Tuesday 4 December 2012

Pebble: a buzz in the air, sniffer bees the revolution in drug detection

  (Featured in issue two of Pebble zine

Bees trained to sniff out drugs by latching onto their chemical scents could soon be swarming airports around the world. Joshua Saunders gains an insight into the future of a drug detection that’s set to sting criminals and those involved in narcotrafficking 

 
Honeybees are currently being trained to recognise scents such as heroin, cocaine and other drugs in an attempt to crack down on smuggling within airports. Their ability to smell pollen from over a mile away makes them ideal candidates for the new revolution in drug detection. 

 
One company, Hertfordshire based Inscentinel, are using Pavlovian conditioning - where a specimen is taught
to associate one thing with another unconditioned stimulus. This works for bees
by conditioning them into associating the scent of a drug with sticking their tongue out for sugar.


The bees are introduced to the scent by pressing a button that releases the sample into their airstream. The scientist then touches the bee’s antennae, which is their way of detecting the scent; the bee puts out its tongue and is fed the sugar with water. The process is then repeated to analyse whether the bees stick out their tongues in anticipation of the scent and associate the scent, in this instance drugs, with being fed.
...
 
“You’d see that the cocaine bees are responding, not the heroin bees”

Stacey Kendall, a junior scientist who carries out this research at Inscentinel says, “if they do that, it’s a sign that they have learned to associate the smell with the sugar. If they don’t, half way through the six seconds, you’d touch their antennae again as a reminder and then feed them.” 

“One person can train 30 to 40 bees in a day, you start with bee number one and it will get exposed to the smell for the first time. You work all the way through to bee 35 and then go back to bee number one.” 

Inscentinel condition batches of 35 bees at a time, teaching them in five cycles to ensure the 80-90% of the bees are trained in one day. “They can do it in one cycle but not every bee will,” she added. 

From this, the company intends to provide cartridges of six bees in a vapour detector container, called a Vasor, to be dispatched to airports and other clients for use. 
 
The bees can be trained for over five different drugs and can be taught to recognise chemicals found in the explosive Trinitrotoluene, more commonly known as TNT. 

In developing countries, where it is more expensive to send a medically trained doctor to remote locations, the bees are being used to detect Tuberculosis. They do this by watching to see if they react to the scents given off by compounds found in TB patients’ breath, this has been noted by Dr Steve Chambers - one of New Zealand’s leading infectious disease specialists - as ‘the perfume of tuberculosis’. 

One possible way of utilizing this new method of drug detection in airports would be ‘looking at the cargo going onto a plane not the people,’ which Stacey believes is an area that can be overlooked.

This would work by sucking air from wrapped cargo and then concentrating that air into a filter, then by showing the filter to the bees, you’d see which ones reacted by sticking out their tongue. “You’d see that the cocaine bees are responding not the heroine bees,” and from that be able to deduce that traces of cocaine are inside the cargo.

The screening process is far from the initial fear-filled conjurations of how people believe bees are going to be used to detect drugs at airports. Stacey says, “it sounds like setting bees on people but they are contained in a handheld hoover type piece, so in theory you’d never know that there are bees in there.”

Another way would be to partner the trained bees with sniffer dogs while checking luggage. Stacey explains, “they don’t have to replace sniffer dogs they can work in conjunction. You have a sniffer dog, it’s indicated that there’s something in someone’s luggage [you could then] take them to one side and use the bees.”

To train a dog to become a sniffer dog it takes on average six-months, and a further month to train it to another scent. Up to 100 sniffer bees can be conditioned to associate a scent with sugar in a few hours making it a more financially worthwhile endeavour.
 

At the moment only 35 bees can be trained by hand, but 100 could be conditioned with an automated conditioning unit, where the scents could be released directly into the machine along with the sugar incentive. While this approach may not be as thorough as conditioning each bee by hand Stacey says, “when you put in hundreds of bees it doesn’t matter if a lower percentage are trained, you still get out more bees at the end.”

Inscentinel are using European honeybees, officially known as the ‘Apis mellifera’, because they are one of the most commonly found species of bee, allowing them to be trained worldwide. Stacey explains, “they are not really special, they’re not going to be any different from those used by bee keepers to pollinate an apple orchard.”

Inscentinel are currently working towards a field trial, this upcoming February, with a FTSE 250 company that wished to remain unnamed. 

So far, the company has faced little opposition from the outside world and animal rights activists. Stacey says, “we’ve had one or two angry emails or letters... but that’s probably to be expected.”

“It’s hard to know what’s going through the head of the bees, but they’re getting more sugar than they would be able to find naturally. If you put any stress on them there would be no point because they are not going to behave as they should, and may not learn or respond [to the conditioning]. Their life expectancy outside of the hive is just eight to six weeks so it doesn’t appear to, broadly speaking, affect them,” she adds.

After being used by airports the clients would then return the bees to Inscentinel. When the bees return from duty, the company intends to let them return to a normal life. Stacey says, “the idea when it was set up was that we’d get fresh bees, train them and hand them out to whoever is using them. Then when they return the used bees, we’d release them to a different hive, like a retirement hive.” 

Pictures courtesy of Inscentinel

Pebble: from end to end, John O'Groats to Land's End


  (Featured in issue two of Pebble zine)

Scott Westwood walked the length of the British Isles, without spending a penny by relying on the generosity of the public. Now the raconteur retells his tumultuous tale of six weeks and one day, journeying to the furthest corners of Great Britain


“When you think about it, the United Kingdom’s quite a small island compared to the rest of the world,” Scott Westwood tells me, only a month after completing a 43 day trek from pole to pole of our ‘small island’, raising money for the charity Parkinson’s UK. The imposing John O’Groats to Land’s end journey consists of over 1,200 miles alone. Without counting Scott’s additional ten and a half miles scaling Ben Nevis, the largest mountain in the British Isles, a few days into his walk. 

From the end of the pier at John O’Groats, Scott embarked upon the initial day of his solo, moneyless venture where he would depend upon the kindness of strangers to ensure he had food to eat and a place to sleep.

He spent the previous night on a train for 12-hours heading to the nearby town of Thurso, Scotland, over 550 miles away from his Birmingham home. On his last night at home before the challenge, he relaxed and avoided mulling over the quest before him.

The total distance actually equates to a few hundred miles more than The Proclaimers proclaimed they would walk or three quarters of Frodo and Sam’s journey to cast ‘the one ring’ into the fires of Mount Doom.

The imposing challenge would test his determination, sanity and the ability to carry on walking despite having swollen and severely blistered feet. “It didn’t hit me that it was all real until three days time when I was in pain,” he said.


Equipped with nothing other than the clothes on his back and a rucksack containing a stash of energy bars, as well as a tent and water bottle, the weight of the bag soon took its toll.

To keep on schedule he needed to maintain an average of 21 miles a day; with a couple of one-day marathons to make up extra miles, which took Scott 14 hours to walk due to his heavy bag. “If I worried too much it would have held me back,” Scott said. 

Five days in and arriving at Inverness, it was already a tough battle to accept the lengthy challenge ahead. But with recurring bouts of determination he fought off his body’s calling to give in; “what else am I going to do? I’m going to carry on walking because that’s the only thing I can do,” he thought. “Your life is waking up, walking 22 miles and going to sleep... This is what you do now,” his mind kept telling him. The regular campsite consisted of fields, parks and woods but also...

“I carried a pebble from the most northern point of Scotland and brought it to Land’s End, now I’m done”

...strangers would offer him a place to stop. “I’d get talking to people in the street and they’d say ‘Where are you staying tonight?’ and I’d reply, ‘wherever I can find.’” Throughout the journey Scott stopped on people’s sofas, in their spare rooms, in B&Bs, hostels, and some five star hotels. “I was very lucky with all that,” he added. 

On Scott’s third day of walking, there was one man in particular whose help left a lasting impression on the walker. Keith had seen Scott on the road and offered to send the trolley of belongings that he had acquired ahead to Glasgow to collect there, “It was kind because I wouldn’t be going to [Glasgow] for another week and a half”. Keith also put him up forthe night, fed him, bought him a new water bottle and created a ‘John O’Groats to Land’s End – Parkinson’s UK’ laminated sign for his backpack. “Keith O’Rourke, this bloke was an absolute godsend,” he said. 

A few days later and Scott was already adopting the look of a traveller, having collected two walking sticks to use en route. One of which lasted for the rest of journey. It was white driftwood with a hand groove, “It started at my shoulder and ended just above my waist. I’ve never felt more affinity with a piece of wood. It was my companion and protection if someone tried to attack me, and it was something to lean on.” 
On the 26th day of the trek, Scott scheduled his only day of rest, back within his home in West Bromwich, Birmingham. Scott said: “It was horrible fate, the amount of train stations I walked past saying trains direct to Birmingham. I was just outside Wigan when I walked past my first sign for Birmingham- that was amazing. I was counting down the days to get home and it was nice not having to beg for food [for the night], stopping in my house, in my bed,” he reflected. But the break was short-lived as the following morning he was back on the road. 

“Leaving home was heartbreaking having to leave my door to walk for another 15 days was just horrific.” But with the last stretch of the journey ahead of him the food he had stocked up on slowly diminished, “there was a point where I walked 12 miles on just a banana.” Ten days away from the finishing line, and Scott realised he would have to go hungry for the day to ensure that his supplies would last to Taunton, where he was set to meet some friends. He headed towards Weston Supermare the day he acknowledged he must go hungry. 

But an hour into the day and his journey took him past a health shop, “the man comes out, stops me and says, ‘have you really walked this for five weeks, with no money’ and he said, ‘come in, take as much as you want.’” His luck continued
to turn around, as he was offered a free Carvery from a barmaid he was speaking to, and later was invited for some food by a kind lady and her son.

“Later, I’m on the pier, the sun’s setting in front of me, a bloke comes up, starts chatting to me and I end up getting bought fish and chips. All on the day I said I was going to be hungry. “I thought if that’s what the universe is doing. If I say I’m hungry today and it provides me with all this, I should have done it earlier.”

At St Ives the walk was drawing to an end, Scott felt emotional as he walked through the memory filled streets that he spent many childhood years in, “the blazing sunshine came out and I knew it was going to be a good day because I’d walked the route a hundred times over.” 

He reached the finishing line at Land’s End, Cornwall, by 6pm on his 43rd day. The journey that had taken him through more than 134 of Great Britain’s villages, towns and cities, was now over. “I’d planned in my head how I’d feel crossing the line since Glasgow, and it wasn’t what I felt. I finished and I just felt like I had to carry on. I was like, ok now what do I do tomorrow? I got so used to walking that I couldn’t stand still.” 

He rejoiced with a lovely reception of family members and tourists, brandishing an appreciative banner from Parkinson’s UK. Stained from 43-days worth of walking and the non-alcoholic champagne his stepdad sprayed over him, he made his final thank yous, with passing tourists honking their horns in the background. “But it was a lie, I’m not done yet,” he thought, noticing the sheer-drop into the sea only 100 meters away. Scott, his mother and stepdad took the final few strides to the cliff face and the furthest corner of the United Kingdom. 
“I had a pebble, no bigger than my index finger, with me that I’d carried all the way from John O’Groats - the entire journey,” he slung the smooth black pebble into the sea, heralding the end of his voyage. Moments later at the cliff edge elation swept as Scott accepted that it was all over, “I carried a pebble from the most northern point of Scotland and brought it to Land’s End, now I’m done.”

During the six week and one day walk, he was solely dependent upon the public and their kindness, “literally if people weren’t generous then I would have starved.” Scott has raised over £2,500, half of which was donated to him on the trek down. “People were giving me twenty pound notes, fivers, cheques, change, bar staff gave me their tips, and little children gave me their chocolate money, it was truly unbelievable.” 


“Don’t put this in the article, but I walked the same [amount of days] as Jesus you know, we both walked for forty days,” jokes Scott, who now is back for a second year of intensive training at The Royal Academy of Dramatic Art.

“I haven’t done any exercise since coming back. On the walk, I lost a stone and a half so had to put that back on,” he now waits for his certificate from the official John O’Groats to Land’s End association to commemorate his journey. As well as verification for a potential added accolade, “I believe I may be the only person who’s walked solo from end to end.” Scott finally reflected, “it was a great achievement that I walked the country, but it’s the people I met and the thousands and thousands of stories that I have, which I wouldn’t change for the world.” 

Find out more about Scott’s journey at www.justgiving.com/ScottWestwood2012


Friday 30 November 2012

Pebble zine: Issue two

Take a look at December/January's edition of Pebble for an assorted array of features, lifestyle, fashion, beauty, music and culture.

Here's what new from the features section:
  • Scott Westwood, travelled across the UK to its furthest apart corners solely reliant upon the public's kindness
  • Sniffer bees could be swarming into airports around the world as the revolution
    in anti-drug smuggling measures
  • Two sisters, splitting lives and growing up in different countries
  • El Mar, Mi Alma - the sea, my soul: Chilean surf film
  • Breaking into the industry: the Christmas industry
  • How spiritually intelligent are you?
  • Sibling rivalries: what you and your brothers and sisters argued about
  • 'Honey Curls', a sweet poem to my sister

  • Special thanks to Scott Westwood, Stacey Kendall, all our contributors and the design team.

    Go, read it now.

    For more from Pebble zine check out the website: www.pebblezine.com

Thursday 29 November 2012

Presenting: Whitwam Studios

The talented Natasha Salmon and myself, was asked to present a corporate launch video for video graphics and virtual studio software developer Whitwam Audio Visual Solutions.

The software gives the user the capability to build virtual studios from scratch and incorporate banners, amongst other graphics in real time so that minimal post production work is required.

This could be used for television shows, business presentations, and sports news, as well as others. All that's truly needed is a green screen and the system can build the rest. Check out the video below...




 Before you is a preview of the launch video, more to be released.

Monday 26 November 2012

The Art Network - presented by Joshua Saunders and Charlotte Foot

Following the success of the Bournemouth University's US 2012 Election Coverage, a couple of us presenters, Charlotte Foot and myself, were approached for another project: The Art Network.

The classy review show analyses the public's views on the final installment of the Twilight saga: Breaking Dawn Part 2, an exciting preview of Glass Eyes an Independent film set to be launched at the Student section of the Cannes Film Festival.

As well as discussions and exclusive music from singer-songwriter Ryan Keen.

Check it out, you know it makes sense...

 

Many thanks to the TV Production students at Bournemouth University.

Saturday 10 November 2012

US Elections 2012: coverage of the coverage by BU

At Bournemouth University we produced live election coverage from November 6th at 21.00 (GMT) through to November 7th at 07.00 (GMT) - here's the PR team's post promotional coverage of our coverage.

<iframe width="640" height="360" src="http://www.youtube.com/embed/RZBHgg8RoR8" frameborder="0" allowfullscreen></iframe>

Wednesday 7 November 2012

US Elections 2012: differences between the UK and US

Political correspondent Gareth Hill and myself, travelled to London to question how similar the United States of America and the United Kingdom actually are?

Find more from Bournemouth University's US 2012 Election coverage at: http://us2012.bujournalism.info/


Filmed, edited and presented by Joshua Saunders and Gareth Hill

Tuesday 6 November 2012

US Elections 2012: the first ladies, presenting

Both Michelle Obama and Ann Romney have given huge support to their husbands as they battle for the White House.

But just how important can they be in their own right?

Joshua Saunders looks at the credentials of both of the women vying to become America's First Lady.

US Elections 2012: Coverage Live from Bournemouth University (Stream)

The long campaign road of the US 2012 Elections have swiftly drawn to a close, find out tonight whether Democrat candidate Barack Obama will be reelected for a second, final term. Or whether Republican nominee Mitt Romney will take the White House.

For live coverage visit the link below: 9pm - 7am

http://us2012.bujournalism.info/tv/

Have a look at this sneak preview from the US Election 2012 News team...

Friday 19 October 2012

US Elections 2012: behind the scenes

Take your first glimpse behind the scenes of Bournemouth University's US Election Coverage 2012, with the tightly contested presidency being fought for, as well as one-third of the senate and seats from the House of Representatives, it's worth waiting for...

Coverage from: November 6th - 21.00 (GMT) - November 7th - 07.00 (GMT).

Find out more at: http://us2012.bujournalism.info/

Sunday 7 October 2012

Pebble: prison pen pals



  (Featured in issue one of Pebble zine)

It’s an unusual friendship: a law student from Birmingham and a convict in California. “It’s strange how things are so simple in my life and yet everything’s so chaotic in his,” Kristy, 21, reflects. It’s less than three years ago since she first began writing to Miguel, held at Corcoran prison, San Francisco. 

 

Miguel often sketches pieces for Kristy and has even
designed her a tattoo
Curiosity struck, after she read an article about a woman who fell in love through a prison pen pal service. After he was released, the couple married and moved in together, but the romance was cut short after he refused to give up his other pen pal mistresses and she left him. “I wondered how anybody could be so attached to someone who had committed such a bad crime,” Kristy thought.

Eager to learn about life across the pond, she perused the endless list of inmates hoping for a friend
to write to. “I said I’d never write to anybody like a paedophile or a rapist. But I was really interested in
writing to somebody from the mafia, having always been interested in them.” After sending out several letters Miguel replied with a brief handwritten note explaining the crimes he had committed, the structure to his day and his passion for art and tattooing. 

Miguel is locked 5,250 miles away in what the Los Angeles Times once described as ‘the most troubled
of the 32 state prisons’. Their most infamous resident, Charles Manson, now 77, still receives regular fan mail.

In the room that he shares with another ‘celly’ - as he refers to them - Miguel keeps photographs and letters sent by Kristy on a small bedside table. With minimal luxuries, his life sharply contrasts with the liberated existence of people on the outside.


Miguel - Spanish for Michael - is of Mexican descent, but was born in California. He is muscular in build, has short black hair, a moustache and dark eyes. His arms to his hands are laced with tattoos. 
"They knew he had a bad temper, and he’d react in a bad way"
“Certain tattoos he was given because of the certain crimes he committed, as that’s what they do in the mafia,” says Kristy. 

“I think he likes writing to me, because I don’t really know about his world, whereas the majority of his family have either been in prison, been part of gangs or in trouble with the law. 

“I’m not from the world he’s from; his area’s predominantly wrapped around crime and you have to be part of these gangs to survive.”

More recently, Miguel designed a tattoo for Kristy, having formerly owned a tattoo parlour before being imprisoned. “I told him that I was thinking about getting a tattoo, but I’d want a unique design, because I’d never get anything just for the sake of it, and he designed me a piece.” 

Kristy regularly receives sketches from her prison pen pal, who has a resonating passion for fine art. And in return, she sends him a letter at least once a month, giving him the companionship he’s deprived of.

As well as helping her to understand the American legal system for her dissertation, Miguel is currently studying law in prison with ambitions of getting into the profession once he’s granted his freedom.

After a while, you kind of forget about how you met, tells Kristy, “People always say, ‘Aren’t you worried because they’ve got your address?’ but then you think he’s got X amount of years in prison and I don’t see him as dangerous. You have this type of bond; a friendship.

“If I ever wanted to stop writing to him, I could tell him and he’d just stop, but I don’t think it would ever come to that.”

Kristy receives more correspondence from Miguel than his family. “I suppose I’m the impartial person in all of this; he can tell me something and I won’t pass judgement.”

Relationships give prison life normality, and sometimes instead of ink, love can flow from the tip of a pen. But being behind bars can constrain a pen pal relationship from forming into little more than a friendship. Miguel found out first- hand from briefly dating a woman on the outside. “She wanted him to have a phone-sex conversation while he was on a prison pay-phone, could you imagine it, with all the other prisoners there listening!” 

Meanwhile, back in Britain, Kristy’s been dating long-term partner Luke and has no intention of anything more than a platonic friendship. She says: “He sees me as being younger, and I see him as being older.
“He can kind of think of me as a young mind who he can talk to – he can watch me change and I watch him getting wiser and reforming.” 

Far from the sombre side of prison life, on the outside, Miguel was known to have a short fuse, often acting irrationally out of impulse and emotion. It was his tempestuous nature that led to him being arrested in 2006; Miguel kidnapped a man who had been stalking his sister.

He then stole a car with the driver still inside and drove to the desert. Once he’d got there, he gave the keys back to the owner, who drove off. He then threatened the stalker before leaving and was later caught by the police. “His family never told him [about the stalker] because they knew what he was like. They knew that he had a bad temper, and that he’d react in a bad way.” Miguel was only told about his sister’s obsessive ex after he showed up at her apartment.
Since returning to jail for the second time, Miguel’s trying to keep his head down and is mentoring younger prisoners. He has even transferred from a previous Californian jail to avoid the risk of tarnishing his record, which could push his release date further out of reach.

Under America’s Three Strikes Law, if Miguel is prosecuted again, he will be forced to serve a mandatory 25 years sentence, plus time for the crime he committed, meaning reformation and rehabilitation back into society are his only choices.

But with a further ten years to serve until he’s up for parole, regrets plague his mind: “He feels guilty about not being there for his daughter while she goes through school and his son who’s just about to go into prison.”

 "She wanted him to have a phone-sex conversation while he was on a prison pay-phone, could you imagine it"

Seeing past a person’s crime is essential while writing to someone in jail, having the empathy to understand that a criminal is not necessarily a bad person but someone who’s made a bad decision or action.

“It’s kind of like when you get a big crowd of people, they lose their individual identity. You just see them all as prisoners. But then, when you write to certain people, you get the idea that they’re not a bad person. [Take Miguel], he’s done this specific crime for certain motives. And you start to see them for who they are rather than the crimes they’ve committed. So the more you write to them and the more you hear about their life and family, you start to sympathise.” 

In the past few weeks, Kristy filled out a visiting form, so that one day she can meet face-to-face with her friend from afar. 

“He’s said our friendship has made him think about things in different ways, to make a change and want better things out of life.” 

Featured in Pebble zine

Pebble: breaking into the comedy industry


  (Featured in issue one of Pebble zine)

Arron Ferguson, from the rising comedy couplet NOT The Adventures of Moleman, jests about performing alongside a man too tall for buses, 2am satire fried chicken and generally talking funny...(tumbleweed), perhaps we’ll leave the puns to him

NOT the adventures of Moleman
Illustration by Guy Larsen
 


The act
I just do what makes me laugh. Mainly, I work as part of a double act for sketches, but away from the sketches is kind of like one-man variety show kind of thing crammed into five minutes, if that makes any sense. When writing, we tend to start with everyday stuff, then take the bits that are odd and keep adding to that until eventually it ends up funny.

The secret to being funny
I don’t know why you’re asking me that; ask someone successful! I think, ultimately, it’s just, a) making sure you do what makes you laugh and don’t worry about other people, not even the audience, because ultimately, the thing people respond to the most is seeing someone having a good time. And, b) the key - making sure you have your own style that no one else is doing, which is impossible to master unless you keep gigging. So many great acts on the circuit, but all of them, including myself, start off being too much like their favourite comedian.

The chalk and cheese comedy duo
Arguably, the best person to pick to be in a double act is someone you get along with, but at the same time is someone who pisses you off a bit. Then you’re providing different stuff. I can happily say Richard, who I’m in a double act with, is definitely a better actor then me, but then he’s not so good at things like handling hecklers, improvising around stuff that may go wrong, and that’s what I add. I can be the one who knows what to say when a prop breaks in the middle of a show.

How to get paid
You have to hunt online to find pubs that do open mic nights, and then you hope that eventually one of the people running them will like you and start helping you out with it a bit. That’s what we were doing, really. Going on Twitter, and people come back and say they’ve done a good
gig here, it’s nice. Also, there are lots of good Facebook groups, one called the Comedy Collective, where people will post: ‘I run a club, come every Wednesday and get a slot’.

Tips to newcomers
This is massively a product of the era that we live in, but try and provide content in a million different mediums. I think comedians starting out now, for a chance to make a living out of it, need to perform live, they also need to be actively hilarious on twitter, they need to be making YouTube videos, they need to be making podcasts. I think that’s the best way to succeed, hit every single market you can.

The Edinburgh Free Fringe
Doing theatres in London, people are paying six pounds to come in,
it massively changes someone’s mindset. They put six pound over a desk when they walk in, then they’re prepared to enjoy themselves and they go for it. Whereas if someone just wanders in for free, then there’s a ‘f***ing entertain me’ attitude, ‘I can leave, I didn’t pay for this.’ We
were lucky and ended up getting invited to start five-ten minute slots at variety nights. One of them was on a bus, which was pretty awesome. The other half of my sketch act is very tall, he’s six foot three and he couldn’t sit on the bus!

Taking his audience to KFC
No one can prepare you for what the Edinburgh can do to you. It does change you. I mean, despite being quite a sensible, grown-up young man, the second I had three weeks built up of festival atmosphere, I just kind of snapped and improvised. And said, “Who in the audience wants to go to KFC?” and they all came. We were just there at two in the morning, drinking champagne and eating chicken from a bucket. It got really weird, but that’s what happens. It’s incredibly strange but you should just trust it.

Saturday 6 October 2012

Pebble zine - Issue One

Check out the efforts of myself and many talented others' work in introductory  online publication...

 

 Pebble zine

culture  |  fashion  |  features  |  lifestyle  |  music

 

Pebble zine editors  | photography Joseph Kent

 

Meet the editors (clockwise) : Joshua Saunders (features), Tazz Gault (fashion), Sally Rose McCormack (music), Georgia Scarr (lifestyle), Beth Price (beauty) and Nick Reilly (culture)
Pebble zine logo


Issue 1: Intimacy


" Pebble is launching its first issue. We explore the beauty of bare faces, the tour rituals of Dry the River and the letters of a long distance friendship. We seek answers on our emotional connection with food, the secrets of locations at home and abroad, and shine a new light on the clothing we keep to ourselves."




Visit the link above or comfortably flick through our pages below...

 






 
Keep an eye out for the next edition. In the meantime visit www.pebblezine.com ; like Pebble zine on Facebook and follow us on twitter.



Tuesday 4 September 2012

Stacey Solomon Q&A

Joshua Saunders caught up with Stacey Solomon in Birmingham to speak about her career so far and what the future holds for the artist who's yet to debut her own music. 

Since leaving the X-Factor in 2009 has been one of the busiest stars in showbiz. Crowned Queen of the Jungle in I'm a Celebrity Get Me Outta Here, co-hosting Sing If You Can with Keith Lemon as well as other presenting positions for Sky. In between having her second son, Leighton, and becoming the new face of Iceland, taking over from Coleen Nolan. And this September premiering new ITV show Top Dog Model and a new album... then if that wasn't enough, planning a wedding scheduled for next year.


JS: First of all, welcome back to Birmingham Stacey...

Stacey Solomon: Probably about the seventh time I've been. I love Birmingham people are really friendly. You know when you come outside of London because everyone says hello. Birmininum [sic] here I am...


JS: You rose to fame through the X-Factor, did you ever expect you'd make it this far?

Stacey Solomon: No I never thought I'd even make it through the auditions of X-Factor.


JS: If you could summarise your journey since the X Factor in a few words what would they be?

Stacey Solomon: Time of my life. I don't know how else to put it, I'm a very lucky girl.


JS: A lot of celebrities after finishing TV talent shows fizzle out, what's your secret to staying around?

Stacey Solomon: I don't know. Just being normal I suppose.


JS: You've got your first studio album coming out in September, how are you feeling about it?

Stacey Solomon: I can't wait I'm so so excited. It's so lovely to have worked on something for so long. I'm so passionate about it and put lots of hard work into it. So I can't wait to see how it goes...


JS: What can your fans expect from it?

Stacey Solomon: It's very chilled out, live-lounge and acoustic. Then there are some fun floaty numbers on it, so I'm extremely excited.


JS: You've been quite busy since the X-Factor with other side projects is music still your priority?

Stacey Solomon: I love music, I really love music. But I really enjoy presenting I wouldn't like to choose between the two I absolutely love them both and am lucky enough at the moment to be doing both. so I'm just going to enjoy it.


JS: Now imagine Stacey Solomon ten years in the future... where is she and what will she be doing?

Stacey Solomon: I'll be 32 that's all i know for sure... I hope I'll still be releasing music, but I'll have to tell you in ten years. But I'm doing my dream job, definitely, by far, I never in a million years thought I'd be able to do stuff like this. This is 100% my dream job.


JS: You're soon to be married how's the planning for that going?

Stacey Solomon: I can't wait to get married next year, hopefully I'll be having to organising it. I've not organised much in my life so good luck for the wedding.

Thank you for having me I can't wait to come back.

Tuesday 3 July 2012

Olympic Torch Relay - Birmingham, for MSN Sport

Joshua Saunders describes the torch's journey through Birmingham


Read the piece at:
http://sport.uk.msn.com/olympics-2012/inside-track/blogpost.aspx?post=e569b708-e42d-4c5c-9483-0a171342afef

The torch's travel through Birmingham coincided with National Armed Forces day and melodic swing and jazz echoed through the streets of England's second city.

Below are several pictures taken on the day including actor Gerry George of Churchill, by George! , whose imitation of Winston Churchill was uncanny.



Also, phenomenal performances by Sticky Wicket Swing Orchestra, Maggie O’ Hara, Dave Sealey, as well as a Military Band and Sea Cadets Drill Squad.



Despite viewing from afar the beacon that heralds the start of Great Britain's Olympics could still be seen.


Read the piece at:
http://sport.uk.msn.com/olympics-2012/inside-track/blogpost.aspx?post=e569b708-e42d-4c5c-9483-0a171342afef

Tuesday 19 June 2012

Activism: five ways to run a successful campaign

Changing the world is tough, so here’s how to stop your campaign falling from vive la revolution to immediate dissolution.

'Be the change you wish to see in the world,' Gandhi | Photograph David Kozlowski (Dallas Photo)

 

1) Immerse yourself in the Internet

Get yourself a web site! For as little as a fiver (what’s that the price of one cinema ticket?) you can have your own domain name, the online hub for your revolution to flourish…besides who wants to go to see a movie on their own anyway? You don’t needs to parade the streets shout down a megaphone when you can amass activists from your computer chair in your boxers. The UK spends nearly one quarter of all our Internet time on social networking sites (Ofcom, 2010) so utilise it. Facebook following? Check. Tactfully tweeting? Tick. Ignore this and you may as well go back to your cave painting #Granddad.

2) This is what I like to call the circle of trust…

All the youthful years of parents telling white lies have made modern day mankind a discernible bunch. So remember Robert De Niro passionate speech about ‘the circle of trust’ in Meet the Parents and know that once ‘the circle of trust’ is broken you’re out and there’s no coming back - that’s your situation, you are Greg Focker. Be honest with your message and don’t conceal anything, if you do it will create an overhanging shadow of suspicion and your campaign will topple over quicker than an inverted triangle.


3) The grass is always greener - Positive petitioning

Long gone are the days when a melancholic man wielding a sorrowful symphony of words was enough to bring supporters to their cause. An overexposure to guilt-trip TV and the harrowing stories that accompany them have switched mute to our now desensitised receptors, so think positive protesting. Set positive goals and focus on the good that will come out of your efforts, rather than fixating on negativity. Next thing you know, your glass is no longer ‘nearly empty’ but ‘one-eight full’ and your newly acquired following will see that too.


4) Relentlessly chase after change

Naturally, giving up on your cause is the worst thing you can do. Change takes time and patience is the main virtue of it. Imagine if Martin Luther King Jr., gay rights activist Harvey Milk, militant Emmeline Pankhurst or even, as much as it gripes me to say it, Bob Geldoff threw in the towel. Without revolutionaries (maybe Geldoff’s stretching it a little) our world would be closer aligned to the Paleolithic times of the stone ages and increasingly ignorant as a result. Online activists Avaaz.org with a membership of over 14 million people worldwide campaign for their utopian dream. As the founder Ricken Patel purports there’s a need for us to ‘close the gap between the world we have and the world we want’.

5) Get out there!

Set a date and take to the streets with your countless campaigners, the only way to achieve your goal will be through proactive action... you can’t make it all happen from your computer chair. Lobby your local and national government, target key locations with high footfall that are relevant to your point. The more civilians that are aware of your group and what it’s fighting the better for your cause, they may even join you...

So now armed with an arsenal of advice take your silver-star beret, army of followers and go forth into the world young Che, go change the world.

Sunday 20 May 2012

Chelsea Fringe: Grassroots gardening festival launches in London

  • Quirky alternative to Chelsea Flower Show over 80 gardening exhibitions across London

  • GuerrillaGardening.org exhibition displays eight years of environmental activism

  • Royal Visit from the Duchess of Cornwall May 30th

  • Chelsea Fringe 19th May until June 10th, further information and map


Chelsea Fringe: Afternoon tea in Dock Kitchen, Ladbroke Grove.

Quirky alternative the Chelsea Fringe will feature lesser-known grassroots gardening for over three weeks germinating across London.

Newly sprouting this season, the Fringe exhibitions are predominantly free and stretch across London.

Organiser Tim Richards said: "The aim was always to shine a light what these people are doing all year round and to encourage them to not just open community gardens but activate them with workshops."

Tim’s idea for the Fringe flourished from a semi-conscious epiphany, initially find his love for gardening through the words of 18th century poet Alexander Pope and the era’s fixation for the natural world.

“[The Fringe] differs by showcasing things that don’t just exist for a week, the whole point is to enjoy the things in life that are nearly free.”

"The people involved in the fringe now are the visionaries," and cultivating this horticultural revolution is Richard Reynolds, achieving floriculture fame through his blog GuerrillaGardening.org

Visionaries

Since 2004 Richard has 'illegally' entered derelict buildings to bring beauty to neglected sites across the world, including Warsaw.

Chelsea Fringe: Guerrilla Gardener,  Richard Reynolds
wearing one of the four prints to be
 released by Liberty next year.
With his agricultural arsenal of seed missiles designed for reaching less accessible locations, which are challenging targets for environmental activism.

His work has helped to recapture the imaginations of the new gardeners and clothing range Liberty will release four new patterns to their range inspired by his horticultural hobby next year.

Richard found more from his planting passion six years ago when romance blossomed after meeting soon to be wife Lyla while planting tulips around traffic lights.

 “People ask me 'why should I bother [with environmental activism]?' I’m not being paid, it’s not my garden it’s not helping my house price, I can now say it’s good for love.”

The Guerrilla Gardener will be showcasing an exhibition documenting his work over the eight years at the Garden Museum starting tomorrow and give a guided tour on Sunday.

Royal Homage

The event, which is set to return next year, will receive a royal visit from Her Royal Highness The Duchess of Cornwall on Wednesday 30th May in Hackney and Shoreditch . 

Featuring

  Don’t Let the Grass Grow, inspired by the famous saying it’s an illustration of move and change. “If you don’t like to move on well you can always sit back and watch your grasses without stirring.” Located at Dock Kitchen in Ladbroke Grove.

Chelsea Fringe: Don't Let the Grass Grow.
 Odd shoes sprouted along a path once
used by transportation carts.
Chelsea Fringe: Don't Let the Grass Grow.
 Plants and seedlings tucked
needed into the shoes.



 

Chelsea Fringe: Don't Let the Grass Grow.
 Singular boot shows mother nature.


Chelsea Fringe: Don't Let the Grass Grow.
 Exhibition come to life: Varying seeds
planted in the shoes will find out if
grass can grow under your feet


Others events include:
      • The Garden of Disorientation that has transformed a disused Smithfield slaughterhouse.
      • Living Under One Sun garden, a galvanized garden allotment in Tottenham near to where the London Riots happened just over a year ago.  



Saturday 19th May until June 10, visit www.chelseafringe.com for more information and a map.






Created with flickr slideshow.

Sunday 15 April 2012

Derek: Risky Ricky Gervais's controversial comedy yet to warm the nation's hearts

When comedy meets controversy it's challenging to find Gervais far from the center of it - the writer of the Office on Channel 4 with new show Derek.

Ricky Gervais adorning archetypical dark comedy Derek
Gervais has divide opinion since his eruption into national satire spotlight, mocking everything from religion to the obese. So it's unsurprising that he's back once again with a show set to split waves of opinion better than Moses.

But has the contentious comedian's portrayal of autism and life through the viewing window of a more simple world gone a little too far?

Or, is the 'bittersweet' comedy characteristic Gervais comedy with an meaningful undertone more than just controversy?

Cast your vote at the bottom...
Ricky Gervais as Derek, stars alongside Idiot Abroad 'pal' Karl Pilkington playing Dougie (Channel 4)

"Derek Noakes is a tender, innocent man whose love for his job and the people he cares for shines through," Channel 4 programme blurb.

Trailer:



Derek tells the endearing tales of an autistic 49-year-old care worker who recognizes the wood rather than the trees, as he fumbles through his stripped down life.

"I like old people, they're kind and they're not going to be around for forever so be nice to them," Derek Noakes.

Yet, despite the character's intellectual shortcomings, Derek's condensed childlike view of the world allows him to communicate powerful points overflowing of wisdom. Often speaks simplistic truths that can sometimes forgotten that strike the chords of epiphany lost to our misted lives, that are otherwise consumed by complexity and complication.

Along with best-buddy Dougie, starring Karl Pilkington in a mirror-image and life-imitating role, and similar love-interest Hannah (Kerry Godliman), the show follows their experiences working in a retirement home.

Following a familiar formula to previous production The Office, scenes of dialogue are interspersed with one-to-one interviews and reflections with the characters.

And rounded off with poignant piece Nuvole Bianche by the unequivocally talented Ludovico Einaudi, to mourn the end of a controversial yet touching pilot episode capable of horrifying and wrenching the hearts of its audience.

But after drawing in 2 million viewers on it's debut episode returning viewers could still have a lot left to be further astounded by for its return in 2013. But for better or worse, you decide...


  • Risky Gervais, too controversial
  • Mediocre, not as good as Extras
  • Love to hate, hate to love? We love it...
  • I don't care, I just love Karl Pilkington, full stop

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