
Reply to: sale-twxg6-1663474401@craigslist.org [Errors when replying to ads?]


It might be called the odd couple, but that show and 1/2 of this combo ran forever. The washing machine is a bid on the classic old style side. Made when things were made to last, this Maytag model A230 is one that keeps on going. I checked it out and found a few articles like this one on the Internet. Cut and paste it to your browser and read for your self. "http://whatdoino-steve.blogspot.com/2006/12/power-of-old-maytags-and-new-websites.html.

The Dryer is much newer, I don't have a date for you (around 5 years or under) I am helping a neighbor to recycle these to someone's door. The dryer is a Maytag Ultimate II and when I looked them up they lite up the sky with all the stars. (I've always wanted to say that.) If you got an interest, reply back and leave a phone # to call you back.

I appreciate your time, good luck and Thank you!

  • Location: Eau Claire
  • it's NOT ok to contact this poster with services or other commercial interests

Wednesday, February 17, 2010

Mandatory Winter Tire Bill

Rep. John Harris (R) Valdez spoke for his bill HB 322 before the House Transportation Committee. The bill would require vehicles above 60˚ North latitude (Someone said this would make it above Yakutat) and connected to the main Anchorage/Fairbanks road system to have US government designated winter tires. Such tires have a snowflake symbol on them. Below is an excerpt from Tirerack's history of such tires which are required now in Quebec.

In 1999, The U.S. Rubber Manufacturers Association (RMA) and the Rubber Association of Canada (RAC) agreed on a performance based standard to identify passenger and light truck tires that attain a traction index equal to, or greater than 110 (compared to a reference tire which is rated 100) during the specified American Society for Testing and Materials traction tests on packed snow. The new standard helps ensure that drivers can easily identify tires that provide a higher level of snow traction.

Severe Winter LogoA mountain/snowflake symbol branded on the tire's sidewall identifies tires that met the required performance in snow testing. The mountain/snowflake symbol is expected to be fully implemented on new tires by now, however there still may be a few winter/snow tires in the marketplace that meet the requirements but were produced in molds manufactured before the symbol was developed.  [more on this at the Tirerack link]

 Anchorage Johnson Tire co-owners Kelly Gaede and Michele Hogan offered a powerpoint presentation that pushed such winter tires as necessary for winter driving safety.  It was less about snow than about cold, which changes the composition of the rubber and their ability to grip the road.



(Photo:  Kelly Gaede at hearing]
Rep. Tammie Wilson (R) Fairbanks aggressively challenged Gaede on different points.  How were poorer families who could barely afford a car going to be able to buy a new set of winter tires?  What about soldiers stationed in Alaska?  Would they be required to change tires when they crossed the border in the winter?  How did their research know that tires were the cause of winter crashes?   Gaede explained that in 1972 the concept of all weather tires began to take over the winter tire business.  However, all weather tires, he continued, really have no traction in the cold. 
This slide was about Finland I believe.

Department of Transportation employees also testified.  By the end of the hearing there were suggestions to push back the starting date until 2014 and several other changes I can't recall. It was also conceded that people could drive on winter tires all year, but not with studs. 


The committee wanted to hear from experts other than the state's largest tire dealer.  As part of the benefit to the state, they said that Johnson Tire would grow from about 125 employees to 800.  Chair Peggy Wilson noted that they needed to hear about the tires from someone who didn't stand to profit from the passage of such a bill.  It was also noted that if the bill passed, Alaska would be the first state in the US to have such a bill.  However, it was pointed out that Quebec has passed a law requiring winter tires.


Here's a copy of the bill.  I can't see it all on my monitor.  If you have the same problem, you can get the bill here.


00                             HOUSE BILL NO. 322                                                                          
01 "An Act relating to winter tires; and providing for an effective date."                                                 
02 BE IT ENACTED BY THE LEGISLATURE OF THE STATE OF ALASKA:                                                                
03    * Section 1. AS 28.35 is amended by adding a new section to read:                                                  
04            Sec. 28.35.158. Winter tires required. (a) A person may not operate a motor                                
05       vehicle registered in this state on a highway from December 15 to March 15 unless                                 
06       that vehicle is equipped with tires designed for winter driving.                                                  
07            (b)  In this section, "tires designed for winter driving" means tires                                        
08                 (1)  that bear the mountain snowflake symbol as certified by the Rubber                                 
09       Manufacturers Association or a comparable symbol as approved by the department;                                   
10                 (2)  that are approved by the department for winter driving; or                                         
11                 (3)  equipped with studs.                                                                               
12    * Sec. 2. The uncodified law of the State of Alaska is amended by adding a new section to                          
13 read:                                                                                                                   
14       PUBLIC EDUCATION CAMPAIGN. The Department of Transportation and Public                                            
15 Facilities shall undertake a public education campaign to notify the public about the                                   
01 requirements of AS 28.35.158, added by sec. 1 of this Act, before the effective date of that                            
02 section to ensure that the public is aware and has notice of the requirements of that section                           
03 before the requirements become effective.                                                                               
04    * Sec. 3. Section 1 of this Act takes effect December 15, 2011.                                                    
05    * Sec. 4. Except as provided in sec. 3 of this Act, this Act takes effect immediately under                        
06 AS 01.10.070(c).                                                                                                        

Saturday, February 13, 2010

Senate Finance Subcommitte Looks at Insurance, Energy, Industrial Development, Fish, and Travel

Working in the Capitol building is like being a pin ball.  You go in one direction (Thursday I went to the State Affairs Committee at 8am) and then you find yourself colliding with other balls and going off in a lot of different, unexpected directions.

I met someone who suggested I head to the Senate Finance Commerce subcommittee where I heard people present their budget proposals for the
Each department had documents, some with more, some with less, data.  They all say they do good things.  And they may well do such things.  Or some might others might not.  The Division of Insurance director Linda Hall sounded sincerely interested in helping Alaskan consumers avoid being caught in insurance fraud.  They were the only group to keep their handout to one piece of two-sided paper.  But I really dislike when agencies use shortened numbers without telling people how many zeroes to add.  I know their budget is more than $6,816.5.  Do I add two zeroes?  Three?  Insiders know this, but how should the public know?  They say the collected $58 million in premium taxes, penalties, and fees.  They got $214,000 in additional payments to Alaskans.  That doesn't sound like much when short hospital event can cost $40,000 or more.
Their public service pledge is "to consistently exceed the expectations of those we serve."  That's cool.  I wonder if they do.  Good goal though.

The others were less consumer protection or regulation sorts of agencies.  At least the Seafood Marketing Institute spells out its budget request total = $18.7 million, of which $3.7 comes from the State of Alaska, $9.1 million from 'voluntary industry assessments' and $5 million from the federal government.  They gave an example of a Brussels Trade Show that cost about $300,000 and netted in $36,000,000 in on site sales and '$394,000,000 more projected for the year.'  And their website has some recipes:


 But this is like buying a home or a car after looking at the brochures.  On the other hand, I don't know what the committee members know already, and who all else has scrutinized the budget. 

Their website is really a marketing site for Alaskan Seafood, so it really wouldn't make sense for them to post the handouts they gave the committee there, but I couldn't figure out how to get the stuff from the committee site either.  You can get their annual report on line.  Sen. Menard praised the Seafood Marketing Institute for their great ads in the Alaska Airline magazine.

 I just don't know enough about this process.  The Alaska Tourism Industry Association handed out a hard copy of a power point presentation.  It was pretty simplistic.  It did list the 2009-2010 44 Marketing Committee Volunteers, but did NOT list the 24 members of the Board of Directors

[Photo is, I believe, Patti Mckay of ATIA reporting to Sens. Menard and Thomas. Double click photos to enlarge.]

The Republican Party is the one that argues most strenuously for the free market and against government intervention.  Except for the Division of Insurance, the agencies at the meeting seem to be government agencies helping out businesses.  As a Democrat, I tend to think that government has a role in helping to stimulate the economy, but I certainly would have asked more rigorous questions than the two Republicans on the panel, Sen. Thomas and Sen. Menard, to be sure that the money was going to give a significant return.  There just wasn't enough information in any of the handouts for me to be able to judge.  And there wasn't much time to ask many probing questions either. 


Chip Thoma from Responsible Cruising in Alaska was there and gave me a copy of a list of questions for the committee to ask ATIA.  Thoma wants to know why the state's share of ATIA is now 75% when it used to be 50%. [These are not my figures.]  He also wants to see backup for the information ATIA offers and questions the lobbying efforts of ATIA in conjunction with the Alaska Cruise Association, which, he says:
  • oppose the one-halibut limit on guided sport fishing, a major cruise ship excursion that pays large monetary commissions to the cruise lines.
  • oppose the state cruise passenger tax, which pays for cruise-related capital projects in 12 ports throughout the state
  • criticize the legislature for 'hoarding' cruise tax moneys
  • support cruise lines and the ACA filing a federal lawsuit against the state cruise passenger tax
I don't know enough about any of these agencies to know if they are using the money responsibly and effectively, but I do know that the handouts they gave the committee certainly didn't give enough information either.  

And, to continue the pinball analogy, when I went into the hall, I bumped into a former student and when I went to look for him a little later, he was in a nearby room pitching for the Alaska Humanities Forum.  This constant sudden change in trajectory due to random meetings is probably okay for a blogger, but I wonder how legislators and staffers get anything real thinking done. 

Thursday, January 28, 2010

Alaska State Retirement Data Security Breach

Bear with me folks as I figure out how I do this.  I've got a big backlog of things to write about, but slow and deliberate does not reflect the pace in the Capitol Building.  Should I do one long rambling post with lots of stuff?  Or should I do shorter posts which focus on just one topic.  The first, again, reflects how things feel in the Capitol.

In any case, here's something  that came up while I was talking to folks today.  (double click to enlarge)
This memo went out to all State workers.  The Teachers Retirement System and the Personnel Retirement System data bases have been compromised.  Since I'm in the TRS system there's a personal connection for me.  Here's the link to the Price Waterhouse fact sheet.  (It's a pdf file)  If you are in the affected group you should do go to the file right away.  I guess the thing to do is call the three credit reporting agencies.  The information on who to call and what to do are below.  I better go do this myself.  Here are some excerpts from the fact sheet (it's five pages):

PRICE WATERHOUSE COOPERS
SECURITY BREACH FACT SHEET

Who is affected by the breach?
Participants in the Public Employees’ Retirement System and the Teachers’ Retirement System, who were active or inactive employees, including retirees, in 2003 and 2004. If you are affected by this breach, you will be mailed a notice shortly with more detailed information about the breach, and instructions on how to sign up for free services pursuant to the settlement reached with PwC.
What information was lost?
The lost information contains names, social security numbers and dates of birth.
What should I do now?
You will receive a notice in the next few weeks that describes the protections PwC has agreed to provide to affected Alaskans. This will include free credit monitoring and identity theft protection, or placing a security freeze on your credit report. Details about what these protections entail and how you can sign up for them will be explained in the notice. The notice will also explain how you can make a claim for any damages you may incur if you become an identity theft victim.
In the meantime, there are other steps you can take to protect yourself against identity theft:
1.    You can place a fraud alert on your credit report, even if you have credit monitoring in place. You can contact the three main credit reporting agencies below to place a fraud alert:
Equifax 1-888-766-0008   www.equifax.com
Experian 1-888-397-3742  www.experian.com
TransUnion 1-800-680-7289  www.transunion.com
 

A fraud alert will not prevent access to your credit report, but it will alert the reporting agency, and businesses checking on your credit, that your information has been compromised. If you have already placed a security freeze on your credit report, a fraud alert is not necessary.

What are some of the things someone can do with my personal information?
Identity theft occurs in many forms. Here are some of the common ways identity thieves can misuse your information:
New account fraud:    This happens when an identity thief uses your personal information to open up new accounts in your name, but will use a different address. Thus, you may not discover the new account for some time.
Existing account fraud: This occurs when an imposter uses your current account information to commit fraud. You can learn of this kind of fraud by reviewing your monthly account statements.
Debit or check card fraud: This occurs when a thief uses your debit or check card to remove money from your bank account. This is sometimes prevented if your accounts can only be accessed with a PIN, but there are ways to avoid this by making “off line” transactions.
Social Security number fraud: This happens when an imposter uses your SSN to gain employment, for tax reporting purposes, or other illegal transactions.
Criminal Identity Theft: This occurs when a criminal gives another person’s name and personal information during an arrest. If the imposter then fails to appear in court, an arrest warrant can be issued with your name on it!
You can get information about these kinds of identity theft from several online resources, including the FTC’s web site, www.ftc.gov/idtheft.

Monday, January 25, 2010

Pocketmod - Cool, Clever Pocket Notepad



Pam at Grass Roots Science sent me a link to pocketmod a long time ago, and as we were getting ready for Juneau, I decided it was just what I needed.

Rather than write things down on a piece of scratch paper, I prefer to have a little notebook in my pocket and just keep everything in the same place.  And everyting stays in chronological order.  And I try to date things.  "Hmmm, I met him at the film festival, that was in December, so it should be around....here."

Pocketmod offers a tiny, but very handy way to make a little notebook out of one piece of paper.  It has a template and you can make different types of pages - lined, a calendar by week, by day, a to do list, etc.  You can even stick in a Sudoku.



It prints out on one page, and then you cut it - following their instructions (upper middle left) and then fold it into a little book.  I was even able to put a jpeg form map of Juneau on the back page.   And presto, you have a notebook for a week.




To see how easy it is to make your own customized pocket notebook click the link.

And since it only uses one side of the paper, it's a great way to use the back side of a paper you don't need.  And I would imagine that kids would love this too.

Saturday, January 23, 2010

Another Way to Make (not much) Money from My Blog

Here's an email I got yesterday.
Hi,

My name is XXX XXXX and I run a WWWW business in Alaska.
Since you run a blog in Alaska, I'd like to ask if you'd be interested
in working out an advertising relationship with me.

It's pretty simple. All I'd ask for is a blogroll link pointing to my
website, ZZZZZZ.org, or a blog post with a link to my
website from your blog. And after the links up, I'll send you $5 with Paypal. Easy as that.

And I'll also throw in free WWWWWWWW quotes for you! ;o)

Thanks for your time, and let me know if you're interested!

-XXX
Rest assured, I'm not likely to endorse a product or 
put up a link because someone is willing to pay me for it. 
If I will make sure readers know the relationship. 
And mostly I'll do it, like this post, just to let people 
know ways people surreptitiously advertise on blogs.
 
If I write about something or someplace, it's because I
think it's interesting. If I endorse it, it's because I think it's good.
 
That's not to say that XXXXX doesn't run a legitimate business 
and he is just being creative about ways to advertise.  
Skepticism is always healthy.  

Tuesday, January 12, 2010

Interesting Baggage Rules and Exceptions

Some of the legislative staff is driving to Juneau and one of the staffers in my office took a suitcase for us.  Yesterday I went to the Alaska Airlines website to see how much our check-ins would cost.  We pretty much just go carry on these days, but this could be three months, so a little bit more would be helpful.  So here are the basic charges under the new regime:


But, there's another link called Baggage charges and waivers:




Jackpot!! Travel wholly within State of Alaska - THREE FREE BAGS!  Hey Ted, sorry I had you take that suitcase.  I could have taken yours.  The temptation to take six check-ins with us is great.  But, no, we're going to stick to one, maybe two, possibly three check-ins between the two of us.

There's also three free check-ins for military "on orders."  And people going to Guadalajara or Mexico City can take two free bags from Dec. 1 to January 15.  What's that about?

But there's more:


OK, strollers and car seats, wheel chairs.  That certainly makes sense.  And international connections where you can take two free check-ins, that makes sense too.  But there's a special for Santa Rosa in Napa Valley:  one box of wine!

No free boxes of frozen salmon from Alaska, what did Santa Rosa do to get their exception?   But the rules do recognize hunters though.  Here are the rules on raw meat and antlers:




 Here's the link to the Alaska Airlines baggage page with 14 different sections.

Monday, January 04, 2010

Share the Damn Link

Below is an email I got today asking me to trade links with another website. That was a key strategy offered for getting more hits when I first started blogging. But then it was more bloggers linking to each other. Technorati, one of the sites that tracks blogs and ranks them,
now says
Please note that links in blogrolls don’t count towards Authority, as they are not indicative of interest in relevant content; we stopped including blogroll links in August 2008.

On occasion I've mentioned ways sellers have attempted to advertise on this site.  Some leave comments - usually with a couple of generic compliments about the site first.  Then put in a link to an unrelated website.  Usually I just delete the comments unless they are relevant to the post.  For example, I deleted one that sold modern Italian furniture that was in a comment on a large Asian furniture complex that we visited in Thailand, but I left a link to dvd's that taught children Mandarin Chinese that was linked to a post where I had pictures of children writing Chinese characters.

Others offer to pay you if you write a positive post about their products.  They pay more if you don't mention that you're getting paid.  I'm sure a lot of bloggers must take them up on that, but I think that's pretty slimy.  People buy things that bloggers endorse because they think this is a genuine testimonial. And it hurts blogger credibility in general when people find out some bloggers are paid to do that.   It's an example of how the market contaminates honest dialogue. (I'm not against the market, I'm just for honest, sensible understanding of its benefits and costs.)


Dear owner of http://whatdoino-steve.blogspot.com,


I'm the webmaster of http://www.sharethedamnroad.com.


We came across your site on the Internet and feel that it would fit
perfectly into our collection of quality links at
http://www.sharethedamnroad.com/content/link-partners.
1. Here's the carrot as he works on my vanity by calling this a quality link.
2. It's about bikes, and this is a bicycle friendly blog.  But it's not like the two Alaska bike links I have on the right that talk about biking in general.  It's selling bike jerseys.
3. And it's a generic email.  He didn't even use my first name, which isn't hard to find.
We've already placed a link to your website along with a description at our site on the page, which we encourage you to check for accuracy. Once you place a link back to use, your link will be moved up to a more visable spot on the page.
3. And I get a link from them, and when I get back to them I get more visible shelf space.
We'd appreciate it if you place a link back to our site using the following HTML code (just copy and paste it into your links page): http://www.sharethedamnroad.com" title="Cycling Jeresys That Make A Statement">Road Cycling Jerseys Cycling Jeresys That Make A Statement On your page, the code will look like this: Road Cycling Jerseys Cycling Jeresys That Make A Statement If you'd like the description of your site modified, the category changed, or if you have any other cross-promotion ideas, feel free to email us. Please note that if you don't place a reciprocal link to us somewhere on your site within a week, the link to your site will automatically be removed from our directory. Please link to us using the code above, and let us know where we can find the link.
4. And now the stick - put something up or we're going to take your link down.
Best regards, Jonathan Ciaccio Cycling@ciaccioseo.com This is NOT SPAM -- this is a one-time reciprocal link request. We have NO INTENTION to email you again. You can also reply to this email with REMOVE in the subject line to make sure we'll NEVER send you any more e-mails in the future.
I'd guess the difference between this and spam is that these aren't computer generated messages to zillions of people.  At least I'm assuming that these went to bike related blogs.  Though biking is not the focus of this blog.


As these things go, this is fairly reasonable. It came as an email, not as a comment. That's good.  It's bike related and I like that too. I'm guessing someone saw the post I did with the Share (bike) sign. But I do think wearing "Share the Damn Road" on your back when you bike through traffic is more likely to get you in trouble (all you need to do is piss off one driver) than increase support for cyclists.

So I wrote back saying I'd probably put up a post. And so I have. Not to get a link on his site.  It gives me a chance to remind readers of the kinds of things people do to advertise in the blogging world.

Boycott blogs with non-transparent paid advertising testimonials - if you can figure out which ones they are.

Saturday, November 21, 2009

Film Festival Scam? AIFF is NOT AIFF

[UPDATE March 21, 2010:  Last week I received a letter from the Alaska International Film Festival's attorney saying I had libeled them in this post.  This is my attorney's letter in response.]

[UPDATE August 19, 2010:  I've added a three post series Part 1:  What is a Scam?  Part 2:  What is a Film Festival?
Part 3:  Comparing the Anchorage and Alaska IFFs.]

[UPDATE July 20, 2011: I've added this post documenting that the Alaska International Film Awards was two days past its award announcement date.  It's five days late now.

While working on the ANCHORAGE International Film Festival blog posts I came across another website that had me totally baffled for a bit.  (I added the black circle) The picture was great, but just totally different in style and content from the Anchorage International Film Festival.  Did they add some new graphics? I clicked around and  I couldn't find any of the content that was on the AIFF website.

The awards page had great verbiage like,

"highlight Alaska's important role in the international film community."
What important role do we have in the film world?  Most films about Alaska are done somewhere warmer and cheaper.  And  
"In addition, Best of Category awards will be presented in each main competitive category and Special Jury Awards are presented to filmmakers who make significant contributions to social change, environmental awareness, and humanitarian causes."
but then I got to this:
The Alaska International Film Festival is an awards-based film and screenplay competition.  Films will not be screened for the public.  Awards will be announced publicly by Internet and international press release.
 "Will not be screened for the public." ?!!  I thought a key part about entering a festival was to get an audience for your film.  Winners announced by internet?  Who is on the jury?  And how come I couldn't find anybody's name on the website?  Is the whole festival computer generated?   And then I saw.  It wasn't the ANCHORAGE International Film Festival.    It was the ALASKA film festival. (No, I'm not offering a link to the site.)

Here's the website for the festival I've been blogging about.

But on the OTHER AIFF site,
the submission page lists the different categories and it costs $25 or  $40 to submit a film depending on length and how early you submit your film.

And there's a contact address where you can also submit your films: 

For general questions or filmmaker inquiries please contact us at:
Alaska International Film Festival
3705 Arctic Blvd, Suite 2329
Anchorage, AK 99503
So I checked out the address today when I was doing other errands.

Above is 3705 Arctic in Anchorage.  The address is in white letters above the door under the red Mail Cache letters.  If you double click the picture you can enlarge it to see.





If you wander  past lots of mailboxes you get to this alcove (left) and  "Suite 2329" is down on the end wall, lower right.  It's a very small suite.

Right here in the picture on the right to be precise.


A whosis search of the url for this website got me to Godaddy and yielded a phone number with a 270 area code.  That's in Kentucky.  A long ways away from Alaska.

This is pretty suspicious.  So when I finished all of the above, I googled "film festival scams" and on the third site I checked I found this article on film festival scams that identifies the Alaska International Film Festival as a likely scam:


Sunday, 4 October 2009

Beware of scam 'film festivals'

By

It seems that every man and his dog wants to run a film festival these days, which is fantastic in many ways, not least because it provides an even greater number of outlets for filmmakers to get their work in front of an audience. Sadly the multitude of scammers who prowl the Internet also seem to have their dirty fingers in the film festival scene as well.
A timely reminder came this week when the "Alaska International Film Festival" was brought to our attention. Visit the site - www.alaskafilmfestival.com (not hyperlinked so as not to give undue Google link mojo to this site) - and on the surface you see a clean, professional looking site for what sounds like a prestigious event and is fact described as such by the site content. But before you dive into the submissions area, it's worth noting a few red flags...

Firstly, the site content reads like this event has been around for years, and indeed, the About Us page says as much. But on closer examination, there is nothing to indicate any previous years' activities, nor can you find any mention of it in Google. Indeed, when we contacted the 'festival' to ask for a list of last year's winners, the respondent told us that this was in fact their inaugural year, despite the About Us page saying, "Each year, awards are presented to independent filmmakers from around the globe..." Update 10-Oct-2009 - surprise surprise, the copy on the About Us page has been changed slightly after this article was published. . .  [Emphasis added]
 You can read the rest of this post and learn about more red flags at filmmaking.com. 

[UPDATE August 9, 2012:  Le site d'Irna, in a post called Pseudo Festivals, Pseudo Awards   writes, in part:  [There's also a French version]
"Let’s start by taking a look at some of these sites: 
California Film Awards 
Alaska International Film Awards 
Oregon Film Awards 
Colorado Film Festival 
Mountain Film Awards 
Honolulu Film Awards 
Yosemite Film Festival ... [I've removed the links]
Doesn’t it strike you that there is more than a little family resemblance between the sites of these different ‘festivals’?  And you wouldn’t be wrong: all these festivals and their ‘prestigious awards’ have more in common than a mere similarity of template design.
-  the jury that awards the ‘rewards’ is never identified, making it impossible to find out who its members are; 
-  none of these ‘festivals’ ever organizes any public screenings; 
-  while posing as established festivals (“Each year, the Yosemite Film Festival recognizes excellence in filmmaking”“The Oregon Film Awards® are presented each year in several categories” ...), none of them has been running for longer than a year or two; 
-  all of them hand out a very large number of awards with grandiloquent names: ‘Grand Jury Award’, ‘Northern Lights Emerging Talent Award’, ‘Sierra Nevada Awards’, ‘Silver Sierra Awards’, ‘Gold Kahuna Awards’, ‘Diamond’, ‘Platinum’, ‘Gold’, ‘Silver’ ... Awards; 
-  the addresses associated with the domain names all seem to consist solely of Post Office boxes; 
-  all these sites are hosted by Rackspace Hosting, either in San Antonio or Chicago ..."]

If you want to submit a film to a festival in Alaska, I recommend the Anchorage International Film Festival.  I know it's real because I've been to a number of them and I blogged the last two.Stumble Upon Toolbar

Wednesday, October 28, 2009

The Line Between Reporting the News and Promoting the Product

[Note: If I sound a little peevish here, it's because I'm getting into subjects that tend to set me off. Take that into consideration as you read and just discount the excesses. Thanks.]

I took a picture of this eye-catching LA Times ad waiting at LAX for our flight north. (You can double click it to enlarge.) It outlines some of the key flaws of the iPhone. I don't have an iPhone, but I'm one of those Mac users who seem overly attached to their machines. Truly, I never thought I'd have a relationship with my computer, but if it got run over today, I'd go out and buy a new one tomorrow. Even with all the snow leopard trouble I had.

But not being open source and the way they control iTunes are two of the troubling aspects that remind me that Apple is a big for-profit company. Even if they do make much more user friendly machines, they still care about my money more than they care about me. But I was curious about who was suggesting they'd fix these things. So I snapped this picture as J was saying, "Quick, they're boarding" and forgot about it.

Until yesterday morning when NPR had a segment on the Droid campaign. (You can read and/or listen at the link.)

When regular listeners to NPR, not just right wing talk show bullies, characterize NPR as being liberal, I bristle. On social issues they may lean a bit left, but on the issue of the economy, they are thumpingly pro-business and pro-market. Yes, they talk about environmental challenges and they mention labor now and then, but their news shows are heavy with promotional pieces for movies, books, television shows, new techie gadgets, etc. It seems like half their programing is based on calls they get from agents trying to book their clients. Going out and gathering real news takes more work and money. And it's much harder to do an honest negative review when the person you are reviewing is right there with you.

And they tend not to look too closely behind the curtains of corporate America unless someone else has already pulled them back. They've even added business shows like Market Place that implicitly buy into our national infatuation with making money.

Mind you, I think we need to have programs on business and the market. But not ones that echo and promote them uncritically. Rather shows that analyze not just individual businesses, but the whole economy and our assumptions about it. They've done shows that question why regulators missed the then impending economic crisis. Why did NPR miss it?

Schools too should be teaching about business and how corporations are structured and which companies own which other companies and how they manipulate images and emotions to get people to buy, buy, buy. We need to understand, as a culture the conditions under which the market makes important contributions and the conditions which require government oversight and regulation.

But NPR tends to cheerlead more than they do serious critical challenges of our economic assumptions. Listening to Democracy Now, Media Matters, and such programs gives you a sense of how anemic NPR's business coverage is. As I've said in other posts, Richard Nixon, in today's political climate in the US, would make most current congressional Democrats look downright conservative.

NPR, compared to most other mainstream sources of news today, also looks 'liberal' in comparison. But as the Nixon example points out, the political playing field has shifted waaaay over to the right since the election of Reagan; NPR is part of the shift. When All Things Considered began in the early 70s it was a completely new, somewhat irreverent news show. Now they are too comfortable in their mold and boringly predictable and repetitive, with interchangeable broadcasters (most having one of four or five patterns of speech,) and with only rare surprises.

Clearly the weaning off of government funding which forced NPR to seek corporate funding plays a big role here. They used to only say things like "Sponsored by XYZ Corporation" but now they have mini- commercials that tell you about new products and services they offer. It is no longer commercial-free radio, despite the semantic games they play about those words. I also acknowledge that a government financed network does raise other issues. But commercial radio based on advertising, as NPR has also become, has its own set of problems - not the least of which is how to report the news without jeopardizing your funding.

And this piece on Google, Motorola and Verizon's challenge to the iPhone seemed to gloss over one of the major issues about cell phone service - the cost. NPR's tech guru, Mario Alexander tells us it's all about applications.
Applications on mobile devices is really the new sweet spot, so these companies are really going to start competing on who is having the most relevant applications, the easiest to use applications, and the best applications that meet users needs. And so I don't think it's necessarily just about the device. The device is a big deal, but I think it's more about the applications and what you can do with the device.
What about competing on cost and plan simplicity? OK, I think some of the things they talked about were potentially important. Rene Montagne asks why Google is getting into the phone business and Mario says that's all about search.
Google wants to own the search business and the mobile device is becoming more useable for searching for information.

You're finding that more and more people are going to their mobile devices versus going to their computer to find relevant information that they need while on the go. So they want to dominate the mobile market like they've dominated in the desktop market.

But what's main issue?
So the bottom line is we're going to have more choice. You have the iPhone store, the Microsoft place for applications, RIM has a store, Palm has a store. It's going to be a very interesting fall and certainly an interesting 2010.
Choice of what? Not good, inexpensive plans. Montagne then gets close to the important question:

MONTAGNE: And if - what - you just need a phone?

(Soundbite of laughter)

MONTAGNE: I guess they're out there, right?

(Soundbite of laughter)

MONTAGNE: So...

Mr. ALEXANDER: Just to make calls.

MONTAGNE: Well, you know, any tips on how one decides?

In the end Alexander says:

I think it's going to come down to really three things: simplicity with style, useful features, and then the applications that make a difference in your life.

For me, the glaring issue about cell phones is how people in the US have relatively little choice about cost. Sure, there are lots of choices in plans, but all those plans mean a fairly hefty minimum payment and they are all designed to keep adding minutes to your phone experience (just time the voice mail features and add up the all the extra seconds people take waiting for those recordings and then multiply them times the hundreds of millions of calls made every day. There's a reason why they don't say "Leave message now.") There are precious few choices for just a phone with low cost minutes where I can easily keep the costs pretty low. For example this March 2009 LA Times article on a study of cell phone usage found:
When you do the math, you find the average cellphone customer actually pays more than $3 per minute, according to a report being issued this week by the Utility Consumers' Action Network, a San Diego consumer advocacy group.
In Thailand I could buy a relatively cheap prepaid card and call at rates that were, compared to US rates, very reasonable. (Though from 2008 to 2009 it was clear the Thai phone companies are watching how the US companies have made phones into money conduits from customers to companies.) When I ran out of time, I could 'fill up' at one of the ubiquitous phone shops. But in the US, that kind of plan is so expensive per minute that it 'makes sense' to 'choose' packaged monthly plans that have innumerable hidden traps to siphon your money.

These are hard economic times and they're promoting the $100/month product that everyone needs to have that didn't even exist 20 years ago.

But NPR didn't even mention cost competition. The marketing and cost, I guess, is a given and not a factor in the choice consumers have. Why didn't the whole issue of cost and how phones plans are designed come up in this piece? Because this was pretty much a fluff piece promoting how cool phones are. Phones are one of the biggest rackets to transfer money from consumers to the large corporations going on in the US today.

Thursday, October 22, 2009

Wisdom Springing out of the Garage

Sometimes too much of a good thing becomes problematic. My mom has always been careful about not wasting things and so many things got stored in the garage just in case she might need them. And she was often able to say, I've got just what you need and come out of the garage with the needed item. The one limit to storing things was that the car needed to fit in the garage. But her garage has been an inspiration for us to clean things out in our house. So, not without some conflict I was allowed, with close supervision, to clean parts of the garage while we've been here. Don't get me wrong, I know that things get harder to do when you get older and since my mom worked until just a couple of years ago, she didn't have that much extra time or energy to keep the garage cleaned out.



I'm afraid you have to look closely to see that there is a lot more space on this side of the garage. A lot has been thrown away, consolidated into smaller boxes, and/or given away. Some is still waiting to be given away.






Among the things we found were these little envelopes.








And these badminton rackets.













And these old magazines. I'm sure that someone would find use for these three things so I took pictures and posted them on Craigslist today. The people who can use these things haven't been reading Craigslist today.





I also came across this book I bought in Thailand long ago called Teaching Dhamma By Pictures: Explanation of a Siamese Traditional Buddhist Manuscript by Ven. Buddhadasa Bhikkhu. There are 47 pictures which are explained. "Wisdom Springing Out of the Mud" is just one of them.






And this spider.

Monday, October 05, 2009

How is this different from piracy?

Pirates take control of a ship on the seas, strip it of its valuables, then abandon it, leaving its crew, passengers, and owners to survive as best as they can. How is the story below (from the NY Times) any different? There's a company instead of a ship.

For most of the 133 years since its founding in a small city in Wisconsin, the Simmons Bedding Company enjoyed an illustrious history.

Presidents have slumbered on its mattresses aboard Air Force One. Dignitaries have slept on them in the Lincoln Bedroom.


But now it is filing for bankruptcy after being boarded and looted by pirates dressed as members of an investment firm.

The owners (investors) and crew (employees) are left holding the empty mattress.

For many of the company’s investors, the sale will be a disaster. Its bondholders alone stand to lose more than $575 million. The company’s downfall has also devastated employees like Noble Rogers, who worked for 22 years at Simmons, most of that time at a factory outside Atlanta. He is one of 1,000 employees — more than one-quarter of the work force — laid off last year.


And the pirates sail off fat and happy.

But Thomas H. Lee Partners of Boston has not only escaped unscathed, it has made a profit. The investment firm, which bought Simmons in 2003, has pocketed around $77 million in profit, even as the company’s fortunes have declined. THL collected hundreds of millions of dollars from the company in the form of special dividends. It also paid itself millions more in fees, first for buying the company, then for helping run it. Last year, the firm even gave itself a small raise.

Wall Street investment banks also cashed in. They collected millions for helping to arrange the takeovers and for selling the bonds that made those deals possible. All told, the various private equity owners have made around $750 million in profits from Simmons over the years.

How so many people could make so much money on a company that has been driven into bankruptcy is a tale of these financial times and an example of a growing phenomenon in corporate America.


I'd call this modern corporate piracy. You can read the whole story at the NY Times.


Or you can contact one of these people who work for Thomas H Lee Partners. There's often (not always though) more than one side to the story.

THL has fostered a culture of partnership and teamwork through its 30+ year history. THL has one of the largest complements of senior partners in the buyout business, emphasizing a hands-on approach to investing. THL benefits significantly from the cumulative experience and knowledge resident in this team and believes it has unmatched continuity and depth of experience among these professionals.



Todd M. Abbrecht
Richard J. Bressler
Charles A. Brizius
Margaret W. Covell
Anthony J. DiNovi
Thomas M. Hagerty
David V. Harkins
Charles P. Holden
Scott L. Jaeckel
Seth W. Lawry
John D. McClellan
Soren L. Oberg
Joseph F. Pesce
Scott A. Schoen
Scott M. Sperling
George R. Taylor
Kent R. Weldon
Gregory A. White
Shari H. Wolkon


Beverly Berman
Joshua M. Nelson
Vivek Sharma


James C. Carlisle
Daniel G. Jones
Ganesh B. Rao
Jeff T. Swenson
J. Lucas Wimer


Alex J. Alexandrov
Joshua D. Bresler
Hobart A. Cook
Alexandra L. DeLaite
Laura A. Grattan
Douglas H. Vandenberg



Michael Beregovsky
Kemper P. Diehl
David T. Jackson
Anil Kumar
Brittni E. Levinson
Andrew R. Mayer
Megan B. Melican
Katherine A. Regner
Emma C. Somers
Justina J. Wang






Unfortunately, the links don't give you their individual contact information. Here's the contact information the THL website offers:

100 Federal Street
Boston, MA 02110
Phone: 617/227-1050
Fax: 617/227-3514

Media Contacts:
Matt Benson/Robin Weinberg
Phone: 415/618-8750/212/687-8080
Email: mbenson@sardverb.com/rweinberg@sardverb.com