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Update #1: The Komen Foundation backed down from its previous blackballing of Planned Parenthood cancer screening services—or did it?
Update #2: In yesterday’s rant about the Komen fiasco, I mentioned how the organization had attracted negative comments even before this. But I failed to provide a good link to those previous criticisms.
Here’s such a link. It goes to the trailer for Pink Ribbons, Inc., a National Film Board of Canada documentary investigating the group. It opened today in Canadian theaters; a Stateside run starts in March.
Director Lea Pool’s film (based on Samantha King’s 2006 book) had, of course, been shot, edited, and scheduled long before this week’s right-wing cave-in by Komen management.
The film’s gist: Komen management allegedly cares a lot more about promoting itself, attracting corporate partners, selling branded merchandise, and, of course, raising money than it is about detection, treatment, or “the cure.”
All-new item: A Seattle gun merchant announced a Komen-authorized pink handgun. Komen management now denies any authorization, involvement, or even pre-knowledge of this.
1917 seattle metropolitans; from seattlehockey.net
Could Seattle actually get a National Hockey League team before it gets another NBA basketball team?
That’s what CBC Hockey Night in Canada commentator Elliotte Friedman seems to believe.
Friedman notes that the NHL wants to stop collectively owning the fiscally imperiled Phoenix Coyotes.
Friedman also says one of the top Coyote contenders is a Chicago minor-league hockey owner, who’s helping assemble land for a new arena in Seattle’s Sodo area, just south of Safeco Field.
Seattle’s hopes are supported by a move in the Legislature to somehow finagle state support for a new arena during this upcoming session.
What Seattle’s got in its favor:
What Seattle’s not got in its favor:
Despite these reservations, Friedman suggests it might be in the league’s financial best interest to place the Coyotes in Seattle, ready or not, and then award an expansion team to Quebec.
So, where would any Seattle Ex-Coyotes play, until a new specially built arena is ready (at least two seasons)?
My own favored option would be to simply expand KeyArena to the south; even though that would displace its current main tenants (the WNBA Seattle Storm and Seattle U. men’s basketball) for one season apiece.
But if an all new building is deemed really necessary, it should be (1) in Seattle proper (like the current Sodo arena scheme is) and (2) built with as little state or municipal subsidy as possible.
As a postscript, here’s a circa mid-2000s essay from the fan site SeattleHockey.net, detailing past attempts to bring the NHL here.
(NOTE: Due to time constraints of an employment-related variety, these might not appear as frequently during the next few weeks.)
There’s one thing I sure don’t want you to miss. It’s at 5 p.m. today at the new Elliott Bay Book Co., on 10th Avenue between Pike and Pine on Capitol Hill. Be there or be trapezoidal.
1979 ad from vintagepaperads.com
It’s a shotgun aesthetic, firing a wide swath of sensationalistic technique that tears the old classical filmmaking style to bits.… It doesn’t matter where you are, and it barely matters if you know what’s happening onscreen. The new action films are fast, florid, volatile audiovisual war zones.