Posts Tagged ‘changecamp’

What a busy weekend you have

There will be martinis.

There will be martinis.

Ah, the weekend. Our brief taste of freedom each week. Let’s enjoy it, Edmonton.

How about you get your thoughts provoked over at the Global Visions Film Festival? I believe it’s Canada’s longest-running documentary film festival.

The first Saturday of the month means time for the Handmade Mafia to provide you with awesome goods.

The Yardbird Jazz Festival kicks off tonight. Sweet.

Over at the TransAlta Arts Barns, the Night of Artists takes over for the weekend.

The Barns close out the weekend with a Yogathon for Charity.

Perhaps you’re feeling a bit peckish. Well, you can head over to the Shaw Conference Centre for the Rocky Mountain Wine and Food Festival.

The Likwid Lounge is hosting a veritable smorgasbord of aweseome Saturday, with a fundraiser show for a new independent record label. The lineup includes The Joe, A.O.K., Zebra Pulse and Audio/Rocketry.

As mentioned in the headlines this morning, Farmfair International IS ON.

The Alberta Ballet kicks off its Edmonton season with Romeo and Juliet.

The Edmonton Classical Guitar Society has “Between Two Continents on Eight Guitars,” or G8.

Maybe you’d like to see what Grant MacEwan University has to offer. There’s an app for that.

You can always see what Edmonton’s ChangeCampers are doing to change things around here.

If you’re a fabulous lady 50 or older there’s the “Fabulous at 50 Experience and Martini Party” (as noted in the sign above).

Perhaps you want to get rocked gently, by Andy Kim at the Century Casino?

With Remembrance Day coming up the Cosmopolitan Music Society presents “Lest We Forget: A Musical Tribute” at the Winspear Centre.

Finally, Said the Whale plays Brixx tonight.

And while it’s not exactly a weekend event, in the new week you’ll be able to listen to/download the new podcast from The Unknown Studio, with guests me and Sally. I shower the Unknown Studio boys with love until they blindside us with their 60 Minutes-style questioning.


Edmonton weekend fun

When the big hand gets to 5 we all get 2 days off.

When the big hand gets to 5 we all get 2 days off.

That clock is slowly ticking toward the weekend. We are so close now.

But wait, do you even know what you’re going to do this weekend?

We’ve mentioned talking about doing things differently at ChangeCamp, enjoying some non-pretentious and award-winning jazz, heading North of Nowhere, and spooking and grossing yourself out at DEDfest.

But there’s more.

First, there’s more on the dead side, with a zombie walk and then a zombie prom at New City.

And on the Hallowe’en side there’s the Scarecrow Festival at Northlands.

There’s a really interesting event happening Saturday night, called a Timeraiser. Basically, you bid on auction items but you’re also bidding with your own volunteer hours. Neat.

Over on Stony Plain Road they’re doing Store Front Cinema.

Also Saturday, Delhi 2 Dublin bring their electronica world beats to the Starlite Room.

You could also look for “A New Perspective” at this photography show.

The Edmonton Model Railroad Association is throwing its doors open to the public this weekend.

The Pilgrims Hospice is holding their annual “Voices for Hospice” benefit concert too.

Hey, Chad VanGaalen is playing the Myer Horowitz Sunday. You needed to know this.

Sunday also sees the Pop Culture Fair over at the Mayfield Inn Trade Centre.

And on Monday, author Hal Niedzviecki is over at the University of Alberta talking about our peep culture.

SO MUCH TO DO!


Why I’m going to ChangeCamp

A change will do you good.

A change will do you good.

We were going to do a story about this weekend’s ChangeCamp, but it’s been pretty well covered by outlets such as Vue Weekly and the Journal.

Instead, I decided, I will write about my own reasons for wanting to go. Perhaps it will convince someone who didn’t know about it, or know what it was about, to come out Saturday and talk about change.

First of all, I like the idea of a bunch of people who don’t really know each other getting together to try and figure out ways of engaging citizens.

Voter turnout at all three levels of government is terrible, people don’t tend to remember a lot from high school politics and civics classes, and the news can become a series of stories about boys in balloons instead of what your governments are up to. So, there’s clearly room to improve the level of debate.

Second, unlike most conferences and symposiums, you (yes, YOU) can show up Saturday morning and pitch an idea you want to talk about. You could be leading a discussion on that very topic within minutes.

There’s also lots of talk about data. The City (and provincial and federal governments) has lots of information. Everything from where buses are coming and going to where police officers are responding to calls. Data junkies, and people far better at computers than I, would love to have this made widely and freely available so they could build phone apps, wikis, maps, and all kinds of other helpful tools for you and me. Government just has to be willing to hand it over.

I suspect there will be talk about small pilot projects involving such data, what could be done if some other information was just made available and the best way to ask nicely to get it.

I’m also looking to meet people who are really excited to be a part of something here in Edmonton. They are going to be at ChangeCamp to try and engage with the wider community and I look forward to talking with them.

Maybe I’ll see you there.