Snapshot Chronicles

Susan Getgood's personal blog

  • Home
  • About Snapshot Chronicles
  • Privacy & Disclosure
    • Cookie Policy
  • Getgood.Com

Re-run week one, category politics

09.15.2009 by Susan Getgood //

I’m currently on vacation in Africa. Since I will be focusing my blogging on my Snapshot Chronicles Roadtrip travel blog during the trip, you’re going to get a couple weeks of re-runs here on Snapshot Chronicles. This week, three of my political posts from the past year.

From June 2008: Disappointed, disillusioned, disheartened but still a Democrat

From Sept. 2008: Sarah Palin for VP?

From January 2009: A personal reflection on the inauguration of President Obama

Categories // Politics

From my bookshelf

09.08.2009 by Susan Getgood //

The TV in my exercise room isn’t working. More accurately, either the TIVO or the cable connection is malfunctioning because I can watch DVDs but not broadcast. So, I’ve been reading while on the treadmill instead.

Which means I finally got around to two books that have been sitting on my shelf for ages, Outliers: The Story of Success by Malcolm Gladwell and Giving: How Each of Us Can Change the World by Bill Clinton.

One of the reasons I like Gladwell’s books is that he focuses on a single point, and illustrates it in a number of ways.  As opposed to some business books that seem to  introduce more themes than there were animals on the ark, but then skim over the all important proof.

Outliers argues that the rags-to-riches tale in which the supremely talented overcome impossible odds to succeed is built on a faulty assumption that the individual did not benefit from any special advantages. There’s a strong element of being in the right place at the right time in his success stories, but overall it provides a strong argument for those who favor nurture in the nature/nurture argument. It’s also a fast, satisfying read, which is not something we can say about every business book on our shelf.

While I am sure that President Clinton wrote Giving out of a desire to motivate the public to acts of philanthropy, it also serves as an excellent primer on philanthropy in the United States, both domestic and internationally focused. If you are interested in the non-profit world, start with Giving, and then move on to some of the other books Clinton references in the text.

You might also want to check out events like August’s Social Good Conference sponsored by Mashable, although I have profound differences of opinion with the Humane Society of the United States, one of the charities supported by the conference. (If you are interested, the bottom line is: HSUS is a lobbying organization devoted to the eradication of pet animals in the US. None of the funds it raises goes to support animals. Just about every cent goes to support  lobbying. Want to support animals? Donate to your LOCAL humane society or breed rescue organization.)

Here’s a list of stuff  I have pending to review, and Lord help me , this blog isn’t even that well known although its sister Marketing Roadmaps has a small following and is the reason for most books I get offered. Some of these things will end up there or on Roadtrip, my travel blog. Disclosure: all the stuff in this list was sent for free, for possible but not promised review. Most of the stuff I review on my blogs however (Like Outliers and Giving) I purchased myself.

  • Rosetta Stone Mandarin Chinese
  • A bunch of books including Online Public Relations by Phillips & Young; Public Relations and the Social Web by Rob Brown; Six Pixels of Separation by Mitch Joel and The Truth about Trust in Business by Vanessa Hall. Note: all these publishers asked for interest before sending the book and I said I hoped to get to it. If that was good enough, send away!
  • The screener for Drop Dead Diva. Yes I suck. Yes I intended to watch it right away. And did not.
  • A pile of unsolicited, unrequested blues CDs, received as a result of my work a year ago on a blues movie that never was released (and by the way, the production company stiffed me on the last month’s  fee which we are STILL trying to collect.)

Categories // Books, Charity

Kids TV: Characters Parents Love

09.04.2009 by Susan Getgood //

Last month, I conducted two very unscientific Twitter polls about the children’s tv characters that parents dislike and like the most. I wrote about the hated characters on August 27th. This is the follow-up about the characters we like. Not surprisingly, there are some that appear on both lists, further proof that one person’s poison is another’s preference.

The top vote getters, with two each, were Wizards of Waverly Place, Phineas and Ferb and Spongebob. Everything else was mentioned once. Apparently, we often agree about the most annoying characters, but when it comes to what we like, our tastes are all over the place.

Here’s the list of single-votes:
Kipper
Little Bear
Curious George (with a shout out for the William H. Macy voice-over)
Ang (Avatar)
Dora
Handy Manny
Zack and Cody
Elmo
Sportacus (LazyTown)
Steve (Blues Clues)
Statler & Waldorf (Muppet Show)
The Count (Sesame Street)
Pepe le Pew and all the classic Warner Brothers cartoons
The Wiggles

I cast my votes for my favorites among the current crop my son watches — Wizards of Waverly Place and Phineas & Ferb — but looking at the list, I remember Kipper with great fondness. I also would give a thumbs up to the Avatar but my favorite character was the Uncle.

Here’s a clip from Wizards that amuses me nearly every time I watch it.

Categories // TV/Film

  • « Previous Page
  • 1
  • …
  • 4
  • 5
  • 6
  • 7
  • 8
  • …
  • 72
  • Next Page »

Search

Posts

  • Paris: Panoramas, Gardens and … Catacombs?
  • Five Must See Museums in Paris
  • Paris: When to go, where to stay, what to eat
  • Reykjavik Restaurants Worth the Trip
  • Reykjavik: Favorite Museums

Archive

Copyright © 2025 · Modern Studio Pro on Genesis Framework · WordPress · Log in