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culture

Bittersweet

by tomlucier on January 6, 2010

There’s something special about a labour of love.
By it’s own description, you do it for more than the immediate reward outside of personal satisfaction.

I have so many labour-of-love projects that it reads like a laundry list.
I’m only now realizing that the acronym of that is LOL Projects. Certainly, the world of paid journalists and talents are laughing out loud at me while I toil away at these things.

My list of unpaid fun: (I love lists)
CBC Radio Windsor – Weekly Culture Column
Squeezebox Podcast – Weekly podcast
Show Up Podcast – Indefinite publishing of weekly cultural interviews
CJAM Radio Show – “Not In My Backyard” – Weekly Windsor/Detroit cultural conversations and interviews
The Ampersand (National Post Arts & Culture Blog) – RARE blog posts about Windsor cultural folks
TomLucier.com – Duh. This blog.

There’s clearly several of these commitments on the chopping block.
Jhoan and I have a child due to arrive in late February. God knows I’ll be super-obsessed with my new role as Dad, and that these free projects will disappear indefinitely or forever. But in the interim, I still need to feed my wife and child during her year off, and hopefully save money throughout the life of this new, perfect person.

This reflection catalyzes all kinds of realization about other talented people in my life, community, or professional circle.

Jamie Greer has recently sworn off writing about music. This is a tragedy. Plain and simple. He’s the most knowledgeable, intriguing, and hilarious music writer anywhere near these parts. And he’s stopping. I used to be in a position where I would try to light a fire under him, and push him to keep it up. But now, I don’t blame him.

He’s been writing for little or no money, for far too long. And he deserves to be paid well for his contributions.

With the recent six-year anniversary of Phog Lounge having gone by, we set up a projector and flashed photos of Phog regulars from years gone by. While nostalgic, this was a tragic reminder of how many gifted people we’ve lost to the big cities around the world.

As much as we want to keep these gifted people within the city limits, we will continue to bleed talent if we don’t pay for it.

This all leads me to an understanding that you can only do so much for free before you begin to resent those that profit (in one way or another) because of your willingness to give.

2009 was a year of free. From me to others. February marks the end of that gifting. It feels exciting to prepare for that end, but super-sad because of the fun that will be missed in playing a role in the Windsor cultural community to the level that I have tried to play.

Without being compensated for the efforts I feel that I’ve developed sufficiently beyond where I was in 2008, I will be respectfully saying no to most projects, unless they call to me on a one-time basis for something I love.

And to finish this piece, I’d like to shortlist a group of at-risk contributors who I fear Windsor is also at risk of losing when they eventually hit that wall of frustration from non-compensation. These are off the top of my head. Basically, these are people who I’m aware of and who I think are underpaid (or not paid) for what they do in Windsor’s cultural scene:
Michael Poirier (film)
Jolie Inthavong (film)
Sean Tighe (film)
Murad Erzinclioglu (music, art, film)
Owen Wolter (photography, reporting)
Gus Morin (you name it)
George Manury (music)
Dan Bombardier (art)
Stephen Hargreaves (reporting, music, art)

Okay, getting depressed. I’m stopping.

Question to leave you with.
When do you know you’re giving away something you shouldn’t?

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Phog WalkED Detroit

by tomlucier on September 28, 2009

The domed roof of the Charles H. Wright Museum of African American History

The domed roof of the Charles H. Wright Museum of African American History

So our walk happened.
It was based in the cultural center of Detroit, around the Detroit Institute of Arts, The Detroit Public Library, The Scarab Club, WDET 101.9 FM, Wayne State University, and the like.
I’ll link HERE TO THE PHOTOS of the walk. There’s a bunch, and they’re on Flickr.
I’ll put a link at the bottom of the page also.

Detroit Public Library, Second Floor, Panorama

Detroit Public Library, Second Floor, Panorama

We went forth on September 12th, 2009, and emerged into the U.S. with less than half of the official respondents to the Facebook group. 18 of us eventually got to our meeting place (Phog Lounge) and managed to get to Detroit. E-mails were sent to me while the group was waiting to travel explaining that hang-overs, lethargy, and scheduling conflicts were preventing some from attending.

Thank goodness we had enough drivers show up for the ones who were still too intoxicated from the night before to drive.

When we met Bob Goldsmith at the back entrance to the Detroit Public Library, we really didn’t know what we were going to be seeing. “Midtown” is a new place for us. Cass Corridor is a place we hear horror stories about from the saltier folks we know. Bob changed all that.

We started by visiting the Detroit Public Library’s innards, which were stunning and ornate beyond our expectations. I’ll post photos. From there we headed through a series of places previously undiscovered by the group including The African American Museum of History, The College of Creative Studies, The Detroit Science Center, Detroit Medical Center, neighbourhoods frozen in time (like Ferry Street, Canfield Ave.), Avalon Bakery, Cass Cafe, The Bronx Bar, and more.

Canfield Street. Frozen in time with old homes and cobblestone streets

Canfield Street. Frozen in time with old homes and cobblestone streets

We finished our illusion-shattering trip, which started at 11:15am, with a visit to Dally In The Alley, around 2pm. This festival takes place on and around a little block of Cass Corridor right near Bronx Bar. It travels, like water, into the most convenient caveats, into the alleys around the area in question.

We know how big the Detroit suburbs are, and how the general public of those spaces USE Detroit-proper as a playground to be left desolate each evening. But even with that truth, there are people LIVING and making LIFE happen in Detroit. Many of them make sure they attend Dally In The Alley.
I bumped into a few of them..friends of Phog. It was great to see some familiar Detroit faces. They were proud of their city, and they knew about our walk, and they were eager to know what the group thought. Most of us could only shake our heads, shrug, and make faces to show we were impressed.

I wound up buying two woodblock prints from Kevin O’Rourke (Crown Vic Productions)
and I’m absolutely thrilled with them in my possession rather than displayed in that alley.

This was another one of those events that was made exclusively by the people who went on the walk. The participators. That title should be said as if you’re announcing a comic book hero…PARTICIPATORS! Not enough is said about the people who choose to be a part of something. To show up. To make memories. To make connections. To be a part of the thing that makes the NEXT thing.

Thank you to David Ziriada who made the walk happen. And thank you to Bob Goldsmith who ran the tour. Mostly, I am thankful for the people who walked. You know who you are.

By the way, we have booked another walk, which will be free. This walk was a WHOPPING $10 U.S….hahaha…which was easily worth every red cent. The next walk will be dependent only on how many drivers we can secure, as it will be a drive/walk Walk. It is scheduled for Saturday, October 17th. Want in? E-mail me at phoglounge@gmail.com

Again, here’s the LINK TO THE PHOTOS of the first Phog Walks Detroit.

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Phog Walks Detroit

by tomlucier on September 9, 2009

I have put out a Facebook invite for an incredible walk taking place in Detroit.
Bob Goldsmith of Detroit Tour Connections is hosting the two-hour tour.
The tour will be in the area of Cass Corridor…a richly interesting space, which will lead us to the Dally in the Alley festival.

Here’s the details of the walk, according to Bob:
“I think we should meet at the main branch of theDetroit Public Library. The address is 5201 Woodward. Let’s meet at the rear (west) entrance, which is on Cass. People can park on Cass, or on Kirby. “Midtown” is a pretty large area of Detroit that includes the Cass Corridor, Brush Park, the Detroit Medical Center, the large campus of WSU, and the Cultural Center area.

We’re mostly going to tour the Cultural Center area. Our two hour tour will include: Hecker mansion and other homes from the late 1800s; the DPL, DIA, Park-Shelton and Maccabees Bldgs from the 1920s; the Historical Museum; the Detroit Science Center; the Charles H. Wright Museum; the Scarab Club; the College for Creative Studies; and a few of the buildings on WSU’s campus.

The Dally has a website — www.dallyinthealley.com. It includes a map and directions … but the best bet is probably to mapquest 5201 Woodward if we are going to meet at the main branch of the Detroit Public Library. People can take I-75 north to Warren, and then take Warren west to Woodward or to Cass,
or they can just take Woodward from downtown Detroit to the Cultural Center area.”

We will meet initially at Phog Lounge at 9:45am. We will leave by 10am on our way to the Detroit Public Library. If you want to come, you must e-mail me at phoglounge@gmail.com or message me on Facebook (Tom Lucier). If you can drive…good…if you can’t, we still have room in some cars heading over. And you need your Passport to attend.

THIS SATURDAY!!! We already have over 20 people coming, so there will be tons of opportunities to make friends from Windsor along with the endless opportunities to meet your American reflections during the walk. I think it’s going to be an important first step in creating a very important community that is almost non-existent…the cross-border cultural community.

Personally, I feel that this is a KEY and CRUCIAL event for community leaders to be a part of, in order to initialize, strengthen, and solidify our relationships and understanding of our American brethren.
If you find yourself to be a leader here in Windsor, I really think it’s a good time to start thinking about sharing your strengths with people across the way, who know little or nothing about this community of artists, musicians, and doers.

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One of the best culture columns yet, if I do say so myself.
Broken City Lab’s new Text In-Transit idea blows me away. This was my way of bringing it to light to an audience who may not find out about it otherwise.

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