Monthly Archives: September 2008

Prelude to MinistryCOM

Thursday and Friday, I’ll be in Oklahoma City for the MinistryCOM conference, billed as the “National Church Communications Conference.”

I attended two years ago in Phoenix and last year in Nashville. This year, I’m doing a workshop about writing. Twice (once each day). Really looking forward to that. Don’t get many chances to talk about my craft.

Most MinistryCOM attendees do communications for megachurches. It’s a highly competent bunch.

Then Pam and I are taking some vacation. I’ll be tackling three novels:

  • Cross, by Richard Patterson.
  • The Fifth Woman, by Henning Mankell
  • Die Trying, a Jack Reacher novel by Lee Child.

Probably won’t get through all of them, but it’ll be fun trying.

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Quote Unquote

Ed Rollins: “[Obama] is not going to win by telling voters McCain is too old and doesn’t know how to use the Internet. Many of McCain’s supporters are old and could care less about the Internet.”

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Proud Churches

Tim’s preaching through the seven cities of Revelation. I wrote a song for the worship team, based on the CCR “Proud Mary” tune. We played it today as a special.

Really, really fun to play “Proud Mary” in church. As we played, I could see a few smiles, like, “Wow, this is cool. I can’t believe I’m hearing this.” Maybe they still think it’s a song about marijuana (Proud Mary is a paddle-wheeler.)

I managed to work in the name of each city. Which isn’t so easy when you’re talking about Pergamum, Thyatira, and Laodicea. Here it is.

Left to see the seven cities,
Seeing what that man, John, had to say,
Some of them were good, and some of them were bad,
Laodicea was just lukewarm.

Sardis needs to wake-up,
Thyatira needs to hold on.
Readin’, readin’, readin’ Revelation.

Met Jezebel in Thyatira,
Saw folks worship Balaam in Pergamum,
Endured persecution with the folks of Smyrna,
Those who overcome get the crown of life.

Philadelphia, hold on,
Ephesus, find your first love.
Readin’, readin’, readin’ Revelation.

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Going Easy on Palin

For me, Charles Gibson’s interview of Sarah Palin was disappointing. She came across about how I expected–straightforward and earnest, but shallow on the issues. My big disappointment was with Gibson.

He didn’t press her on anything, except for that stupid Bush Doctrine question (which I’ll bet Bush himself would have flunked). He just put questions out there, and accepted her rehearsed answer without prying further. I suspect that Palin herself felt like she got off easy.

  • She’s been misleading the country about her support for the Bridge to Nowhere, but Gibson passively accepted her canned answer.
  • He brought up, but didn’t push, on her record with other earmarks.
  • He let her get away with her totally unnecessary lie about selling that government jet on eBay.
  • He didn’t pry into what, to me, sure looks like abuse of power in Troopergate.
  • He didn’t bring up her, and her husband’s, association with the Alaskan separatist party, and that party’s affiliation with the American Constitution Party, which seeks a US theocracy (can you spell T-A-L-I-B-A-N?). I don’t care how hard-core Republican you are–shouldn’t this be explored?
  • Religious statements she has made, like describing the Iraq war as “a task that is from God,” and that building a new gas line was God’s will.

I like Palin. But while I would love to perpetuate the image of Sarah Palin as squeaky-clean wholesome, there remains room for much legitimate press inquiry. She needs to be held accountable for misrepresenting her own record. I expected more from Charlie.

Palin’s next interview is with Sean Hannity on Tuesday. That’ll be a joke. Like Olberman interviewing Obama. Hannity will mostly just set her up to criticize Obama. At some point, Palin needs to be pressed.

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Those Who Died on 9/11

At break this morning, we reminisced about where we were when we heard about the 9/11 attack in New York. I had just returned to the office from an elders meeting at Bob Evans.

CNN has a memorial to all the persons who died that day, with photos and information about each person and comments from people who knew them. Very interesting and moving.

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We’re Prepared

I was told yesterday that one of the almanacs is predicting one of the coldest winters ever.

We have a new furnace and roof. Bring it on.

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200 Channels, and No News

At the Y, a long bank of TVs hang on the wall to help fitnessnics while away the time on the treadmills, bikes, and arc trainers. My arm-bound Radio Shack tuner lets me dial into the various channels.

So I’m treadmilling last night, switching back and forth between MSNBC and FOXNews. And getting very frustrated. Lots of very serious analysis of lipstick comments. Olberman is bashing McCain and giving Democrats highly articulate wet kisses. Meanwhile, O’Reilly is pretending to be fair and balanced while belittling all things Democrat.

Olberman is now officially a joke (there, Mom, I said it), his own Worst Person in the World. (O’Reilly has been one for some time.) His Alpha Dog power trip downed Tucker Carlson and Dan Abrams, and he’s working on banishing Tom Brokaw, who told him on air that he was being unfair.

Their shows end. On comes newcomer Rachel Maddow on MSNBC, and Hannity and Colmes on Fox. Maddow is Olberman’s spunky little sister. Hannity loves superlatives and exaggerations, like last night when he said of McCain, “He had every bone in his body broken in a Hanoi prison.” Colmes is allowed to speak occasionally.

I just want to watch some objective news. A couple nights ago, Olberman interviewed Obama, with questions akin to this: “You’ve seen the latest McCain ad. It was stupid, right?” I think even Obama was embarrassed by it, and may have thought Olberman was hitting on him, it was so suck-uppity chummy.

I went home and turned on CNN. Anderson Cooper was actually dealing with issues–comparisons of the candidates’ tax plans, their abortion views, other stuff. It was enlightening. What a concept.

I miss having Headline News at night, when you could actually turn on the TV and get the day’s news. Now, Headline News has Shallow Glen and Shamelessly Exploitive Nancy…and better ratings, evidently. So sad.

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In Praise of the Corn Casserole

corncasserole.jpgMy all-time favorite church potluck food is the corn casserole. You know, the corn with Jiffy cornbread mixed in. I can never get enough of it.

In what must surely be the bizarrest-ever version of a midlife crisis, I’ve spent the year learning how to cook. Instead of getting a Harley (which I’ve not ruled out entirely), I’ve gone domestic. I had a goal of learning ten crockpot recipes, and I think I’ve gone beyond that. On Saturday, I made pancakes for the first time. In stores, I look at skillets and cooking utensils. Yes, I’m losing it.

In light of my infatuation with cooking, it’s not surprising that I learned how to bake a corn casserole. I checked out various recipes on the internet, mixed-and-matched some ingredients to form my own recipe, and gave it a try.

Jodie, Pam’s sister, was over a few weeks ago. I grilled us steaks and baked a corn casserole. Jodie loved it. In fact, she asked for the recipe (yes, a woman asked ME for a recipe). She called to say her kids liked it. This gave me a decidedly un-guylike sense of satisfaction.

Pam’s not so crazy about corn casseroles, but that’s okay. Just leaves more for me. Potlucks are few and far between, and I haven’t seen a corn casserole at a church potluck for a while. But now, I don’t have to wait.

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GraphJam

I am really enjoying a website called GraphJam. People post silly graphs and charts about all manner of nonsense. It’s quite funny. Some are good, some not so good.

Here are two recent ones I got a kick out of.

funny-graphs-speed.gif
121.gif

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The Decline of Journalism

I’m a trained journalist. I used to regularly read Washington Journalist Review and Columbia Journalism Review. I’m an admirer of old-school journalists, and I appreciate their mindset. You put aside your own biases and follow the story, wherever it leads. No matter what the partisan spinmeisters say, writing a negative story about the Clintons doesn’t make you a Republican, and writing something negative about McCain doesn’t mean you’re a Democrat. Journalists follow the story.

I loved David Brinkley’s Sunday morning show. Brinkley was a hardcore journalist; so were Cokie Roberts and the ever-unlovable Sam Donaldson. George Will, a pundit, was thrown in for good measure.

But today, pundits rule. The people who host TV “news” shows don’t come from journalism backgrounds. Olberman, Matthews, O’Reilly, Stephanopolous, Scarborough, Buchanan, Carlson, Abrams, Larry King–these are not journalists. They are personalities. And so, news circa 2008 is far different from news circa 1978.

There are still some true journalists out there. Jim Lehrer, Tom Brokaw, Andrea Mitchell, Bob Scheiffer, David Gregory (though he’s aspiring to be a pundit), Brian Williams, Christiane Amanpour, Bob Woodward, Candy Crowley, Anderson Cooper (yes, Cooper). Dan Rather was an amazing journalist in his day. The major newspapers are home to many superb journalists.

But TV viewers want opinions, evidently, not facts. So personalities rise to the top at the expense of journalists.

And today, there’s the dilemma of deciding, “Who is a journalist?” The evil “media” now includes the blogosphere, where facts are optional. And so, Andrea Mitchell and Bob Woodward get lumped in with DailyKos and HuffingtonPost. They are not the same. But the blogs get half-baked stories out there, and journalists really have no choice but to follow up to see if there’s any truth to it. Rush Limbaugh and Sean Hannity vomit up innuendoes and tabloid-worthy gossip about Democrats, and when Brian Williams doesn’t repeat it on Nightly News, he gets accused of being on the Democrat payroll. No, it’s just that they didn’t find anything credible to report.

But unfortunately, the half-truths and thoroughly-spun tripe from the pundits and blogs is what we end up talking about.

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