Getting Organized, Round XXXIII

Getting Things Done is the closest I’ve ever come to getting organized and even that is a little to all consuming for me. Yes, I found it gave me piece of mind and time to think. Time to think about what else I should be worrying about getting done.

Let me said that the only reason I’ve even tried is 43 Folders and To-Done and that’s only because I’ve hung out with their proprietors. Organization for me is a state best achieved by peer pressure.

It is that kind of lemming-like trust in friends and their recommendations that brought me to this organizational system which I’m going to give a shot. Wish me luck. Or look out below because the cliff edge is already over my shoulders.

Katrina: Small Acts of Heroism

Although the small acts of kindness and heroism in the face of Hurricane Katrina are too numerous to count, this week’s episode of On The Media brought one to my attention I hadn’t considered. The program interviewed New Orleans Times-Picayune editor Jim Amoss who discussed how, emotionally but mostly physically, the paper is still publishing despite its facilities, staff and their families being buried under the flooding. Although the TP couldn’t produce a print issue during the first terrible days of the hurricane, it contintued publishing through its web site and via a PDF download. The editorial staff had left New Orleans crammed into a single news van and set up a ersatz office in Baton Rouge. In the meantine, reporters fanned out across the state to bring news of the disaster and its city’s attempts at survival back to the citizenry. Most of them reported at great personal sacrifice to themselves, short of food and water, not knowing whether their families were alive or dead. The TP reporter covering the Gulf Coast has not been heard from and is presumed missing.

I know these men and women are just doing their job but with these obstacles, their job and their unwavering belief in their fellow citizens right to know have taken on a heroism I couldn’t have imagined in my brief tenure working at a major daily newspaper. Now I can.

Listen to the program (mp3 file).

August Wilson Not Well:

August Wilson, one of the shining stars of American dramatics has terminal liver cancer and reportedly, has 3-5 months to live. The two time Pultizer Prize winner has spend the last two decades on a ten play cycle, one for each decade, that chronicles the the African-American experience in the 20th century.

In honor of Wilson, the NY Times reported yesterday that the Virginia Theater will be renamed the August Wilson Theater this fall. It’s the first Broadway theater to be named after an African-American. The honor puts wilson in a league with stage icons like Eugene O-Neil, Helen Hayes and George Gershwin.

I’ve been lucky enough to see several of August Wilson’s plays including Two Trains Running (1960s), The Piano Lesson (1930s) and Seven Guitars (1940s). He and his work were a gift to American Theater. They both will be deeply missed.

Bandnews Bad News:

Bandnews.org proports to be a customized news aggregator for info about your favorite band. Which is a great idea except

1) The database of bands is rather skimpy (Couldn’t they just license one from the AMG or hire a kid for $8 an hour to type in names?)

2) After creating my list of bands, I tried to create an RSS feed of my list. It didn’t work (I’m using NetNewsWire).

What up guys (via Waxy.org)?