Monday, January 11, 2010

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is home really where the heart is? who knows. i can't seem to make up my own mind.
5 goals for january:
1. find a job!!!
2. stop eating junk.
3. drink more water.
4. do homework every week.
5. finish applying to school in vancouver.

2 movie reviews:
it's complicated
- starring alec baldwin & merryl streep
- AMAZING....A MUST SEE!!!!!
- reminds me of my parents except they are still together after 26 years :)

love happens
- great beginning, boring middle, alright end
- have to admit - mr eckhart is so extremely sexy & jen aniston's wardrobe is so adorable. (oversized touques included)

anddddd one more
everyone go see the blindside with sandra bullock. she does better as a brunette but such a touching TRUE story. my ultimate favorite types of movies.

Sunday, January 10, 2010

Podcasts will be back soon! We promise!

Many apologizes to our listeners who have been asking, "Where are your podcasts?" They will be returning very soon - within the next few weeks!

As mentioned before on the blog, we had to temporarily cancel the podcasts due to CJSW's move to a new studio. During the move, the computers in the production room were out of commission. The production room is now set up and we are ready to start podcasting again soon.

We apologize again for the lack of podcasts, and thanks to all our listeners for subscribing to the podcasts and supporting Yeah, What She Said!

Saturday, January 9, 2010

Thursday, January 7, 2010

Goodbye, Marsha.


It is with a very heavy heart that I post this message today. One of Calgary's most beloved, inspiring and dedicated feminists has passed away. Marsha Ellen Meidow died on January 6th at 11:00pm of a serious brain aneurysm.

Marsha worked tirelessly to help young women in Calgary who were living on the streets, involved in prostitution, addicted to drugs, survivors of abuse, and so much more. These are the girls that no one else seemed to care about. Marsha also directed and produced the Vagina Monologues for many years in Calgary - and organized countless other events - all to raise money for young women at risk. In 2007 she received Calgary's Humanitarian of the Year Award.

Marsha was a survivor of abuse and overcame many obstacles in her life including drug addiction and life on the streets. She turned her own life around and was dedicted to helping other women do the same. She was an inspiration to all who knew her, and many described her as an angel on earth.

Calgary has indeed lost an angel. Our feminist community will never be the same without her. Our thoughts and hearts go out to Marsha's family and her husband, Tank.

We will never forget you.

Wednesday, January 6, 2010

Feminist Art as part of Calgary's First Thursdays


Calgary's monthly culture-crawl, First Thursdays, is tomorrow night and one of the features is this exhibit of superb feminist art and it's super affordable! Check out the details c/o www.firstthursdays.ca :

If Women Ruled the World

Venue / Location:
The Art Gallery of Calgary (117-8th Ave SW)
Repeats every day every Tuesday and every Wednesday and every Thursday and every Friday and every Saturday until Sat Jan 23 2010 .25 Sep 2009 (All day)

Ticket Price: $2.50-$5
LiveRush Price:$2
Event Description:
If Women Ruled the World: Judy Chicago in ThreadA Co-production between the Textile Museum of Canada (Toronto) and The Art Gallery of CalgaryArtists: Judy ChicagoMedium: Mixed MediaGallery: Main, Tall, Top North and South


Living legend of feminist art, Judy Chicago’s place on the landscape of contemporary textile practice is a significant one. Best known for her groundbreaking sculptural installation, The Dinner Party (1974-76), Chicago has spent decades exploring the possibilities of “thread as brushstroke”. The exhibition surveys some of Chicago’s most important contributions in cloth, highlighting both key and lesser-known works dating from 1971 to present. From macramé to needle point to airbrushed quilts, Chicago employs “technique as content” in her major projects selected for this survey exhibition including, The Birth Project (1980-1985), The Holocaust Project (1993), and Resolutions: A Stitch in Time (1994 to present). This exhibition centralizes the labour intensive nature of Chicago’s textile work as a metaphor for investing in the ideas, values, histories and provocation in her artwork. This unmistakable work of the hand draws attention to the possibilities of making as an explicitly political act. To this end, five artists who take this notion to heart are profiles alongside Chicago, underscoring her ongoing and unmistakable influence and creating an intergenerational dialogue with Chicago’s most recent work If Women Ruled the World (2008).

Allyson Mitchell is an artist and academic concerned with the intersections of feminist art, education, activism and theory. Working predominantly in textile-based sculpture, installation and film, Mitchell has exhibited her work in galleries and festivals across Canada, the US, Europe and East Asia. Her show, Lady Sasquatch, will be touring across Canada in 2009-2010. Allyson Mitchell has performed extensively with “Pretty Porky and Pissed Off”, a fat performance troupe, as well as publishing both writing and music. She recently completed her PhD in Women’s Studies at York University, where she teaches feminist cultural theory. When Women Rule the World: Judy Chicago and Cloth is her first major curatorial project.

She Will Always Be Younger Than UsArtists: Orly Cogan, Gillian Strong, Wednesday Lupypciw, Cat Mazza and Ginger Brooks Takahashi
She Will Always Be Younger Than Us brings together a selection of artists whose work counts among its influences the practice of Judy Chicago. Orly Cogan, Wednesday Lupypciw, Cat Mazza, Gillian Strong and Ginger Brooks Takahashi are young artists whose work is explicitly engaged with feminist politics through the use of textile, thread and fibre. Their work ranges from video to embroidery, performance and sculpture with the political intention to ignite politics and question culture.

what is love? baby don't hurt me, baby don't hurt me no more.

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ahhhh time to rip open the dusty psychology books and start & finish my paper on chronic pain today. yipee.

casa loma was fun but definitely overrated. nothing too crazy went down. and the lines....oh the lines. it was a sardine-packaging game just to get inside the castle after a good half an hour wait. ick. oh well new years is always overrated, next year i better be at a: 1) house party, 2) beach, or 3) cottage (cabin for those westerners). we didn't even get a glass of champagne but it's a good thing we chugged a bottle before we got there. so classy.

anyone in toronto-area know of a sweet job for me? i'm jobless and broke and on the look out for a good job! (aren't we all?) well until next time............ciao

Monday, January 4, 2010

Get Involved with Take Back the Night 2010

It's a brand new year, and if one of your resolutions is to get more involved in Calgary's feminist community, then this is your opportunity!
Take Back the Night is an annual event where women (and men) take to the streets and protest violence against women. Last year Calgary's event was organized by a grassroots group of local feminists. If you are interested in being a part of the 2010 planning committee, please visit Calgary's official Take Back The Night website.