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Posts Tagged ‘charity’

Charitable Comedy Takeover

As Executive Producer and Artistic Director of the NC Comedy Arts Festival, I want to personally welcome you and invite you to enjoy the largest comedic event in the South.

DSI Comedy Theater works yearlong to produce the most thrilling festival possible and we are dedicated to supporting the local comedy scene so that the very best comedians in the country want to play here. I’m enormously proud of what this festival has accomplished since 2001 and I hope everyone reading this will have an opportunity to witness the immense amount of talent we’ll have in the Triangle during the month of February, to experience the community and, most importantly, to laugh.

If this is the first you’ve heard of the NC Comedy Arts Festival, let me take a moment to tell you what we do. For the last decade, NCCAF has welcomed comedy acts from across North America to showcase improv, sketch and standup comedy right here in the heart of North Carolina.

Each week the festival showcases a different comedy genre. This year we open with sketch comedy and film. Week two boasts some of the hottest up-and-coming standup acts on the road today and week three closes with a return to our roots with 26 incredible improv comedy shows featuring acts from New York, Chicago, Boston, Philadelphia, Toronto and North Carolina.

If you are returning as an audience member or participant, welcome back and thank you. Its dedicated comedy fans and artists like you that make this festival possible year after year.

And for the 2011 festival my company has decided to donate 10% of ALL proceeds to the Chapel Hill-Carrboro YMCA We Build People Scholarship Campaign.

If we Sold Out our Festival shows we could raise $10,000 for the YMCA! So buy a ticket TODAY for you and a family member, buy a block for people at work or click around the festival site and suggest shows for your friends to go see. Laugh Out Loud and help DSI make a difference in the community.

NCCAF Sketch Comedy (February 2-5), http://nccomedyarts.com/sketch

NCCAF Standup Comedy (February 9-13), http://nccomedyarts.com/standup

NCCAF Improv Comedy (February 16-20), http://nccomedyarts.com/improv

Thank you.

Are you a Freemason?

I’ve been captivated by FREEMASONRY for a long time — Over the last 30 years the square and compass kept surfacing: on books in family homes, on curiously dark buildings in ALL the towns I’ve ever lived in (we moved a lot), and a documentary about the Iron Workers Local that my grandfather belonged to in New York.

For Christmas I was gifted two books about Masons: First, an incredible published history about Masonic Lodge 19 and Second, Freemasons for Dummies (above: CLASSIC fireside literature).

Anyway, I have decided to officially start my search for the right local Masonic Lodge.

The symbols kept surfacing but recently the principles of Masonry have come into focus for me. I am motivated by the opportunity to do significant charitable work within the community; I would like to push my own moral uprightness; And I’m always enthusiastic about the idea of fraternity and unconditional support.

Are you a Freemason? Let me know. I’d like to talk about your lodge.

Extreme Social Reponsibility

extreme-makeover-FAIL

I was just reading the gawker article Extreme Makeover: Home Foreclosure Edition and I started to think about Corporate Social Responsibility and the phrase “The Road to Hell is paved with good intentions.” Yes, people who believe they are doing good can end up doing harm but, more to the point of this post, There is no value in simply planning to do good if you don’t actually do it. Or rather, for some advocates of families who were helped, if we are measuring good done against harm, what is acceptable?

Story after story tells the tale of families who had houses foreclosed because they took out Home Equity loans they could not repay or, in some cases, because they simply could not keep up with the higher utilities and tax assessments for their new “BIGGER & BETTER” used-to-be homes. (Wall Street Journal)

In one case (MSNBC 2005) a family of 5 orphans were the reason why ABC built a 9-bedroom home for a family. Within 5 months a lawsuit was brought against ABC because the 5 orphans were no longer welcome by the host family (who, because of the contract, had FULL ownership rights to the new home). Details of the case and circumstances are not clear, but it got thrown out of court because of the contract. Because of the contract? What about the motivation driving the show to begin with?

It seems like ABC gave a man a fish but did not TEACH anything. Reasonable single-family homes and follow-up counseling don’t require us to “MOVE THAT BUS!” Or at least, not a comically large bus.

I am a huge advocate for social equality but education must be a priority.

What are the next two steps of outreach? Three steps? Maybe four? Corporate efforts can no longer simply stop when it becomes inconvenient. Especially when our means to research and distribute dissent are more powerful than ever. How do Sears and other Extreme Makeover sponsors feel about all the press yesterday about the show “Downsizing” the McMansion development? What about all the tweets and Facebook links? I just read about the 2005 court case, 5 years later, and I got angry enough to write about it.

We can all agree that corporate alignment with a program that helps people like the Marshall Family can be an incredible marketing opportunity and good PR, But did they need this house? Or did the sponsors feel like THEY needed that house because WE needed that house, to justify watching the show?

Are there other shows or programs that jumped the charity shark? What does that mean? You know, Outreach that seems to help but doesn’t really complete the cycle of support. I know that budgets and time are always a factor but how can we ALL make sure that follow up is not just an after thought?

Also, I hate the lottery. Scratch tickets are the DEVIL /rant