Category Archives: North Carolina

2010 List of America’s Most Stressed Cities Released; Detroit Is No. 1

From AOL News:

The Motor City is feeling a bit stressed out these days.

Detroit, and its 9.026 stress index, earned the unfavorable honor of topping the Portfolio.com/bizjournals analysis of stress levels in America’s 50 largest metropolitan areas. Los Angeles scored the next highest stress index, with a score of 5.899.

The study looked at 10 factors, including unemployment, income growth, poverty, sunshine, murders and commuting, to determine which cities leave their residents all wound up and which ones offer the good life. Drawing upon 2009 population estimates from the U.S. Census Bureau, the organizers analyzed the 50 largest American metro areas and then compared where they scored on those indicators to the national averages. (More information on how the study was conducted can be found here.)

Considering the ongoing dire state of the American job market and the struggling auto industry, the stress that the Motor City is experiencing certainly seems justified.

At No. 3 in the rankings is Cleveland, which has a 5.146 stress index. Possibly that result reflects some vestigial pain from LeBron James’ “decision” to move down to South Beach, Fla., although topping the “Robberies” index with 827.5 robberies per 100,000 residents may be the better explanation.

Here are the top five most stressed cities studied, along with corresponding stress indexes and unemployment rates.

1. Detroit: 9.023; 14.3 percent unemployment

2. Los Angeles: 5.899; 11.6 percent unemployment

3. Cleveland: 5.146; 9.3 percent unemployment

4. Riverside, Calif.: 5.105; 14.4 percent unemployment

5. St. Louis: 4.737; 9.9 percent unemployment

And the five least stressed cities studied:

46. Austin, Texas: -5.183; 7.4 percent unemployment

47. Raleigh, N.C.: -5.249; 8.4 percent unemployment

48. Minneapolis-St. Paul: -6.875; 6.7 percent unemployment

49. Virginia Beach-Norfolk, Va.: -7.859; 7.6 percent unemployment

50. Salt Lake City: -7.949; 7.1 percent unemployment

New York City, the largest metro area studied, with 19.7 million residents, boasts the longest average commute to work, with an average of 34.55 minutes. It came in at No. 6 with a 4.734 stress index.

via 2010 List of America’s Most Stressed Cities Released; Detroit Is No. 1.

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Ocracoke Island Journal: Wet & Damp; Bedraggled

The latest “Earl” News from Ocracoke Island, one of our favorite places on earth, via Philip Howard’s blog.

That is almost the worst that can be said about the aftermath of Earl…almost. I did see one tree lying on top of a roof (at Ocracoke Restoration), but it hadn’t punched any holes through the roof, or even torn off shingles. And the outer portion of the dock at Ocracoke Harbor Inn has collapsed. There surely is other damage, but everyone I saw and spoke to agreed — the damage was minimal.

The tide was up in several places around the village (“flowing like a river” one neighbor said), but it had receded by morning. Blanche’s house is very low to the ground, and the tide came up to her siding, but not into the house. We lost no trees on Howard Street, just a few branches and limbs.

The last I heard there was sand on Hwy 12 between the village and Hatteras Inlet (I’m sure the state will be clearing that as soon as possible). I understand that officials are checking to see that the ferry channels are clear.

I do not have any up to date information about Hwy 12 on Hatteras Island, or about when the ferries will resume operation. However, the NC DOT web site should have the most current information: http://tims.ncdot.gov/tims/default.aspx

via Ocracoke Island Journal: Wet & Bedraggled.

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Ocracoke Island Journal: Hurricane Earl Update

If you want Hurricane Earl news from Ocracoke Island and the Outer Banks, Philip Howard’s blog is always the best source.  His family has been on the Island for generations.  He’s a great source of Island news and history all year long..

His daughter is filing for him while the power is out.  Here is her latest report and a link to Philip’s blog.

This is Amy Reporting my father’s observations. We are in Carrboro making a vacation of the evacuation order.

As of 8am today, it appears all is well on Ocracoke. There will be some clean up of course, but a quick glance out around the harbor indicates that there was not widespread damage. The power has been out since 4am with winds that felt like they were about 60-65mph on Howard Street. A stroll out to the harbor this morning verified that Howard Street was more protected, because the winds there were still quite blustery and quickly flipped the umbrella inside out. The tide did come up, however Howard Street houses appear to have all stayed high and dry.

My father said he actually slept through most of the night, waking only when the house was really shaking and rattling. He has been up since early morning just checking on things in the area around the house. So far he’s not been out to the beach to see how the dunes held up. Most cars are still staying parked on higher ground for the time being.

via Ocracoke Island Journal: Hurricane Earl Update.

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Congressional Campaign Ads: Against Virginia Fox and for Tom Perriello

Here’s a great ad from Billy Kennedy who’s running against the totally insane Virginia Foxx in the next Congressional District over here in NC:

Here’s Tom Perriello’s first ad in VA 5th District’s, my old home district.  Tom is such a top notch Congressman.  Especially after that fool Virgil Goode.  I hope the folks in his district realize how lucky they are, but I fear they don’t….

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Filed under North Carolina, Politics, The South, Virginia

Congressman Brad Miller: Fair Game – In the Mortgage Drama, One Role Is Enough – NYTimes.com

Interesting article about our Congressman Brad Miller in today’s New York Times:

MEET Brad Miller, a Democratic representative from North Carolina who was elected to Congress in 2002, talks straight and understands how big banks can put consumers at peril.

He is worth getting to know, not only because of his deep concern about the foreclosure epidemic, but also because he has made a compelling recommendation to level an exceedingly tilted playing field in mortgage finance.

Depending upon your perspective, Mr. Miller is either the right man in the right place on Capitol Hill — if you’re a consumer — or a threat to the status quo.

via Fair Game – In the Mortgage Drama, One Role Is Enough – NYTimes.com.

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Triad Stage: My Thoughts on “Sister Mary Ignatius Explains It All for You” and “The Actor’s Nightmare”

I have some good news and some bad news.   Good News:  I had a great time at Triad Stage’s UpStage Cabaret last night seeing these two shows.  Bad News:  I saw the last performance so it’s too late for you to go…

These shows are part of the repertory summer season that Triad Stage does with UNC-G.  I don’t know the details around this, but the Actors appear in the main stage show and after hours in these two shows as well as in another production.  I have attended these late night shows in the past and also had a great time.  I recommend you keep an eye out for these opportunities to see these late evening shows in the Upstage Cabaret.  They are a great addition to the main season at Triad Stage.

I also love the space where these shows are held.  I wish Triad Stage would use it more.  It would be a great place for small concerts, Cabaret acts as well as theatre.  And you can drink during the show…

The plays themselves are two short plays by Christopher Durang.  I always enjoy his work when it is done well-as it was last night.

“The Actor’s Nightmare” is very short and very funny.  Anthony Scarsella did a great job as the lead with able support from the rest of the cast.

The longer play, “Sister Mary Ignatius Explains It All for You”, is totally dependent on the actress playing Sister Mary for the play to work.  Leah Turley was delightful.  Although she is too young for the part, as written, she made it work beautifully.  I would love to see her do this again in about 20 years.  She was also a stand out in the main stage show at Triad Stage.  I hope we get to see more of  her here in the Triad.

The entire cast of “Sister Mary” was excellent. Outstanding work by the entire cast including Catherine Delaney, Matthew Delaney, Izzy Goff, Dylan Weikel-Feekes and Nick Albrecht.  Especially, Dylan Wiekel-Feekes.   As the perfect Catholic schoolboy, he almost stole the show.

Both plays were also extremely well directed  by Kate Muchmore, for “Actor’s Nightmare” and by Bryan Conger for “Sister Mary”.

We are lucky to have several good College theatre programs here in the Triad.  I applaud Triad Stage for their support and partnership of these groups.

Congratulations to UNC-Gs’ Theatre program for such fine work during this Summer Rep series.  Many thanks to Triad Stage for providing such fine facilities and support to these young artists.

I can’t wait until next year!

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Triad Stage, “Providence Gap” and Some Thoughts On Blogging

It has been a very interesting week for me.

My review and thoughts on “Providence Gap” created quite a lot of discussion, both here, on FaceBook and in conversations I’ve had around town.  That post received the most “hits” of any blog post I have posted.

I thank all of you who read it, whether you agree with me or not.  So far, almost everyone I’ve talked to has agreed with me.  But I’m sure almost everyone tells the folks at Triad Stage they loved “Providence Gap”.  People don’t like to be impolite.  Neither do I.

I will start by saying I have re-read my blog post several times and I stand by my comments completely.

With one exception:  I think I was unintentionally a little too harsh on Preston Lane.  While I stand by my comments on “Providence Gap”, the Appalachian series and “Julie’s Dance”, as I reviewed his credits last night, I realized how much I had enjoyed some of Mr. Lane’s other adaptations.

Like most consumers, theatrical or otherwise, the bad usually stands out at the expense of the good in our memories as time passes.

I want to give praise, where it is due, just as I will give criticism where I think it is due.

Mr. Lane did a great job in his adaptations of “Ghosts”, “Hedda Gabler” and “Dracula”.  I thank him for those works and those enjoyable evenings at Triad Stage.  He has also shown great talent as a director.  However, when you are the Artistic Director of a professional theatre company, you have to be ready to accept good feedback as well as bad.

That brings me to some thoughts on blogging…

I read blogs for a long time before I started one.  I’ve only been blogging since December and I’m constantly amazed that more and more people are reading this blog.  I decided to throw my thoughts out into cyberspace as an outlet and for fun.  I never really thought whether someone else, outside a few friends, might want to read them.  They do.  I’m surprised when I run into people around town and mention my name, for some reason, and they say:  “Are you the blogger?”  It’s been an adjustment to think of myself that way.  But yes, I am a blogger.  I’m proud to say so.

I think bloggers are essential to communication today.  With most of the traditional media outlets owned my big corporations and news mixed up with entertainment, I’ve long depended on political blogs for my news and information.  With the local traditional media being swallowed up by corporations and conglomerates, you don’t see as much local news coverage as you once did.

And you see almost no Arts coverage.  No one in the local media reviews local Theatre or other Performing Arts anymore.  That’s why blogging is essential.  We have to create our own information sharing process.  That’s why I intend to continue to provide my thoughts on the local Arts scene when I attend performances.  I hope you will, too.

I’ll also say that what few traditional critics still remain don’t carry the weight they once did.  Shows can survive horrible reviews in the New York Times and still run.  Example:  “The Adams Family.”  Shows can also get great reviews and be derivative, boring and deeply flawed.  Ex:  “The Shining City” and “Pillowman”.

Word of mouth is much more important now than it used to be.  But it doesn’t always get to the producers.  That’s why we need blogs in the Triad.  I’m really not sure the folks at Triad Stage were hearing what I and others were saying about “Providence Gap” until I posted on my blog.  And quite a lot of people were saying it.

Now if you Google Triad Stage and “Providence Gap” you not only get the Triad Stage press releases, you get our blog posts.  This is an important change due to the internet age.  We can all comment and express our opinions.  And others can read them.   Then they can make up their own minds.  It’s really free speech at it’s most basic level.  No one controls the dialogue.

It’s too easy for us to be caught up in our own bubbles, silo’s or echo chambers today.  With Triad Stage and other organizations, I worry that so many people want something from them- parts in plays, jobs, productions- that it is getting harder for them and other Arts organizations to get real feedback from their audiences.  Standing ovations mean nothing in the theatre now.  Audiences think they are expected.  Hell, in New York, they even applaud the scenery changes.

I don’t want anything but good theatre that expands the heart and mind.

So I’m going to continue to blog.  I hope you will continue to read it.  I also hope you will continue to give me your comments and your feedback.  I no longer do this just for my amusement.  I’m finding a sense of community and a dialogue that I am enjoying immensely.

We live in an increasingly polarized and isolated society and blogs can help us rebuild our fractured communities.  They allow we busy people to communicate at our own time and speed.  They let us share ideas, thoughts and opinions in ways that daily interaction in a Politically Correct world often prohibits.

I don’t expect everyone to agree with me and I welcome comments, both good and bad, on this blog.  As long as they are civil.  This is an open forum and I plan to keep it that way.

I also encourage others to start their own blogs.  I’ve enjoyed many other great blogs here in Greensboro, the Triad and the state of North Carolina as much as I enjoy some of the national blogs I read daily.  It’s really easy to start a blog.  I recommend WordPress.com.  You can start your basic blog for free and be up and running in a matter of minutes.

So again, my thanks to all of you who bother to read this blog and apologies to Preston Lane for overlooking the good works he does due to the impact of one really bad night in the theatre.

Let’s keep the dialogue going…

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“Providence Gap” at Triad Stage: My Thoughts and Review

I just got home from the longest night I have ever spent in a theatre.  I hate to be negative, but friends don’t let friends see bad theatre.  I have seen hundreds of shows in my life and nothing prepared me for the mess that is “Providence Gap”at Triad Stage here in Greensboro, North Carolina.

Let me start by saying I love Triad Stage.  We have been season ticket holders since they first opened.  We have seen every production they have ever mounted.  I donate money to them.  Often, they do wonderful work.  But when they miss, they miss big.  “Providence Gap” is a huge miss.

Let me also say Preston Lane, who I do not know personally, can be a wonderful director.  “Picnic”, an old warhorse of a play that I was dreading, turned out to be a magical evening in the theatre– largely due to his direction.  He has created magic many times in the past at Triad Stage.  Just not when he is writing/adapting and directing at the same time.  Starting with “Julie’s Dance”, most adaptations or new works I recall that he has both written and directed have been, at best,  tedious.  I couldn’t even look him in the eye as we left tonight I was so embarrassed for him.

Let me also say that Laurelynn Dossett wrote and performed some beautiful music.  However, it was lost in this mess of a show.  In every collaboration she does at Triad Stage, her music is always the high point.  The book of the show is always the low point.  And usually the Direction.

For the record, I also simply hated their previous collaboration “Beautiful Star”.  I know it sold well for Triad Stage, but it was still, at best, mediocre.  It seemed to me to be more appropriate for the Barn Dinner Theatre than a professional company like Triad Stage.  “Bloody Blackbeard” had great music and a wonderful set, but seemed like a rough draft of a show.  “Providence Gap” has beautiful music, but seems like, at best,  a very rough first draft of a show.  Laurelynn’s music is usually the only saving grace of these collaborations, but even she couldn’t save this mess.  I would have bought the CD, but I didn’t want to risk mental flashbacks to the show.

I felt sorry for the very talented actors.  Most of them are from UNCG-G’s Theatre program.  They were all extremely talented and did the best that could be done with what they had to work with in “Providence Gap.”  The best thing I can say to them is to be grateful that they learned early in their careers what it’s like to be part of a really bad professional show.

There were about 4 or 5 plays in “Providence Gap.”  It could have been a fascinating story about how “hillbillies” came down from the mountains to work in the cotton mills.  It could have been a fascinating story about mountain people.   But, Mr Lane was overly ambitious.  We did not need a 2 and a half hour allegory.  It did not work.  We did not need to hear it as representing the 20th Century changes in lifestyle for mountain people.  If I had heard the phrase “Twentieth Century” from the narrator/ MC one more time, I think I would have climbed over the seats and beaten him with my program.  The woman character “representing” the 20th Century was confusing, annoying and should have been cut.  The Radio Show format simply did not work.

The characters were poorly developed and, as the man behind me said, “turn on a dime”.  These were sketches, not characters.  They were not “real” people.  And, while I know what he was trying to do,  the character names seemed  more appropriate to a Jackie Collins novel than mountain people in the early 20th Century.  The plot was both obvious and contrived.  It was totally predictable and the prediction was not good.

As I said, I felt sorry for the actors and appreciate their fine work in making these characters as honest as they could.  They did not have a lot to work with in the script.  I hate to say it, but there really was not a book here.  At least not a coherent one.  Especially not one worthy of Laurelynn Dossett’s music.  I hope she steps away from this type of collaboration before her reputation is tarnished by association.  She deserves better than this…She and her fine musicians were misused on stage in this show.  They were neither fully integrated into the show nor appropriately featured to “comment” on the action.  This was part of the weakness in both the book and the direction.

Usually, one can at least love the set in a Triad Stage production.  Even that did not work tonight.  It was boring and depressing with no focal points.

I really hate to be so harsh in this review, but I look at it as “tough love”.  Triad Stage needs to stop this foolishness before they hurt their reputation even further. I did not hear one positive word from anyone in the audience tonight.  I’m sure there were some people who liked it, but I didn’t hear it.  All I heard walking back to the car were comments similar to mine.

I must say, it is admirable that they are trying to feature North Carolina History and music but, frankly, this is not working.  I can’t be an enabler.

I beg Triad Stage to end the Appalachian saga while they are behind, but before they further damage their reputation.  This was, frankly, abysmal.  They don’t need this kind of word of mouth when they are trying to build and retain an audience during tough economic times.  They are too important to us in the Community for me not to call them out on this–even if no one there reads it.

But then, who am I to judge?  I’m just a guy who sees a lot of theatre, in a lot of places, who won’t be seeing anything else in this genre at Triad Stage.  You couldn’t pay me enough.  I can’t even think of anyone to whom I would do the disservice to give them our season tickets for something like this show.  I was embarrassed for them that they put this on their stage.

As a supporter of Triad Stage, I’ve had my say….I just hope we can move on to bigger and better things next season.  I wish Laurelynn Dossett and all the talented actors all the best.  Triad Stage and Preston Lane can and should do better…

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Filed under Entertainment, Greensboro, North Carolina, Theatre