Wednesday, February 28, 2007

Later!

Hello Readers:

This will be my last post as editor of Spare Change News. I've been here for nearly two years now, with a total of 6 years in Boston. Far from a native of this fine state, I am originally from Seattle, and now I'm moving back there.

My shoes are being filled by Dave Hadden, who, when he gets on his feet, will make sure the SCN blog still kicks and screams. Wish him luck and keep an eye on the paper. He has some great ideas that I'm sure will be expressed within the pages of our upcoming issues.

If you want to hit me up, you can reach me at paul.rice AT gmail.com. I'd love to hear from you.

That's it! Take care,



-Paul

Thursday, February 22, 2007

Celluloid Spare Change News

Thanks to JD Marlow and Aimee Rivera, there is a beautifully shot and edited documentary about Spare Change now available for viewing on the world wide wetlands! Watch out for my neckbeard! It's a doozy!

Tuesday, February 20, 2007

2.15.07 Edition of Spare Change News



We're a bit late with this update, so forgive us. The issue is selling like hotcakes and we've been too busy counting our hill of dimes!

Seriously, this is a real nice issue, with articles looking at a whole spectrum of topics, including ATHF bombs, City Council homelessness wrangling, GLBT homeless teenagers, as well as sexy oil paintings in Cambridge! Now that's diversity in action. Thanks to Sarah Esposito for writing the teasers:

Art Bomb$?
An art critic takes a look at the infamous ATHF campaign that turned into a bomb scare. Kate Ledogar blames the Neo-liberal, globalized economy for this debacle and argues that Turner Broadcasting was truly victorious in marketing their movie and getting free publicity on national news. Our lives are already surrounded by advertising and marketing, how much further can we let it go?

Cambridge Artists Oil Up
Two local artists Tom Tipton and Deborah M. Priestly, co-owners of the Out of the Blue Art Gallery, open their talents to the community in this new show. Tipton and Priestly tell their personal stories in their paintings while tying in the local community, from the Charles to Cambridge.

Homelessness On The Rise Among Gay Youth
A new study released by the National Gay and Lesbian Task Force shows that at least forty percent of homeless youth identify as Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual or Transgender (LGBT). What are the factors playing into LGBT youth becoming homeless? What are proactive steps we can take towards solving this epidemic?


And we're out! Enjoy.

Tuesday, January 30, 2007

2.1.07 Edition of Spare Change News



Find these and other delights in the upcoming issue of Spare Change News (out Thursday, February 1st, at a vendor near you):

Incommunicado

Residents in certain mental health facilities are granted the right to telephones and uncensored mail, yet they are not allowed the right to basic web access and email accounts. Advocates work to make this a fundamental right in Mental Health Wards.

Reflections on Black History Month

Local Black voices express their dreams and inspirations relating to Black History Month. Hear about the challenges these writers faced as minorities growing up in White America.

Housing Feud Ignites

Cambridge Housing Authority (CHA) presents controversial new plan for the city’s public housing. Local residents feel they are not being represented fairly and are not well informed by the CHA about meetings or changes. Changes include restrictions on how Cambridge residents are defined.


Till next time,


-SCN

(Update written by Sarah Esposito, SCN's talented editorial intern!)

Friday, January 19, 2007

Homeless Heat Mapping in Los Angeles

We got a link from a friend about a "Homeless Heat Map" he helped create to track homeless populations in downtown LA. Here is an image of the map, and his notes on it:



From George Mokray:

Back on December 5th Cartifact launched the Downtown Homeless Map and
I got to write about the process here. The project takes LAPD Central
Division's bi-weekly homeless counts and turns the data into a map,
visually telling the story of changes in Downtown's street population.

Today we've put online a new version of the maps, using a radically
different methodology for showing the data. Instead of the dots of
the old maps, this version takes the data and turns it into a "heat
map" that shows the density of the population in different areas.
More about the new style after the jump...

Interesting to note, though, is the way in which temperature affects
the number of people on the street. It's cold outside, and has been
for several days now. The count for January 15th (Monday) was down
271 people from January 2nd. It got cold and the people who could
find somewhere to go did so.

I think the main thing this new style brings is a more instant
understanding of what's going on. The dots made an interesting
picture, and one that did work to tell the story, but in the end they
generated a lot of questions. Real world data collection inevitably
means compromises in your methodology, and in this case it led to
confusing results like dots showing up on top of other dots.

Aside from just looking cool, the heat map was a tecnically
interesting thing to create. The process involved taking irregular
point data and generating an approximated surface from it. That
surface data was then brought back into the GIS and the statistical
models were tweaked this way and that until they generated something
that felt true to the situation on the streets.

Update (9pm): A little on the technical side...

To generate the approximated surface I'm using surfit, an open-source
gridding application. Initially I was struggling because the data I
get only has positive points -- there are no zero points to bring the
elevation back to the plane in areas where no homeless were counted.
I eventually figured out how to normalize the computation against a
flat area I set up that covers Downtown.

Once I have the surface grid from surfit I use VTBuilder from the
Virtual Terrain Project to georeference that data and clean out
really low data (elevations less than 0.5 or so). VTBuilder outputs
an Arc ASCII GRD file and I pull that back into ArcGIS.

The color ramp is applied against a set of baseline statistics that
don't change count to count.

---

View the map for yourself here.

Tuesday, January 16, 2007

1.18.07 Edition of Spare Change News



Did you miss us? Probably not, but that's ok, we'll get over it..

Yes, we got a bit lazy around the holiday season and failed to update the blog FOR WEEKS! OH MY. This internet thing is serious business and sometimes we get the proverbial tube-flavored ADHD.

Anyways, we are back with a little teaser for the next issue, coming out this Thursday. It's pretty, no? And yes, we are still salivating over the arrival of Deval Patrick. Don't worry, we'll get over it.

Also, if you haven't noticed, some of our vendors are rocking trendy new SCN aprons! We'll try and get some pictures on the blog. These aprons will help you identify who is legit and who is not (although some vendors are reticent about wearing them – they don't want to be mistaken for chefs!).

Anyways, business is as usual around here. We may have some more insanity coming up though, so watch out!

TEASING COMMENCES NOW:

No Standing Still: The Story of Eric Weinberger

A look at the life of an old SCN friend, and a cofounder of Food Not Bombs, and many more local service establishments. Read about Eric's life and accomplishments. There weren't few.

Riding the New Wave

Homeless people build sail boats out of New York City scrap and then sail them to Ireland? Is this for real? Yes, yes, in fact it is.

Plus all the usual trappings you've come to associate with our glorious niche-filling rag. Get to it!


-SCN

Tuesday, December 19, 2006

Tim Hobson Sings The Unholy Blues.



Some friends over at Emerson College just finished a project on homeless artists, and our very own Tim Hobson was among those profiled!

Head over to Beyond Bread, the project's website and read Tim's story and listen to his song. This man is a musical genius and we're proud that he's a part of our family.

Friday, December 15, 2006

Opie & Anthony Churn Under Homeless Limelight


Opie & Anthony, New Jersey's shocking jocks.

Yesterday we received a press release about Opie & Anthony, the network shock jocks who inherited Stern's airtime, and their upcoming and apparently annual Homeless Shopping Spree. We'll let you read it so you can see what the hullabaloo is about:




For Immediate Release Contact: Matt Noyes

December 14, 2006
mnoyes @ ahc.org



Dehumanization Has No Place On Boston Radio

This coming weekend, WBCN Boston is planning to broadcast an event that degrades and humiliates homeless individuals for the perverse amusement of the listening audience. The AIDS Housing Corporation is calling on concerned persons to contact WBCN to urge them not to broadcast this disgusting spectacle.

On Saturday, December 16, radio disc jockeys Opie (Gregg Hughes) and Anthony (Anthony Cumia) will broadcast their annual “Homeless Shopping Spree” at the Short Hills Mall in Short Hills, New Jersey. The “Opie and Anthony Radio Show” is a nationally syndicated show, broadcast locally on WBCN Boston (104.1 FM) and nationally via satellite on XM Satellite Radio.

The so-called Homeless Shopping Spree, which has been held on a number of previous occasions, takes several homeless individuals from New York City and transports them via bus to a shopping mall in a local affluent community. During the trip, Hughes, Cumia and their cohorts provide alcohol to the homeless persons, give them degrading nicknames such as “Tippy Tom,” “Sperm,” and “Buttered Roll,” and generally ridicule them on the air.

Hughes and Cumia’s listeners are encouraged by the radio hosts to give the homeless men money in order to get them to shop at the high-end retail stores in the mall. The men are recorded both with audio and video equipment in the mall and are given a constant supply of liquor.

According to the December 14 broadcast of the Opie and Anthony Radio Show, well over 2,000 persons are expected at the Short Hills Mall to witness the degradation of these men.

A very disturbing online account of a past Homeless Shopping Spree is at http://tinyurl.com/ydjt9h.

There are many disturbing parallels to be made between the Homeless Shopping Spree and the so-called “Bum Fights” video series. In both cases, homeless individuals are portrayed as existing only for the amusement of others and are subjected to extreme humiliation.

Currently, WBCN Boston is planning to broadcast the Homeless Shopping Spree live on Saturday December 16 at 2:30 pm in addition to a scheduled re-broadcast on Monday, December 18 from 6-9 am.

Please contact WBCN at 617-746-1400 and ask them not broadcast this disgusting and disturbing event on their airways.

# # # #

Matt Noyes
Community Advocacy Coordinator
United Disability Housing Partnership /
AIDS Housing Corporation
29 Stanhope Street; Boston, MA 02116
617-927-0088 x26



We forwarded the release to a friend of SCN who is also an Opie & Anthony fan. Here's what he had to say about the event:


In theory I am all for the Homeless Shopping Spree. In execution, I don't know.

Opie and Anthony have a history of this sort of thing; homeless people have appeared on their show before, some frequently. I am not going to say they are always treated with respect, but what needs to be borne in mind is that the listener does not have all the facts, despite the presented illusion to the contrary.

For example - a man named Homeless Andrew was featured on their show recently; he had purchased a coffee cake, and hadn't eaten any yet. He offered some cake to Opie and Anthony; Opie then put the cake on the ground and jumped on it. This, I think, was a lot more dehumanizing than the shopping spree, but at the same time, the listener isn't privy to everything. In other words, there's every chance it was a work - but who knows? In a venue like radio, the illusion is the reality, pretty much. A lot of their stuff makes me laugh - I'd even say most of it does - but I just couldn't find that funny. Apparently Andrew was initially upset but then held no grudge - so it becomes an issue of if he doesn't care, should someone else? And I don't have an answer to that.

Just some background, I suppose. Anyway, onto the spree.

I think Noyes is missing the point of the spree, and the joke behind it; the spree is a joke not at the expense of the homeless people shopping, but at the expense of the rich people who typically patronize the place. I personally think that, on its face anyway, it's brilliant. When it was done in 1999, the mall closed several of the more upscale stores and eventually kicked the homeless people out, which leads one to wonder what exactly they were doing wrong besides "not being our kind of people."

On its face it reminds me of when Joey Skaggs organized bus tours for hippies through the suburbs of Queens. It delineates class borders in ways we don't think of - that there are folks who consider some sections of society to be, essentially, Untouchables, in the caste-system sense. We're comfortable enough just pretending homeless people aren't there as we walk by, but when they invade our territory (as we perceive it), the cops get called, even though they have every legal right to be there. Legally, there should be no difference between us and them, and yet there it is.

I think it would be much more interesting, though, to do this in advance, without huge crowds, and broadcast the results after the fact, so that there would in fact be nothing the police could really do. As is, something like two thousand people show up, I believe.

Now - does that mean the homeless people won't be made fun of by Opie and Anthony? Not at all. But I think it's worth noting that, either way, the homeless in the equation will be treated with more respect than the rich shopping-mall patrons.

All told, I think it's going to be a fascinating bit of social commentary that will bounce off the heads of most people who hear it - maybe even the hosts as well - but judging by Mr. Noyes' press release, it's already bounced off some other heads too.


What do you think, dear readers? Well-intentioned spoof or dismal mockery?