Twitter Hall Of Fame (And Shame)
Posted on 12.05.11 by Danny Glover @ 7:42 am

Twitter has released its picks for the top 10 tweets of 2011. Some of them will make it into my new Tumblr-blog-in-progress, the Twitter Hall of Fame.

I’m covering the flip side of Twitter on a second Tumblr, the Twitter Hall of Shame. The “fame” blog recognizes previously unknown people who found their proverbial 15 minutes of fame through Twitter, and the “shame” blog is a memorial to famous folks — celebrities, politicians, athletes and more — who tweet before they think.

Feel free to recommend stories past, present and future for both blogs. Email your nominations to danny@enlightenedredneck.com.


Filed under: Blogging and Business and Social Media and Video
Comments: None

‘Must Be Able To Work Indecently’
Posted on 10.19.11 by Danny Glover @ 1:14 pm

I know the economy is bad, but is it so bad that people would be willing to consider a job where one of the skills required is this:

Must be able to work indecently, with minimal direct supervision.

I can see why someone who is willing to work indecently wouldn’t want much direct supervision. The job also requires “overnight travel” and a willingness to “embrace diversity.”

One laughable error in word choice makes the ad sound like something from an adult publication, but it’s actually a listing for … a food-safety specialist in Northern Virginia/Maryland. No pole-dancing required.

My guess is that the ad meant to say the employee “must be able to work independently.” Instead, we see what happens when all of the copy editors are downsized.


Filed under: 1980s and Adoption and Books and Business and Grammar and Just For Laughs and Media
Comments: None

‘Smartphones To Do Dumb Things’
Posted on 07.02.11 by Danny Glover @ 12:26 pm

Another winning commercial from the ad wizards at Geico, this one aimed at techies:

Geico needs to stick with that theme in it’s commercials rather than the lame “That’s Amazing” series also airing simultaneously. This mermaid ad in particular is weak tea:

While I’m talking TV ads (and smartphones), I love Samsung’s spider ad for the Infuse 4G:

I actually would have missed it the first time it aired in our home but for the woman’s scream. That will get your attention!


Filed under: Advertising and Business and Technology and Video
Comments: None

Experience Manassas Past
Posted on 06.06.11 by Danny Glover @ 10:25 am

My wife Kimberly is a new business owner. A few weeks ago, she decided she wants to offer historical walking tours, in antebellum garb, through Old Town Manassas.

She took to the task of starting her business with gusto and made her debut appearance in costume yesterday at the annual Manassas Railway Festival. I took photos at the event and created a slideshow. Enjoy it … and if you’re in the Washington, D.C., area and would like to join Kimberly on the premier walk come July 30, you can reach her at 571-425-2888.

Please also like the Manassas Past page on Facebook and follow us on Twitter. All good rednecks should know their history, and you can help us share it with others!


Filed under: Business and Culture and History and Photography and Travel and Video
Comments: None

Why I Won’t Buy Oreo Fudge Cremes
Posted on 04.18.11 by Danny Glover @ 8:28 pm

As our young children and I watched television Saturday evening, I saw a commercial for a new product called Oreo Fudge Cremes. My sweet tooth was sold by the visuals in the ad, and I told the kids we would have to buy these fudge-coated cookies soon.

But a few hours later, after the kids were in bed and my wife and I were watching TV, the commercial played again. This time my ears heard the words of the ad, and I was not impressed.

The specific words that caught my attention, an exclamation uttered by the mother in the ad, were “Shut the front door!” They may look innocuous in written form, but the inflection in the mother’s voice and the context of the ad made me think she was sending an entirely different message — and a vulgar one at that — to myself and millions of other viewers.

The “f” in “front” sounded like code for the “f” in a four-letter word — one of the few dirty words the FCC still won’t let people say on TV.

I had never heard the euphemism “shut the front door” to imply “shut the [expletive] up” before, so I gave Nabisco the benefit of a doubt. Before making an unfair judgment, I Googled “shut the front door”; I was not surprised by the results.

That I had to turn to the Urban Slang Dictionary and Online Slang Dictionary to answer my question speaks volumes about the etymology of the phrase. But what I learned is that proud-to-be-crude radio host Jason (Buckethead) Bailey coined the phrase precisely as a way to curse while avoiding FCC sanctions for indecency on the air.

I also learned that the makers of the Oreo ad clearly knew this and willfully chose to degrade America’s commercial culture another notch. The ad immediately caught the attention of advertising industry experts, undoubtedly part of the target audience.

The Adweek analysis gets to the heart of why I hate this Oreo ad so much: “Mom’s ‘Shut the front door’ line will surely be repeated in actual, nonhyperbolic families during the course of the spot’s TV run.”

Yes, and our impressionable, home-schooled children, who know neither the f-word nor the subtle techniques of worldly ad wizards, may be among those who repeat it in ignorance, thinking it’s just a goofy exclamation. And they may think me a fuddy-duddy for insisting that saying “shut the front door” makes people hear something they wouldn’t want to say.

“That’s distracting and not really humorous, at least to this mom,” Dallas Morning News arts editor Leslie Snyder said after she saw the ad.

So Nabisco, you hooked me with the promise of a tasty new treat, but you blew it with your too-clever-by-half ad strategy. Don’t expect to sell any Oreo Fudge Cremes to my family — and do expect me to warn our wholesome friends that you’re no longer a family-friendly advertiser.


Filed under: Advertising and Business and Food and Home Schooling and Parenting and Video
Comments: 16 Comments

The Mechanical Incompetence Of VRE
Posted on 11.24.10 by Danny Glover @ 11:29 am

This was my life yesterday morning, which ended in my wife having to drive 30 miles round trip to rescue me and a stranded friend so we could salvage part of the workday:

Tuesday morning’s commute for riders of Virginia Railway Express went from bad to worse as first an engine failure then a brake malfunction stranded 1,600 commuters 20 miles outside of Washington and caused at least a two-hour delay for Manassas Line riders.

It all started when Train 328 broke down between the Manassas Park and Burke Centre stations around 8 a.m. The following train, No. 330, was coupled to it and its engine began hauling both trains roughly 45 minutes later, according to VRE.

But the aging engine wasn’t powerful enough to push the 14-car load up a hill heading into Burke. So in a scene straight out of the children’s tale, “The Little Engine that Could,” the chained-together trains backed up and “throttled up at a higher speed to get over the ridge,” according to spokesman Mark Roeber.

After pulling into the station around 9 a.m. the coupled train’s warning system signaled a brake failure. Cabs and buses were dispatched to the station to take riders into Washington or to a nearby Metro station, while some passengers opted to wait for the problem to be fixed. Others simply gave up and went home.

I reported the news on my Facebook and Twitter feeds as it happened, including posting the photo above of the scene at Burke Center just after passengers started bailing on VRE en masse.

As the Examiner noted, yesterday’s nightmare was not an isolated incident. Persistent breakdowns and delays, including two nightmares that I avoided last week thanks to VRE email alerts and a loving wife-turned-emergency-responder, have plagued the Manassas Line since summer. I have a loyal readership of Facebook friends and Twitter followers who love reading about the misery in real time.
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Filed under: Business and D.C. Commuter Diary and Government and News & Politics
Comments: None

The End Of The Great Recession
Posted on 10.29.10 by Danny Glover @ 6:30 pm

The Great Recession is now officially history — and part of journalistic history. This month the Associated Press added the term to the AP Stylebook, which is gospel in media circles.

Here’s how AP defines the negative economic milestone: “The recession that began in December 2007 and became the longest and deepest since the Great Depression of the 1930s. It occurred after losses on subprime mortgages battered the U.S. housing market. The National Bureau of Economic Research said it officially ended in June 2009, having lasted 18 months.”

Doesn’t that make you feel so much less depressed and recessed?


Filed under: Business and History and Media and News & Politics
Comments: None

Leaf Oil Trumps VRE Locomotion
Posted on 10.21.10 by Danny Glover @ 10:16 pm

The U.S. Postal Service has no official creed, but it has this inspiring myth going for it: “Neither snow, nor rain, nor heat, nor gloom of night stays these couriers from the swift completion of their appointed rounds.”

The Virginia Railway Express could use a strong dose of postal pride because today we riders received an uninspiring, excuse-filled message from the CEO about how we can expect bad weather to make our lives miserable. Rain and the flash-flood warnings it occasionally brings are the bane of his existence.

“While we all know it, it is easy to forget what a strong force water can be,” CEO Dale Zehner wrote in his monthly e-mail. “Flash floods can cause instability in the tracks. Or worse, depending on the force of the water, a flash flood can wash out a section of tracks. Because of this, Norfolk Southern’s operating rules require all passenger trains to operate at restricted speed, under 15 mph. For our Manassas Line riders, this can be quite a long commute.”

Tell me about it. I lived that nightmare commute a few times during the summer. The bad news is that I may have to endure it again this fall, this time because of something worse than mere water — leaf oil. Here is Zehner’s explanation:

In autumn if leaves are falling at a time when there are significant amounts of rain and wind, the falling wet leaves end up on the tracks. Wet leaves then stick to the rails like a bad case of static cling. As the trains roll over the leaves, the wheels act as press that extracts the oil from the leaves, which then cause an extremely slick set of tracks. Our long-term riders on the Manassas Line know that when that set of tracks is an uphill grade, delays can be extensive, even worse than flash-flood restrictions.

In other words, we may be living in the 21st century, but leaf oil still trumps locomotion.

I have the sinking feeling that I’ll be getting another batch of unwanted free-ride certificates from VRE over the next few weeks because of extra hours on the train. The question is how many hours I will endure before I decide I’d rather drive to work and fight the highway traffic.


Filed under: Business and D.C. Commuter Diary
Comments: None

The End Of The ‘Thomas The Train’ Era
Posted on 08.24.10 by Danny Glover @ 9:55 pm

Our family made a quick run to the local Barnes & Noble bookstore last night so I could buy “The Facebook Effect” for the book club my employer, the David All Group, is hosting on, wait for it, Facebook.

After finding my book, I wandered back to the children’s section to see what our kids were doing. The older two, the ones who know how to read, were looking at their favorite series of books; our youngest, 5-year-old Catie, was at the “Thomas & Friends” station.

That’s when it hit me that our last toddler won’t be a toddler much longer. She starts her first full year of school at the Glover Home School this week, and soon she’ll be reading and shopping for books. She won’t have any interest in the “Thomas & Friends” display at Barnes & Noble that has been a part of our family for the past decade.

Kimberly and I used to fuss over which of us would stay at the station to watch the kids play while the other shopped for books. Now that my baby is about to be a big girl, I wish I had spent more time with all of the kids. I blinked, and now those days are almost gone forever.

I’m thinking we should make Barnes & Noble a regular stop over the next year or so. I’ll let Kimberly shop for books the whole time while I enjoy my baby girl before she gets too big to care about Thomas and his locomotive friends.


Filed under: Books and Business and Family and Parenting
Comments: None

VRE Confessional
Posted on 08.20.10 by Danny Glover @ 6:25 pm

Truer words about Virginia Railway Express were never spoken than these by VRE chief executive Dale Zehner in the latest “Train Talk” e-mail distributed yesterday: “This summer has been a difficult one for VRE staff and riders alike.”

In a span of less than two months, I earned seven free-ride certificates because of lengthy VRE delays. Two were the result of train breakdowns ahead of the one I was riding and a third was caused by a power failure on my train. Flash-flood warnings forced VRE to putt along at about five miles an hour during two other commutes. I’ve forgotten what caused the other two delays.

All but two of the delays occurred in the evenings, so they seriously cut into my family time during the week. All told, I lost more than seven hours of my life, basically an extra work day, because VRE couldn’t get its act together.

Before all the troubles started, I was a VRE fan; now I’m a perpetual critic of the system, on this blog, Facebook and my Twitter account (@Danny_Glover). I hope Zehner was serious when he wrote this:

Don’t think for a second that I take your loyalty for granted, because I don’t. No one at VRE does. You are the driving force for what we do here at VRE. I pledge to you that VRE is determined to make improvements, earn back your trust in us to get you to work and home, safely and on-time.

VRE already has lost my loyalty — the only reason I’m still riding is because I’d lose at least twice as many hours of my life driving into Washington or to the Metro every day — and it definitely will have to earn my trust again.


Filed under: Business and D.C. Commuter Diary and People
Comments: None

The Birthday Waffle Makers
Posted on 08.17.10 by Danny Glover @ 10:35 pm

This year for my wife’s birthday, the children made waffles in Mommy’s new gift, a Belgian waffle maker. I forced them to decorate and wear birthday aprons.

They weren’t too thrilled about starring in the video, but Lord willing, we’ll all enjoy watching it together 20 years from now.

I also edited another family video over the weekend, one of my 10-year-old son mowing our lawn for the first time. I had him in mind last week when I replaced our dead mower with a self-propelled version that has an adjustable height setting.

Anthony is eager to start a lawn business so he can buy electronic games. We’re teaching him to save a large chunk of his earnings and to reinvest in his business by buying other tools. But if the desire to buy the latest gadgets motivates him to do hard work, the mower will be a worthwhile investment not just for our own lawn but for his character.


Filed under: Business and Family and Parenting and Video
Comments: None

A Valedictorian Educates Her Educators
Posted on 08.08.10 by Danny Glover @ 8:47 pm

Last month at Coxsackie-Athens High School in Coxsackie, N.Y., an 18-year-old girl who rose to the top of her graduating class embraced her valedictory speech as an opportunity to deliver a pointed message to the educational system that molded her.

“School is not all that it can be,” Erica Goldson told her teachers and school administrators, her peers and their parents. “Right now, it is a place for most people to determine that their goal is to get out as soon as possible.” Her speech has created a minor buzz online.

I don’t agree with every gripe Goldson voiced. Most children need educational goals to excel, and tests are the best way to gauge student progress toward those goals. Based on the awkward delivery (see the video below), I also doubt that Goldson spoke from her own inspiration. I suspect that an adult who hates authority, structure and the “evil corporate world” unduly influenced her.

But as a whole, her speech is worth a read. Here are some of the high points:

  • I cannot say that I am any more intelligent than my peers. I can attest that I am only the best at doing what I am told and working the system. … I did what I was told to the extreme.
  • I excelled at every subject just for the purpose of excelling, not learning. And quite frankly, now I’m scared.
  • Between these cinderblock walls, we are all expected to be the same. We are trained to ace every standardized test, and those who deviate and see light through a different lens are worthless to the scheme of public education, and therefore viewed with contempt.
  • Our motivational force ought to be passion, but this is lost from the moment we step into a system that trains us, rather than inspires us.
  • We are thinkers, dreamers, explorers, artists, writers, engineers. We are anything we want to be — but only if we have an educational system that supports us rather than holds us down. A tree can grow, but only if its roots are given a healthy foundation.


Filed under: Business and Culture and Home Schooling and News & Politics and People and Video
Comments: None

Journalism TBD
Posted on 08.07.10 by Danny Glover @ 12:01 pm

Journalism has been in a state of upheaval for years. The Federal Trade Commission, the Federal Communications Commission and people in the news business will tell you that the future of media in the digital age is still to be determined.

“To be determined” — sounds like a great name for a news outlet. And it is. TBD.com, a local news venture funded by the same company that built Politico, will go online in the Washington region next week.

I was immediately intrigued when the talk of the as-yet-unnamed TBD started in media circles several months ago. TBD had big money in the bank (from Allbritton Communications), and it had a digital news visionary at the helm (Jim Brady, who built washingtonpost.com). I also was ending a contract job at the time and eager to work in local journalism again, so I tried mightily to join the TBD team.

Alas, with so many qualified journalists in the Washington area looking for work, I never made the cut. So like many others, I’m relegated to watching from the sidelines as TBD tries to win the game of media innovation in a changing marketplace.

I like what I’ve seen and heard so far. For the past few months, TBD has been focused on building a network of more than 100 local bloggers whose work will supplement TBD’s original reporting. And yesterday, TBD shared more of its plans for rewriting the future of news. Here’s a recap by tweet from Steve Myers of Poynter Online:
(more…)


Filed under: Blogging and Business and Media and Technology
Comments: 2 Comments

Making Lemonade Out Of Bureaucratic Lemons
Posted on 08.07.10 by Danny Glover @ 8:36 am

A couple of weeks ago, our 5-year-old daughter opened a lemonade stand for a day at Mamaw’s house in my hometown. She probably broke a local ordinance when she did, but Paden City, W.Va., doesn’t have a Lemonade Police Unit. Portland, Ore., apparently does:

It’s hardly unusual to hear small-business owners gripe about licensing requirements or complain that heavy-handed regulations are driving them into the red.

So when Multnomah County shut down an enterprise last week for operating without a license, you might just sigh and say, there they go again.

Except this entrepreneur was a 7-year-old named Julie Murphy. Her business was a lemonade stand at the Last Thursday monthly art fair in Northeast Portland. The government regulation she violated? Failing to get a $120 temporary restaurant license.

A county official later apologized for the actions of a health inspector on a power trip. “I just feel like we have to be able to distinguish between a 7-year-old who is selling lemonade and trying to learn about business and someone who actually has a business,” Jeff Cogen said.

Ya think?


Filed under: Business and Family and Food and Government and News & Politics and West Virginia
Comments: None

How To Name A Redneck Restaurant
Posted on 07.16.10 by Danny Glover @ 12:32 pm

You can specialize in Persian cuisine and still be a redneck. The proof is in this Falls Church, Va., restaurant’s simple yet descriptively eloquent name:

And if you eat Persian food, as I do occasionally, that makes you an enlightened redneck. Ironically, Meat In A Box isn’t far from my first home in the Washington, D.C., area. I may have to make a trek to the old neighborhood to give it a try. I need more hummus in my diet.


Filed under: Business and Food and Rednecks
Comments: 1 Comment

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