Wednesday, January 30, 2013

Tri-State Airport Authority- Beat Report #1


Tri-State Airport Authority
People I talked to:
1) Beckie McKinley – Marketing Director for 14.5 years
2) Jerry Brienza- Airport Director for four years
Current projects:
1) Remodeling interior of airport
2) Looking to find replacement airline after departure of Delta in 2012.
3) Building more taxiways (major 2013 project)
4) Possible planning of new parking structure (very early, planning stages)
Huntington Tri-State Airport is referred to as a “little city” by airport employees. The facility has its own police department and fire department, as well as two restaurants (Tudors and Gino’s- to be opened soon). Tri-State Airport also has a jet center, used for private airplanes, and also is home to a FedEx building, where packages are sorted and shipped.


Future:
1) I plan on talking to the president of the Airport Authority, Kevin Gunderson.
            2) I also plan on getting to know the members of the airport police department and finding out information about what is actually reported to them as far as crime on airport property, as well as what the do on a day-to-day basis.

Monday, January 21, 2013

Inauguration 2013: Restoring faith in a younger generation


Watching the 57th Presidential Inauguration on Jan. 21, 2013

Barack Obama and Martin Luther King Jr. have a lot in common. They both lived their lives with a common theme -- you can achieve anything, as long as you set your mind to it and work hard.

From King's famous advocacy for equality among the races, to Obama fighting for equal rights for homosexuals, both of these men will go down in history as black men who saw something that needed to be changed, and worked hard to make it a reality. 

During King's notable 1963 speech, "all men are created equal," is a line he said which has gone down in history. Fifty years later, Obama followed up to the famous speech by being the first president to mention homosexuals in his inaugural speech.

"Our journey is not complete until our gay brothers and sisters are treated like anyone else under the law -- for if we are truly created equal, then surely the love we commit to one another must be equal as well," Obama said during his speech, which became a buzz, much like King's speech did 50 years ago.

All people, regardless of sex, race, sexual orientation or lifestyle, are created equal, and that is one belief both King and Obama want to restore to the country, especially the younger generations who will grow up to be the future of the United States.

Obama is the first black president the United States has ever seen, which is history in itself, showing the accomplishments King made on the world, but with his own fight for equality, he made sure his the 2013 inauguration would be one to remember.

The inauguration of the president of the United States is a long-standing tradition and an important part of our nation’s history.

The tradition's purpose is to honor the incoming president in a formal manner, allowing the citizens of the nation to witness history. 

The Presidential Inauguration has been a tradition in the United States for more than 200 years. It began in 1789 with the inauguration of George Washington as the United States' first president.

On Monday, President Barack Obama was publically sworn in as a part of the 57th Inaugural Ceremony.

The official, private swearing in was Sunday within the White House. This year marked the seventh time in United States history when the official inauguration day fell on a Sunday.

Monday was also Martin Luther King Jr. Day, an annual celebration of the life of one of the leaders of the 1960s Civil Rights Movement. The last time the public inaugural ceremony fell on Martin Luther King Jr. Day was in 1997, the day of President Bill Clinton’s second inauguration. 

While sitting on my couch Monday morning, I watched the inaugural ceremony on television, feeling more like an American than I had in a long time. However, while millions were sitting at home, more than 800,000 people were at the National Mall to witness the event, each with an American flag in hand, reminding viewers at home how united Americans can become, and we are not as divided as it may seem sometimes.

“No matter how many times one witnesses this event, its simplicity, its innate majesty and most of all its meaning that sacred yet cautious intrusting of power from ‘We the people’ to our chosen leader never fails to make ones heart beat faster as it will today with the inauguration of President Barack H. Obama,” Senator Chuck Schumer said during the opening remarks of the ceremony.

Both inaugurations of President Obama are important to the history of the United States, primarily because he is the first black president this nation has seen, and that itself shows the progress the United States has accomplished since King's time.

If it was not for the work of Martin Luther King Jr., there is a chance Obama would never have become president. Although King's life was cut short, he changed the world in ways he wanted, but probably never would have expected.

“Faith in America’s Future” was the theme for the 57th inauguration ceremony.

The theme represents “the perfect embodiment of this unshakable confidence in the ongoing success of our collected journey is an event from our past,” Chuck Schumer, New York senator said during the opening remarks of the ceremony.

The theme of the ceremony could also be related to King and all he did for civil rights in the 1960s. If it were not for him, it is possible none of those people would have been at the National Mall on Monday celebrating what could be considered a result of King's work.

Without our past, we would not have our present, or our future.

To have faith in America’s future means to have faith in the younger generations, which means the younger generations need to have faith in themselves and those around them.

“Americans have always been, and still are a practical, optimistic, problem solving people,” Schumer said. “America always rises to the occasion. America prevails and America prospers…those who bet against this country have inevitably been on the wrong side of history.”

Schumer’s speech had a tone saying America can do anything, and anyone who believes otherwise, will be proven wrong, because as a whole, the nation can achieve anything it sets its mind to, anywhere and at anytime.

“The opportunity to become whatever our mankind, our womankind allows us to be,” Myrlie Evers-Williams, a civil rights activist said during the ceremonial invocation. “This is the promise of America.”
Evers-Williams invocation gave the feeling to those in attendance as well as those watching at home that the United States gives everyone the chance to be what they want to be, which is because the freedom of America allows it.

The president’s inaugural speech had allusions to King's "I have a dream" speech given 50 years ago – an appropriate gesture in honor of the holiday honoring King and the public inauguration ceremony being on the same day.

The similarities of the two speeches could mean a couple of things -- things have not really changed in the 50 years since King stood at the podium, or things are changing in a positive way, but we have different, but related priorities today in 2013.

What these two men have in common is they both believe in people, and they believe everyone should have the same rights, and if everyone comes together, change can happen in a positive way.

Obama mentioned gay marriage – a topic widely discussed, which the president has publicly showed his support for, as well as equal rights for women during his speech – issues he will address during his second term as president.

President Obama is the first president to publicly address same-sex rights in a formal speech. The progress he has already accomplished in his first four years in office is a foreshadowing of the changes to come, hopefully within the next four years. 

"We hold these truths to be self-evident: that all men are created equal," King said in his famous speech. That line could be applied to black Americans in the 1960s or gay men and women today. The message is the same: we cannot stop until everyone has equal rights, regardless of their skin color, sexual orientation, or origin. 

These are subjects are things Obama is clearly passionate about, similar to King and his desire for equality between black and white Americans. Obama could even be considered a modern day version of King in this way. 

King was a strong advocate for civil rights and helped lead the Civil Rights Movement in the 1960s before being tragically assassinated in 1968.

The way King advocated for civil rights for black Americans in the 1960s is similar to how Obama is advocating for same-sex rights today, 50 years later.

King’s dreams stated in his famous 1963 speech are still in progress of becoming a reality, but with the help of President Obama, they are coming true.

If you believe in something, there is no way it cannot be a possibility. Strange things happen all the time, so dream big.

President Obama has a lot on his plate for the next four years, but millions of Americans have faith in him, just as he has faith in America.


----------------------
Sources used:

http://www.newseum.org/todaysfrontpages/default.asp (Jan. 21)

http://www.inaugural.senate.gov/

http://www.inaugural.senate.gov/about/facts-and-firsts

http://change.gov/learn/inauguration

http://www.archives.gov/press/exhibits/dream-speech.pdf (for reference)

Inaugural coverage on CNN


Wednesday, January 16, 2013

2013 Inauguration Day proposal- Assignment #3


To: Professor Morris
From: Rachel Ford

RE: Proposal for Inauguration Day

Scope: Research will be done about the life of Barack Obama and the history of the presidential inauguration. The inauguration of Obama will be on Jan. 21, 2013 this year, and will air live on television from 10:30 to 1:30 p.m. The inauguration services will include the swearing in ceremony, the Inaugural Parade and the official Inaugural Balls.

Need: The presidential inauguration only happens once every four years following the presidential election, and between those four years not much is mentioned about it. My goal is to inform people more about the presidential inauguration process, and why it is an important part of history.

Methods: Research the life and accomplishments of Obama during his first term as President and his time before that as a senator, as well as the history of the inauguration process in detail online using official websites, New York Times, other newspapers and academic databases. I will be watching the event live on television.

Sources: New York Times, local newspapers, Washington Post, Chicago Tribune, mostly for their different views on Obama being inaugurated again.
Barack Obama’s official website
EBSCOHost

Presentation: Presentation will be in the form of a New York Times style column posted on my blog, as well as discussion and possible live tweeting of the event as I watch it.

Follow-up: There is no plans for a follow-up at this time, but that final decision will be made based on reactions to initial column. 

JMC414 - Assignment #2

Assignment number two requires a summary analysis of two op-ed pieces found on the New York Times website.

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The first column I chose to analyze is "The Thinking Person's Entertainment" by Alissa Quart.


New York Times contributor, Alissa Quart, begins her op-ed piece "The Thinking Person's Entertainment" by naming a few of television's current most popular programs. According to Quart, some television shows on today, such as BBC's "Downton Abbey" encourage a lifestyle away from the technology many people use on a day to day basis, in exchange for finding "narrative order." Her lede drew people in simply by listing some of today's popular television shows, and did not require a lot of words to do so.

Television shows on the air today are different from those which aired in the 1980s and early 1990s, Quart said. Programming today can be more complex, with shows such as "Lost" or "Heroes" which make a habit of using flashbacks as part of the ongoing plot, causing the viewer to watch an entire series or season to understand what is going on. Older television shows, however, would often have a solved conflict during the allotted weekly timeslot. 

Quart referred to the shows with alternating timelines as "hyperlink television." She said these shows appealed to an audience more accustomed to the Internet due to the frequent back-and-forth nature of these shows. She also mentions these viewers watching several episodes of a television show at the same time thanks to todays Internet streaming abilities through iTunes, Netflix or Digital Video Recording devices. 

Quart's tone suggests she prefers these more complex shows which require loyal viewership rather than older television programs which focus on a different plot during each episode. She closes her column by saying many people prefer these narrative based programs because they make the hectic day-to-day lives of their viewers a little less hectic. 


~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

The second column I chose to analyze is 
"Guys and Dolls No More?" by Elizabeth Sweet.


Elizabeth Sweet's New York Times column entitled "Guys and Dolls No More?" focuses on gender equality and how it seems as if we are going back in time in terms of equality instead of moving forward. Her piece begins with asking the reader to imagine toy sections in retail stores of having racial or class oriented sections. That scenario, according to Sweet, is no different than the gender separation that happens in stores and in advertising nationwide. Her lede, although a bit wordy, gives an image for the reader and helps put in perspective the topic being discussed. 

Based on research done by looking at old catalogues and advertisements, Sweet said in the mid-1970s, very few products were marketed to either gender, but the trend came back during the '90s. The gender marketing stereotypes girls and boys, gearing "girl toys" such as products about beauty, the kitchen or anything with the color pink. Products such as anything involving building or the color blue are generally marketed toward boys.

Sweet is against this gender segregation tactic being used by companies and said the way boys and girls are raised with the idea that anything pink is just for girls and blue is just for boys, and she says in her column that today more than 70 percent of women are in the workforce and attempting to be treated equal to men, and that should start at a younger age, in the toy aisle. Otherwise, the gender equality movement will be pushed back even more than it already has.

Monday, January 14, 2013

First post!

This will be Rachel Ford's blog during the Spring 2013 semester for JMC414, Reporting Public Affairs.

My organization that I will be focusing on throughout the semester is the Tri-State Airport Authority.