50 Ways to Love Your Country

I’m not pointing to this just because it has a nice compliment (although that helps :)) but because it contains info about a book that sounds like I want to buy: check out “Your Voice” at Uncle Horn Head.

Sometimes the thought of getting involved can be overwhelming (it is for me) and it looks like this can help.

This reminds me of a post by another great Philly weblogger, slacktivist, on guerrilla voter registration.

Uncle Horn Head meet slacktivist, slacktivist meet Uncle Horn Head.

I think it would be novel if a few webloggers got together and attempted a local voter registration effort. I wouldn’t know where to begin, but slacktivist’s post might be a start.

Real World Back In Philly – And Just In Time

From John Fisher (About.com) comes details about the great teamwork it took to make it happen. Special thanks needs to go to Young Involved Philadelphia and campusphilly.org for their work to keep the Real World in here. Weblogs spreading the news and furor had a part to play as well.

Right on cue a national magazine trashes Philly style, our looks and calls us rude (Philly.com). Da bastards.

Dehydration and the Emergency Room

I coulda shared this earlier, but it’s not the kind of thing I typically do. Thursday I ended up in the emergency room with a case of dehydration. I must have caught some kind of bug Wednesday night that had me spewing fluids, even when there weren’t any, for almost 24 hours straight. I couldn’t hold anything down. My temperature had dropped. Pretty gross and unnerving. I had to stay home Friday to recuperate. I’m so thankful for my wife – you just have no idea.

If you’re reading this… love ya sweetie!

Tomorrow Morning The Vet Goes Bye-Bye

Veterans Stadium is going to be imploaded tomorrow morning at 7 AM. More at The Nest of Death (nice site!) and plenty more at Philly.com.

I’m not going to miss the Vet anywhere near as I still miss old Sears Tower, or as we called it Sears on the Boulevard. It still stands as the world record holder for the largest explosively demolished building. I worked there ages ago. It’s where I began my career.

The Real World Runs Away

MTV’s selection of Philadelphia was accompanied by unbridled civic rejoicing when it was announced on Feb. 26. City leaders believed The Real World, with its huge audience of 12- to 34-year-olds, would boost the city’s cool factor and help it retain recent college graduates.

But within four days, Bunim/Murray had incurred the wrath of the city’s unions by hiring a nonunion company to renovate the former Seamen’s Church Institute in Old City, where Real World’s cast was to live.

The series had sidestepped organized labor in 13 previous cities, including union strongholds New York, Chicago, and Boston, without incident.

“Every other production company comes in, sits down and bargains,” said Tony Frasco, vice president of Teamsters Local 107, whose members drive vehicles and unload trucks. “The unions are not out to gouge anybody, but this is a union town.”

…Informed of Bunim/Murray’s pullout, Jeff Zeh, president of the Southeast Pennsylvania chapter of Associated Builders and Contractors Inc., which represents nonunion contractors, said, “What else is new in Philadelphia?

“You saw the list of the cities where they’ve produced their projects, and Philadelphia is the only one where they had a problem,” he said. “It is really is a sad commentary.”

“We ask for fair wages and benefits, and [then they] make a fuss and take their ball and go home – what kind of real world do they represent?” said Gillespie, of the Building Trades Council. “We’ll be called the Neanderthals and the pug uglies because of what we’re trying to do.”

Read the rest at Philly.com. More in The Daily News.