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8 random things about me - A meme

May 19th, 2008 | 5 Comments | Posted in Nonfiction by Chris Pommier

Looking in the wrong end Recently, Crystal at Big Bright Bulb, a blog chock full of great advice and insight for small business owners and entrepreneurs, tagged me with a blog meme that’s been making the rounds. I was flattered because it makes me feel a bit more like I’m part of the blogging community. The ideas is that someone comes up with a post, writes it, and “tags” a few other people to write a similar post. Everybody reads the others’ posts, and comments on them. Links are exchanged in a friendly way, everybody has fun, and then we move on with our lives.

So, this one is simply a list post of eight random things about me that you may, or mat not, know. I’m supposed to tag 8 other people at the end, but I don’t know 8 people who blog. So, I tagged three people at the end. I guess I really need to stop lurking on all those great blogs I read. I hereby resolve to comment more.

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Interview: Jane Levin shares insight on poetry, surviving cancer and self-publishing [with Video]

April 30th, 2008 | No Comments | Posted in Poetry, Writing, arts by Chris Pommier

I’ve been lucky to know Jane Levin for over a year now. She and I were awarded a Mentorship by SASE/Intermedia Arts, a local arts organization, and the Jerome Foundation in 2006. With several other local poets weLegacy, by Jane Levin met regularly to workshop and support each other under the watchful eye of Sun Yung Shin, our mentor.

Since then, Jane has worked hard and met with a lot of success in publishing her poetry in both online and print journals. Last week she performed as a featured reader for the SASE/Intermedia Arts GLBT Reading Series. Award-winning writers Andrea Jenkins and John Medeiros curate this long-running reading series.

Part reading, and part book release party, Jane triumphantly held up the gem-green book that she had labored to publish over the previous months. Legacy is a slim volume packed with lyrical, wry and moving accounts of the author’s experience dealing with the fear and pain of cancer, and celebrating the triumph of health, family, friends and her lover Judy.

In her own words, Jane says:

My poems, especially those in my chapbook Legacy, explore universal issues that arise from living as a Jew, a cancer-survivor and a member of the LGBT community. My hope is that my poems will also heal.

I used my digital camera (a Cannon PowerShot A95 for you poetry-loving gadget-geeks out there) to record some short video clips during Jane’s reading. You can watch three of those clips edited together here.

In this 4:42 minute video, Jane thanks her supporters and reads “Atoll” and “Passover” from her book, Legacy.

To order the book, you can send an email to moonflowerpress [at] gmail.com. Each copy is only $8.00 USD. Legacy is also available at the following Twin Cities independent bookstores: Amazon Bookstore Cooperative, Birchbark Books, Brochin’s, Elijah’s Cup and Micawbers.

Read the full interview with Jane Levin after the jump, and below the video.

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WT Update: Selection of Chris Pommier’s freelance clips online

April 19th, 2008 | No Comments | Posted in Nonfiction, Writing by Chris Pommier

I wrote for Lavender Magazine, a local gay/lesbian/queer focused print magazine in 2006-2007. However, in February 2007, they rolled out a new draconian contract for freelancers that would have forced me to give up all future rights to my work, and would have held me liable for future litigation against the magazine.  I refused to sign it because of that, so they couldn’t give me any more work.

I really enjoyed working for them, and their wonderful editor at that time, Michael Moeglin. Though the magazine is rightfully critiqued as a glorified advertising pamphlet within the community, it does support good work, and some wonderful talent. Unfortunately, for some reason the publisher of Lavender has never archived the magazine’s content online. So, for about a year now, I’ve had physical clips sitting in my file drawer waiting to be released online to prospective editors and employers.

I finally made the time to scan, and place, those clips as pdfs on this blog. It took most of Saturday morning, but it was worth it.

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Watchdoggin’: Top notch reporters & editors share investigative journalism tips for ethnic media

April 13th, 2008 | No Comments | Posted in Writing by Chris Pommier

IRE Workshop Minnepaolis This weekend the nonprofit Investigative Reporters & Editors, Inc., a grassroots organization devoted to improving the quality of investigative journalism, brought professional journalists from the New York Times, the St. Paul Pioneer Press and the Wisconsin State Journal to Minneapolis for a two-day conference and workshop. With partners New American Media the Twin Cities Daily Planet and the Twin Cities Media Alliance, IRE provided workshops and networking sessions focused on strengthening watchdog journalism, and building coalitions, among local ethnic media.

It’s not often that I have the chance to be trained by professional, working reporters and editors from nationally recognized, Pulitzer Prize winning newspapers. For a nominal fee of $25, which included lunch and a year’s membership to IRE, I was practically obligated to go. More »

Further Reading on Words & Tricks

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Deep Thoughts, by Jonah Lenetsky
Or, How He Spent his Summer Vacation

February 13th, 2008 | No Comments | Posted in Gay, Nonfiction, Writing by Chris Pommier

InterAlia, a journal of queer studies

Congratulations are in order. Actually, they’re long overdue. My partner, after several years in the MA/PhD track at his University, has published a paper in a peer-reviewed journal. He’s been attending conferences and presenting papers galore, but this marks a new stage of recognition from his peers. Huzzah!

Jonah wrote “Gay Pride and its Adverse: EuroPride 2006 and the Counter Performance of EuroShame” after a research trip to London during which he planned to attend EuroShame 2006 at Duckei nightclub. He planned to examine, through the lenses of performance and spectacle, the commodification of gay pride and the necessary backlash of the Gay Shame movement. Little did he know that violence would erupt that same day.

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