Sunday, October 6, 2024

How will you celebrate Halloween this year?

 



 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Back on March 20, 2018 I blogged about finding Speech topics from around your neighborhood. Yesterday I walked down West Estrella Drive and saw the front yard shown above. That’s quite a display of skeletons. It might scare some children.

 

There is an article by Christin Perry at Parents on September 20, 2024 titled How Parents Can Help Children Overcome Their Fear of Halloween.

 


 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

I was thinking about how we used to celebrate Halloween. I would tape the felt pumpkin shown above in the window next to the front door to indicate we expected children going around for trick or treat. We would prepare by getting a 30-pack of assorted full-size candy bars from Costco. We quit doing that when COVID-19 hit.

 


Saturday, October 5, 2024

Free 2023 e-book on Public Speaking as Performance

 


 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

There is a free 148-page e-book from 2023 by Mechele Leon, Renee Cyr, and Jonah Greene titled Public Speaking as Performance: Practicing public speaking in the theatre & performance. It has four parts and sixteen chapters:

 

Prologue: Part I

Thinking about Public Speaking - Chapter 1

Actor Tools for Public Speaking - Chapter 2

 

Context: Part II

Speaking Occasion - Chapter 3

Audience Analysis - Chapter 4

Ways of Delivering Speeches - Chapter 5

From Page to Stage - Chapter 6

 

Speechwriting: Part III

Writing for Listeners - Chapter 7

Purpose and Thesis - Chapter 8

Structure and Organization - Chapter 9

Introductions and Conclusions - Chapter 10

Ethics in Public Speaking - Chapter 11

Language in Speechwriting - Chapter 12

Presentation Aids - Chapter 13

 

Purposes: Part IV

Informative Speeches – Chapter 14

Persuasive Speeches - Chapter 15

Special Occasion Speeches - Chapter 16

 

The authors all are in the Department of Theatre & Dance at the University of Kansas. Mechele Leon is a professor and the other two are graduate teaching assistants.

 

On December 22, 2020 I blogged about Be your very own Santa Claus by downloading free e-textbooks about public speaking and mentioned another 2019 e-book from the University of Kansas by Meggie Mapes titled Speak Out, Call In: Public speaking as Advocacy.

 

My cartoon of an actor was adapted from this one at Wikimedia Commons.

 


Thursday, October 3, 2024

In 2024 membership in Toastmasters International finally began to grow again, after having dropped for three years in a row

 


 

 

 

 

 

 

I have been reading the October 2024 centennial issue of Toastmaster magazine, which has an article by Paul Sterman on pages 10 to 15 titled A Century of Toastmasters International. Reaching a centennial is very impressive for an organization. On page 26 there is another article titled Toastmasters Today that begins by stating:

 

“The numbers in this statistical analysis show an uptick in Toastmasters growth and a pattern of continuing diversity.”

 

The infographic says there are 272,000+ members – a growth of 2.2%. But it doesn’t say how many clubs there are. So, I went to the Statistics and Data Hub and looked up the Fact Sheet for July 1, 2023 to June 30, 2024 which informed me that there were >13,800 clubs for a growth rate of -3.0%. What happened when the pandemic hit? Regular members don’t get told, but officers can find out. I looked up the CEO Reports for 2022 and 2024 and found the following data:

 

Year    Members   # of Clubs 

2018   357,718       16,672

2019   358,078       16,856

2020   364,212       16,204

2021   300,206       15,875

2022   282,055       14,749

2023   266,564       14,271

2024   272,338       13,846

   

From 2020 to 2021 membership dropped by 64,006 or 17.6%! And from 2019 to 2020 the number of clubs dropped by 652, or 3.9%. I found a chart showing Toastmaster International Membership Growth (1990 to 2020) so I added the data tabulated above, and used Excel to produce the chart for this century, from 2000 to 2024 shown at the top of this post. Membership now is almost at the same level as back in 2011.

 


 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

I could not find a similar chart for the number of clubs, and looked up data from various web pages at the Toastmasters web site like one for 2011 and another for 2014. The chart shown above summarizes the situation from 2007 to 2024. In 2023 we had fallen back to barely above where we were a decade earlier in 2013. Note that multiplying the number of clubs (13,846 for 2024) by 20 members/club gives 276,920, which is pretty close to the membership of 272,338.        

  

Our organization was significantly wounded by the pandemic. Knowing that, we can work on recovering.  

 


Tuesday, October 1, 2024

Be sure to follow Hoot's Law in a crisis


 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

I have been enjoying reading a 2023 book (I got from the Meridian Public Library) by Mike Massimino titled Moon Shot: A NASA astronaut’s guide to achieving the impossible. Chapter 5 is titled You Can Always Make It Worse, and it tells all about Hoot’s Law for dealing with a crisis. There is a brief discussion by Stephanie Vozza at Fast Company on December 7, 2023 in an article titled An astronaut shares his 30-second trick for boosting productivity.

 

Mike describes having trained for a space walk in the Neutral Buoyancy Laboratory (NBL) which is a 200-foot long by 100-foot wide by 40-foot-deep pool. He got his safety tether hopelessly tangled up – between his legs, around his helmet, and around his tools. Finally, he asked Jim Newman, his spacewalk partner for help. Beginning on page 82 of the book (or here at Google Books), Mike says:

 

“In the battle of Mike vs. Tether, the tether had definitely won, and I spent the rest of the exercise kicking myself. Once we were out of the water, Jim took me aside and asked how my snarl got so bad. It was one of the worst he had ever seen. I told him it started out not so bad, but then I rushed, didn’t ask for help, and made it steadily worse and worse until I was totally trapped. Jim nodded and said, ‘Mike, you need to remember Hoot’s Law.’

 

‘What’s Hoot’s Law?’ I asked.

 

‘It’s something ‘Hoot’ Gibson used to say during his astronaut days: No matter how bad things may seem, you can always make it worse.

 

‘Wow,’ I said, ‘Hoot Gibson was a wise astronaut.’

 

‘He was,’ Jim said. ‘There’s something else Hoot used to say that you might find helpful, too. ‘Nothing is often a good thing to do and always a good thing to say.’  

 

Hoot’s law was sound advice. When my first snarl occurred, it wasn’t that big of a problem. But with my rushing and panicking, I made it worse. It would have been better to slow down, take a minute, and appraise the situation before acting. In other words, it would have been better to do nothing until I figured out what had happened before I rushed to action. I could also have asked Jim or the control team to help me see where my safety tether was caught, since it was hard for me to do so myself. Hoot’s Law was one of the most important lessons I ever learned.

 

Robert ‘Hoot’ Gibson was a naval aviator and test pilot who’d been selected as an astronaut in 1978. His flying skills and leadership qualities were legendary. Everyone liked him. During my first selection board interview in 1994, he was still on staff, serving as chief of the Astronaut Office. During my interview, he sat not far from me, smiling the entire time. I’ll never forget that. At a time when I was nervous, he gave me this wonderful smile that seemed to say, ‘It’s okay, buddy. You’re doing great.’ It was a huge comfort to me at a very stressful time.

 

Hoot left NASA in November 1996, soon after my classmates and I showed up, but his mantras and advice continued to be passed on from generation to generation. One of the men who made sure those lessons got passed along was Charlie Bolden. In his long and legendary career, Charlie Bolden had served as a naval aviator, a test pilot, a NASA astronaut, a United States Marine Corps general, and the head of NASA from 2009 to 2017. Even with the talent to amass that kind of experience, Charlie Bolden had suffered his own embarrassing lesson in learning Hoot’s Law. For his first spaceflight in January 1986, Charlie was assigned to be the pilot of space shuttle Columbia. Hoot was his commander. During one of their early training runs, they were doing a shuttle launch simulation – a sim – with the rest of their crew. Charlie, being the rookie, wanted to show everyone how competent he was, just like I’d done with my tether in the pool. The second they lifted off, an alarm sounded due to an electrical failure. Charlie got out his checklist an determined they had an essential electrical bus failure that had taken down one of the shuttle’s three main engines. He told Hoot what the problem was and that he would take care of it. Charlie then ran the necessary procedure, which called for flipping a switch to shut down the failed part of the electrical system to take the bad electrical bus offline. So he reached over and flipped a switch – the wrong switch, taking down the wrong electrical bus.   

 

‘Suddenly.’ Charlie described to me, ‘it got really quiet in the simulator.’ They had already lost one engine from the first electrical failure. Charlie had now lost a second engine by taking an essential electrical source offline, which meant they were trying to get to space on one engine. Which is not possible. As the simulated gravity slowly overtook their simulated shuttle, they fell back down to the simulated Earth and crashed in the simulated ocean, dying their fiery, simulated deaths. Charlie just sat there as embarrassed as he could be, and that’s when Hoot Gibson looked over at him, put his hand on his left shoulder, and said, ‘Charles, have I ever taught you Hoot’s Law?’

 

Mike concludes the chapter:

 

“So, when you’re faced with what seems like a hopeless situation that can’t get any worse, remember: YOU can make it worse. Don’t let that happen, instead I suggest the following:

 

Remember Hoot’s Law. Think of how things could be worse if you make another mistake, and don’t create a second problem while hastily trying to solve the first problem.

 

Remember Joe LoPiccolo. Go slow and resist the temptation to act too quickly.

 

For critical corrective actions, if possible, get a second person to look over your shoulder to mke sure your action won’t lead to a worse situation.”

 

Charlie Bolden’s NASA oral history from 2004 has a slightly different statement of Hoot’s Law:

 “No matter how bad things get, you can always make them worse.”  

 

Right now there isn’t a Wikipedia page for Hoot’s Law, or a discussion of it on the page for Robert L. Gibson.

 

On December 20, 2019 I blogged about The joy of safety interlocks. In that post I referred to an article by John A. Palmer and David A. Danaher in EC&M on November 1, 2004 titled A series of preventable events leads to a power plant explosion. They describe how it began with a toilet line backup spewing sewage on control equipment. That led to hasty and botched repairs which defeated interlocks and allowed an explosive mixture of air and natural gas to develop – and over a half billion dollars of physical damage and lost revenue.   

 

The cartoon of an owl came from Openclipart.

 


Saturday, September 28, 2024

In 2020 Grant Snider published a profusely illustrated book - I Will Judge You By Your Bookshelf

 


 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Via interlibrary loan, from the Meridian Library, I obtained and am enjoying reading a delightful 2020 book with comics by Grant Snider titled I Will Judge You By Your Bookshelf.  Grant is an artist with a day job as an orthodontist and he has a web site called Incidental Comics.

 

On September 19, 2024 I blogged about his 2022 book in a post titled A manifesto on what you should pay attention to – from a book on The Art of Living profusely illustrated with comic strips.

 

I Will Judge You By Your Bookshelf has 14 sections where he confesses the following titles about books, reading, and writing on the indicated pages: 

 

I’m in love with books [Page 6]

I read in social situations [Page 14]

I will use anything as a bookmark [Page 20]

I confuse fiction with reality [Page 26]

I am wanted for unpaid library fines [Page 34]

I steal books from my children [Page 40]

I like my realism with a little bit of magic [Page 48]

I like to sniff old books [Page 56]

I am searching for a miracle cure for writer’s block

 [Page 64]

I care about punctuation – a lot [Page 72]

I will read the classics (someday) [Page 80]

I am writing The Great American Novel [Page 90]

I carry a notebook with me at all times [Page 102]

I write because I must [Page 112]

And he concludes: I hope you don’t mind me asking…can I borrow a few books?

 

Here are links to fifteen comics appearing in the book, as presented on web pages at his Incidental Comics site:

 

Other people’s bookshelves [page 12 and page 13]

The story coaster [page 27]

Story lines [page 31]

The writer’s block [page 32]

The cannon of literature [page 46 and 47]

The three Rays [page 52]

Story structures [page 55]

The book fair [page 63]

Poetic Justice [page 70]

Proofreader’s marks [page 73]

The ingredients of Shakespeare [page 81]

Day jobs of the poets [page 88]

Character development [page 96 and 97]

Strunk and White’s writer’s style guide {page 100 and 101]

Writing exercises [page 116 and 117]

 

My image was created from a Miss Muffet poster and bookshelf at Openclipart.

 


Friday, September 27, 2024

Fun with filler words: A beer-drinking game based on a speaker using the phrase “you know”

 


 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Lewis Black’s Rantcast # 191 | The Emmys has a rant sent in by Garret Cheney in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. (WARNING: Lewis’s language is Not Safe for Work – NSFW). Instead of getting upset by speakers using filler words, just get a cheap beer and take a drink every time you hear them said.  

 

Back on November 10, 2010 I blogged about another phrase in a post titled But, umm. In the TV show How I Met Your Mother, which included Cobie Smulders as Robin Scherbatsky, there was an episode titled Jenkins with a plot described on IMDB as follows:

 

“Meanwhile, Robin encounters fans of her pre-morning news show. When she met the boys at the college bar, one of Ted's students Scotty (Andrew Lewis Caldwell) comes over to tell her that he's a big fan of her work. Full of pride, she interrupts Ted's class the next day to loudly announce that she is the host of the show. After she leaves, the class explains that they are fans because her show comes on as their night of drinking is coming to an end (Her show is so early in the morning that the class is still at the bar from previous night), and her interjection, ‘but...umm’ is the basis for a drinking game (whenever Robin says this, the students take a drink).”

 

The beer glass was adapted from here at Openclipart.

 


Thursday, September 26, 2024

You can’t please everyone – Saturday Night Live’s Jebidiah Atkinson critiques great speeches


 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

On September 17, 2024 at his Writing Boots blog David Murray posted on Next! My reactions to political punditry – professional, and amateur – that somehow *always* makes things even worse. He embedded a smarmy decade-old five-minute YouTube video: Saturday Night Live Weekend Update: Jebidiah Atkinson on Great Speeches.

  

The Saturday Night Live Wiki page on Jebidiah Atkinson explains he is an 1860s newspaper critic who didn’t like Lincoln’s Gettysburg address or several other well-known speeches. And an article by Doug Stewart at Historynet on July 6, 2017 titled Unimpressed with The Address has more details.

 

Another 5-min video from Saturday Night Live titled Weekend Update Rewind: Jebidiah Atkinson Reviews Television Shows has him lamenting that all TV is excrement.

 

There is still another 6-min video titled Weekend Update: Jebidiah Atkinson on Holiday Movies where he attacks classic holiday TV specials: Charlie Brown Christmas Special, Rudolph the Red Nosed Reindeer, Frosty the Snowman, The Grinch Who Stole Christmas, etc.

 

The thumb down cartoon was adapted from one at Openclipart.