FLOATER: Newspaper Carrier
Camille the deaf mother is her own business, whether she like’s it or not, understands it or not. If she and her 11 year old son are getting up at 1:30am to work for $1.50 an hour, that’s their own business, not the papers, not the State of Colorado’s.

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  • Leftover Salmon is breaking up or taking a break?
    Leftover Salmon after 15 yrs says no more.. a hiatus or good-bye for good? read more..

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  • Leftover Salmon is breaking up or taking a break?
    Leftover Salmon after 15 yrs says no more.. a hiatus or good-bye for good? read more..

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  • Mark Karan interview - 4/21/01
    Mark Karan interview

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  • Railroad Earth
    With nearly 400 shows and tens of thousands of road miles now behind them, Railroad Earth has become a staple on the national touring and festival scene, and built a huge following of loyal fans that document and trade every note they play, and often join them on the road for multiple nights. These fans call themselves “Hobos,” and the band considers them to be the fuel that keeps this engine chugging along. Railroad Earth’s next album is planned for release in Spring 2004. Till then the band will continue to bring their music to the stage from East to West. So keep an ear to the ground and listen for Railroad Earth, because they'll be rolling through your town very soon.

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  • ten2nine
    "I hate to break the news to you, but you guy's may have finally put all the pieces together. This new ep is the best work I've heard from you ever! The writing, lyrics and music is superb, the performance is top notch and [Jim Leguilloux's] production gives it a true professional gloss." - Ron Gilmour, Power 104 Kelowna, BC

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  • Metharia
    The debut on the band was on 18th January 2000, when Metharia won the festival "Le Quattro Notti Rock." In June 2003 they are one of the three winners of the "NMC festival,' in Marcerta winning the award for the best live performance.

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  • Signal Path
    Armed with new jungle juice, they are warming up and ready to play. They opened up with a latenight show in Atlanta and continued on to Mountain View Jam Festival in North Carolina. Coast to coast, they'll be working their way to SummerCamp, Wakarusa, and High Sierra Music Festival.

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  • T-Band
    Jim Dooney plays guitar and does most of the lead vocals. He is great at getting everyone involved in the fun by taking requests or choosing the perfect song for any situation. Amy Anderson plays the stand up bass and sings harmony. Amy is the musical backbone of the band. Her playing punch and solid timing keeps us all together in our all acoustic environment. Robert Griffith plays banjo and sings harmony. Rob drives the band with lightning fast fingers and great improvising skills. Rich Egan plays mandolin and does some vocals. Rich keeps your feet tapping and your fingers snapping with his rhythm chops and is great at playing tasteful solos."

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  • Shanti Groove (September 2003)
    Shanti's groove moves along acoustical and electrical lines, combining the voice of jazz and rock with back porch bluegrass and funktified percussion. Bringing their unique sound to venues nationwide, the band provides a musical celebration of the 'groove' kind.

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  • Kelly's running column
    In this column I want to talk to you about Ghent. Ghent is the capital of the province East-Flanders in Belgium, a small country in Europe, and has about 225, 000 inhabitants.

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  • Kelly's running column
    In this column I want to talk to you about Ghent. Ghent is the capital of the province East-Flanders in Belgium, a small country in Europe, and has about 225, 000 inhabitants.

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  • Curious Yellow (August 2003)
    After fronting a couple bands in the mid 90s in California and spending the next several years developing his musical and songwriting talents in Japan and Minneapolis, Adam Lancaster landed in Denver in 2000 and founded the band. The band took on many formations and seemingly endless lineup changes for about a year until the perfect complimentary additions of Gregg Rosenthal (drums), Josh Eckhoff (guitar), and Matt Novack (bass, vocals) created a sound and style beyond what Adam could have hoped for. This new talented group immediately began writing songs and reworking old songs to create music and a performance that attracts and engages every listening audience. The personal and musical bond between each member deepened quickly and the dedication from everyone to develop the band to its fullest possibilities is evident.

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  • New Monsoon (June 2003)
    Utilizing congas, timbales, tabla, banjo, bongos, Dobro, ghatham, Didgeridoo, electric and acoustic guitars, bass, drum kit and keys, the band offers a plethora of textures, rhythms, ideas and moods. New Monsoon absorbs elements of sound indigenous to world culture and incorporates them into a variety of colorful and original rhythmic compositions.

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  • One Way Rider (May 2003)
    "One Way Rider has taken Nashville by storm! It was an honor to have them perform on the Interstate Radio Network a network of over twenty stations that broadcast from Music City and airs nationwide and in Canada. Locally in Nashville, the IRN broadcast on WSM 650 AM, the home of the Grand Ole Opry. The response was great! We cant wait to have them come back on the air and play for us again. It was so good to be with folks that live and love the bluegrass way, truly a blessed family. David and Valerie are a great example of what a family can accomplish together."

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  • Smokestack (January 2003)
    “The quality of playing blew me away. All four guys were stars, but that keyboard player is a superstar. Very Hornsby in his writing and singing, very Medeski with his jams. I have had the CD for a few months, and being a little familiar with the songs impressed me even more.” CanJam News Toronto, Canada

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  • The Miltones (December 2002)
    Formed in the summer of 2000, the Miltones have already performed over 350 shows in under 28 months. Their high volume of gigs has enabled the band to mature and explore a range of musical directions that make them a formidable artistic act. Simultaneously their music seems to embrace a level of healing and celebration that make them both accessible and fortunate for the audiences they have attracted.

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  • Ripple (November 2002)
    When Ripple started out in an Old Tappan, NJ basement during early 1978, none of us thought we would be discussing the possibilities of playing together for 25 years. But that’s exactly what happened. From the early day’s of playing friends parties (usually when the Parent’s were away) to all the great nightclubs and other interesting venues we’ve performed at during the years, we’ve met some amazing people and formed life long friendships that will long out live the Band.

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  • Ray Charles died today at 73.
    Ray Charles dead at 73

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  • Fair To Midland (September 2002)
    Brett Stowers and Nathin Seals offer a rhythmic passion that leads the humble gentlemen in their avant-garde sound. The unearthed discord and unconventional cries of frontman Andrew Sudderth infused with guitarist Cliff Campbell's melodic fury tumble into a captivating creation of sonics, cultures, and confusion. Combined with the subtle offering of Matt Langley on keys, FTM glides past the expected boundries and gracefully throws their intense rock harmonies to the flame.

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  • The Few (July 2002)
    "We did it in chunks, whenever he was available," says Burnside. "Living there, and playing in the clubs, it raises your game." The result, an explosive, hooky collection that echoes Burnside's love of the Replacements and fascination with the Cure, is startling from a 22-year-old who took up guitar only three years ago.

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  • One Cat Left (May 2002)
    Pete’s former association with TOM MARSHALL of PHISH led to the band AMFIBIAN. It was here in this situation that Pete found his voice and his motivation..

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  • Mt. Kilimanjaro!
    In one scene we saw a hippo in the river, a croccodile laying on the bank just beside it, and a waterbuck stanking near in the grass!

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  • Grateful Web Interview with Madison House and SCI Ticketing
    SCI interview

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  • Leftover will be calling it quits at years end.
    Leftover Salmon are saying goodbye..

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  • AN ANNOUNCEMENT FROM TREY 05.25.04
    Phish is coming to end..

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  • Sativa Gumbo (April 2002)
    Sativa Gumbo

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  • Pamela's stories from Africa
    This month I'll continue teaching English at the school, organize a second beekeeping seminar, begin making fuel-efficient stoves, and track down another place to buy modern breed roosters.

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  • Yamagata update
    Yamagata

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  • Yamagata (June 2001)
    Yamagata

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  • JSwine (October 2000)
    JSwine

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  • Mark Karan (August 2000)
    Mark Karan

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  • Moses Guest (September 2000)
    Moses Guest

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  • Uncle Sammy (July 2001)
    Uncle Sammy

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  • Solomon Grundy (April 2001)
    Solomon Grundy

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  • Tonal Vision (May 2001)
    Tonal Vision

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  • Cosmic Dust Devils (December 2001)
    Cosmic Dust Devils

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  • Purple Buddah (November 2001)
    Purple Buddah

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  • Rather Sit Than Dance To It? - by Chris Olson
    no one was dancing, but we HAD to...people were upset behind us for standing up at a rock-n-roll concert...so we tried the aisle...

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  • I'm a Nice Jewish Girl With a Big Bad Tattoo
    Time to stifle your shrieks and open your minds, dear readers, for you will find that this is a story outside of the parameters of Judaism. A story not about desecrating The Body, but one of adorning it, rewarding it.

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  • Phil & Trey - submitted by Jenica
    Truly amazing, that is all that really needs to be said about these two! I recently attended the two Phil shows at Red Rocks, and the reuniting show with Bobby in Oklahoma. They left me speechless and wanting more..

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  • Trey at Alpine! - by Elizabeth
    I just have to agree with the other commentaries on the Trey Anastasio concert at Alpine Valley! Trey and the band were outstanding! I also read that Trey commented that Alpine Valley is "really the best place to play in the world."

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  • Trey at Alpine 7-21-01 - by Ben Dunker
    On Saturday the 21st of July I went and saw Trey Anastasio and Alpine Valley Music Theatre in East Troy Wisconsin.

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  • Trey Anastasio - by Carey Anthes
    Sad but true -- Phish is on hiatus after touring for 15 years and as of now they have no plan to unite anytime soon. Fortunately, some of the Phishies are still making music -- and plenty of it...

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  • Phil Lesh with RatDog - by Cary Anthes
    If one considers how Grateful St. Louis is for The Kind, The Shwag and Jake's Leg, there's no doubt that this city certainly knows how to honor its Dead..

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  • Jerrys' Rain - by William "Swivel" Young
    This a story about my own first mystical experience with the band. I can't remember exactly what year...82 or 83, I believe...

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  • Trey at Red Rocks - by Polly
    I went to the two trey shows at red rocks both the shows were sick it was nice to see an energetic show the horn section tears..

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  • Trey Anastasio's band - by Jonathan Coker
    Well, I did not go to any of Trey Anastasio's summer tour. I saw him during his fall tour. Needless to say I was not impressed. I had a chance to catch him in Charlotte, NC this summer, but decided to catch Panic in Myrtle Beach, SC instead..

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  • Censorship is the Answer? - by Rachel
    Apparently, Clear Channel Communications and whoever makes decisions there has been very, very touchy about the terrorist attacks on New York City and Washington, D.C. The media giant has formulated a list of over 100 songs that will be banned from its stations..

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  • George Harrison - by Mike Macchi
    I was born in 1965, the same year The Grateful Dead was born and the year that the songs that would land on the Beatles' landmark album "Rubber Soul" were probably starting to gel in the minds of the newly turned-on Fab Four..

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  • Insecticide (inspired by Kafka) - by Mike Marzol
    There is a place I remember as being the last place I remember. I'll ask you kindly not to judge me too strongly as I recall the details of the onset of my present condition. There were situations there....Living creatures wore the skin of dead ones. I saw things moving in unnatural ways..

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  • Byrne Other Ones' review - by Jennifer Sarnoff
    here is the set list, which you've probably already checked out on the websites. the songs that have asterisks are ones that Susan Tedeski joined in on. I don't even think they announced her at the show, b/c the whole time we all kept saying, who is that???

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  • Happy New Year from Africa! -by Pamela
    Adjusting to a life of solitude has been somewhat challenging, but I'm sure times will easier once my Swahili improves and I become busy with projects.

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  • Happy Valentine's Day... from Africa!
    There are a few Muslims around in this part of the country, but they do not at all appear to be threatening. The only adverse attitudes we volunteers have encountered is the occassional "Osama!" shouted out at us from little boys, usually only in the bigger cities.

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  • Hamjambo?
    Here it is nearly "winter" and getting very chilly in the Southern Highlands. Not like Nebraska winter chilly, but with no central heating or insulation and lots of drafty cracks in the house, certainly CHILLY.

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  • Greetings from South Africa
    Apparently links have been found between the diamond and tanzanite mining companies in Kenya with Al Qaeda, and the British and American governments are making a big deal out of it. People who I have talked to from Kenya think this is all totally absurd, and are pleading for the ban to be lifted because, as one of them said, "the tourism industry has been brought to its knees."

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  • Pamela's Xmas in Africa
    The change in seasons here is as abrupt as elsewhere in Africa, from last month bone dry and blazing forest, field and brush fires all around, adding smoke to the already dusty air and to now flash flood downpour every afternoon, usually clearing off to a cool crisp evening and a fresh sky of sparkling stars.

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  • Hamjambo? An update from Pamela
    We had very interesting conversations, covering a broad range of topics from Tiananmen Square and democratic reform in China to of course basketball! And what made it even more interesting were that these conversations were in three languages: Chinese, English and Swahili!

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  • Zambia & Victoria Falls
    What stuck me the most, besides the sheer force and pounding loudness of the water, was the incredible intense colors of the contrasting blue sky, white clouds, dark brown rock, vibrant green plant life, and of course the multiple RAINBOWS in the mist!

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  • FLOATER: Factory Tea Bagger
    'I dont do drugs' he said with a straight face and wild white pupiled eyes, going over to the throw away damaged tea pile, producing Bengal Spice tea bags. 'Put this between your toes when you go to sleep' he said, 'clear it right up.'

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  • Ideology Maintaining Structure; The necessity of gender roles in the public/private dichotomy
    However, these "June Cleaver" images have been very effective in getting women to take pride in their role as a housewife--reinforcing their own oppressive location in the hierarchal structure of American social relations.

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  • FLOATER: Production Assistant
    I drove Loni during a night shoot at Elitch Gardens in a golf cart. Just her and I, weaving through the deserted amusement rides under the stars. Surreal. Truth was, Loni and The Hulk were very, very nice people. Loni treated me better then any of the production people, always thanking me for anything I did, and every time kids stopped the Hulkster he would spend time signing autographs.

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  • FLOATER: Boulder County Jail
    A window opened on the floodlit interior courtyard, containing a grassy area and a basketball court. We strolled past big windows looking in on prisoners in different categories. One framed a room of strange, obese men. One had long thin threads of white hair. Another was shaved bald. All seemed to float about the room, oddly aloof, like manatee’s at Sea World. Was Floater going in there? Eeeek!

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  • Air and Water Propulsion Guy: First Attempt
    We were at the YMCA of Estes Park, and I took the kids to a rocket class. I've never been the same since....

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  • The Dead @ Garden State Arts Center - N.J.
    The first night (8/10) was really nice. We had outstanding weather, and the crowd was mellow. As always there was lots of fun to be had in the parking lot and on the lawn. I like PNC--the people who work there aren't total JERKS like many people at Jones Beach. On the way into the show we saw some interesting things..

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  • The Dead @ Garden State Arts Center - N.J.
    The first night (8/10) was really nice. We had outstanding weather, and the crowd was mellow. As always there was lots of fun to be had in the parking lot and on the lawn. I like PNC--the people who work there aren't total JERKS like many people at Jones Beach. On the way into the show we saw some interesting things..

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  • The Dead @ Garden State Arts Center - N.J.
    The first night (8/10) was really nice. We had outstanding weather, and the crowd was mellow. As always there was lots of fun to be had in the parking lot and on the lawn. I like PNC--the people who work there aren't total JERKS like many people at Jones Beach. On the way into the show we saw some interesting things..

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  • Short history lesson on the privilege of voting
    For weeks, the women's only water came from an open pail. Their food--all of it colorless slop--was infested with worms. When one of the leaders, Alice Paul, embarked on a hunger strike, they tied her to a chair, forced a tube down her throat and poured liquid into her until she vomited. She was tortured like this for weeks until word was smuggled out to the press.

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  • Short history lesson on the privilege of voting
    For weeks, the women's only water came from an open pail. Their food--all of it colorless slop--was infested with worms. When one of the leaders, Alice Paul, embarked on a hunger strike, they tied her to a chair, forced a tube down her throat and poured liquid into her until she vomited. She was tortured like this for weeks until word was smuggled out to the press.

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  • Air and Water Guy: Water fighting Bald Faced Hornets
    On reflection, This was a foolish attempt by amateurs, and if I did indeed want to attempt another foolish attempt by amateurs, I would do so in the rain, the temperature under 55 Degrees, with a face mask.

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  • Air and Water Guy: Water fighting Bald Faced Hornets
    On reflection, This was a foolish attempt by amateurs, and if I did indeed want to attempt another foolish attempt by amateurs, I would do so in the rain, the temperature under 55 Degrees, with a face mask.

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  • Air and Water Guy: Water fighting Bald Faced Hornets
    On reflection, This was a foolish attempt by amateurs, and if I did indeed want to attempt another foolish attempt by amateurs, I would do so in the rain, the temperature under 55 Degrees, with a face mask.

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  • Johnny Apple Last Mile Seed
    We will personally connect the "last mile" of optic fiber to every home we can, until we die. For Global Crossing. For people. For Country.

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  • “Grateful” for electricity
    I’m thankful I live on a power grid with a Fire House. I was only without power for 42 hours……lots and lots of my friends still have no electric or phones and it’s been 5 days. But our President is touring the area today so all ‘s well……another HA!!!!

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  • “Grateful” for electricity
    I’m thankful I live on a power grid with a Fire House. I was only without power for 42 hours……lots and lots of my friends still have no electric or phones and it’s been 5 days. But our President is touring the area today so all ‘s well……another HA!!!!

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  • ARNOLD Scares Americans In Hollywood & Washington
    ARNOLD, McCain, Guiliani, & Zel Miller all suceeded to reaffirm how scared Americans have become. Despite many of them not agreeing with Bush over gun control, abortion rights, enviornmental policies, etc -- the big shot republicans, those considerate moderator and attractive to the independent voters were out in full force at the Republican National Convention. Well, it worked. ach concentrated his attacks on Kerry, particulary Zel Miller, a really angry democrat. Nobody mentioned a word about Bush's domestic agenda. Not a word about healthcare, the environment, gun control, outsourcing jobs, our deficit, or education.

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  • Chaplain John (CH Morris) DIARIES from IRAQ
    Truly prayer is the privilege of the children of the Heavenly Father and I've been a grateful recipient.

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  • Chaplain John (CH Morris) DIARIES from IRAQ
    Truly prayer is the privilege of the children of the Heavenly Father and I've been a grateful recipient.

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  • Streets Smarts by Norm Brodsky: Just Say Yes
    How a Policy that sounds tough can turn into a lifeline for some.

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  • Abbie Hoffman: Steal this [Web] Book
    WELFARE It's so easy to get on welfare, anyone who is broke and doesn't have a regular relief check coming in is nothing but a goddamn lazy bum!

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  • No Laundry Before Bedtime, a Cautionary Tale
    "No, sirree, there's no telling what the outcome will be," she drew in on her cigarette. Only now it was a cigar. And the Oracle had morphed into Jiminy Cricket. "No, sirree." Puff. Puff. "Doesn't matter if it's a lamb and a lion, a wolf and a rooster, or an elephant and a donkey. If you could get the two together in any sort of a civilized fashion at all, you just might come up with something totally unexpected. That's what's so exciting about it." He pointed a finger at me. Do crickets have fingers?

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  • No Laundry Before Bedtime, a Cautionary Tale
    "No, sirree, there's no telling what the outcome will be," she drew in on her cigarette. Only now it was a cigar. And the Oracle had morphed into Jiminy Cricket. "No, sirree." Puff. Puff. "Doesn't matter if it's a lamb and a lion, a wolf and a rooster, or an elephant and a donkey. If you could get the two together in any sort of a civilized fashion at all, you just might come up with something totally unexpected. That's what's so exciting about it." He pointed a finger at me. Do crickets have fingers?

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  • Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof...
    I will watch as some of my friends’ desires for marriage become hopeless fantasies, as civil liberties are stripped away from them and the constitution. I will watch as others struggle with life altering decisions that they will not legally be allowed to make. I will watch my nephews grow up in a country where one half of the populace believes the only civil liberty worth protecting is the right to bear arms, while my nephews’ peers shoot themselves and each other with this precious right. I will watch as the constitution, the very foundation of our country, is chiseled away bit by religious bit.

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  • Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof...
    I will watch as some of my friends’ desires for marriage become hopeless fantasies, as civil liberties are stripped away from them and the constitution. I will watch as others struggle with life altering decisions that they will not legally be allowed to make. I will watch my nephews grow up in a country where one half of the populace believes the only civil liberty worth protecting is the right to bear arms, while my nephews’ peers shoot themselves and each other with this precious right. I will watch as the constitution, the very foundation of our country, is chiseled away bit by religious bit.

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  • Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof...
    I will watch as some of my friends’ desires for marriage become hopeless fantasies, as civil liberties are stripped away from them and the constitution. I will watch as others struggle with life altering decisions that they will not legally be allowed to make. I will watch my nephews grow up in a country where one half of the populace believes the only civil liberty worth protecting is the right to bear arms, while my nephews’ peers shoot themselves and each other with this precious right. I will watch as the constitution, the very foundation of our country, is chiseled away bit by religious bit.

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  • Perception is Everything: Look Busy
    When I turned 16, I decided to get a job at a restaurant. I remember a young bartender telling me the secret to the working world: “Pick something up and look busy. It doesn’t matter what you are doing, just look busy.” Eight years later, I realize what a golden nugget of advice this really is.

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  • Perception is Everything: Look Busy
    When I turned 16, I decided to get a job at a restaurant. I remember a young bartender telling me the secret to the working world: “Pick something up and look busy. It doesn’t matter what you are doing, just look busy.” Eight years later, I realize what a golden nugget of advice this really is.

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  • Happy Birthday Mike Moran, Grateful Web's Founder
    How did this slak jawed local do it?

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  • Pearl Harbor, December 7, 1941
    Bless the Dead and Wounded of Pearl Harbor, also victims of inept American Intelligence and failed imagination...

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  • Help write the Grateful Web Movie: "WJER RADIO"
    Submit ideas, dialouge, character development or commentary on Grateful Web's first movie "WJER RADIO" !

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  • Help write the Grateful Web Movie: "WJER RADIO"
    Submit ideas, dialouge, character development or commentary on Grateful Web's first movie "WJER RADIO" !

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  • Who would want to hurt this little girl?
    If seven African American children could integrate a white school in Little Rock in 1957 and live to tell about it, then dozens of African American children should be okay almost twenty years later in Denver, Colorado, right?

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  • Who would want to hurt this little girl?
    If seven African American children could integrate a white school in Little Rock in 1957 and live to tell about it, then dozens of African American children should be okay almost twenty years later in Denver, Colorado, right?

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  • Who would want to hurt this little girl?
    If seven African American children could integrate a white school in Little Rock in 1957 and live to tell about it, then dozens of African American children should be okay almost twenty years later in Denver, Colorado, right?

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  • Air and Water Propulsion Guy: Honey Bees get your home Buzzing
    Thirsty Hands provides true 'home made' bee products from Suzanne's Boulder Mountain Home. Each years unique flowers effect the taste of the honey we devour.

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  • New(ish) Music Review: 'Year of the Crow' by State Radio
    A recent favorite in my personal palette of rebel rock is State Radio’s newest album, Year of the Crow. Although not a new record per say (it was released back in February of this year), it deserves to be acknowledged in what is possibly the most important election season of my time. Year of the Crow is a no-holds-barred criticism of everything to do with the current ruling administration, touching on such dare-not-speak-its-name issues as the torture of uncharged political prisoners at Guantanamo Bay, the CIA’s new “right” to spy on its own people, and the idea of America as an Imperial force, and not the gallant freedom fighter some politicians make us out to be. Some people would call such criticisms unpatriotic, but these things need to be said. Our government is only as evil as its people will allow it to be, and ignorance and complacency are the only real treasons in our fine country.

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  • New(ish) Music Review: 'Year of the Crow' by State Radio
    A recent favorite in my personal palette of rebel rock is State Radio’s newest album, Year of the Crow. Although not a new record per say (it was released back in February of this year), it deserves to be acknowledged in what is possibly the most important election season of my time. Year of the Crow is a no-holds-barred criticism of everything to do with the current ruling administration, touching on such dare-not-speak-its-name issues as the torture of uncharged political prisoners at Guantanamo Bay, the CIA’s new “right” to spy on its own people, and the idea of America as an Imperial force, and not the gallant freedom fighter some politicians make us out to be. Some people would call such criticisms unpatriotic, but these things need to be said. Our government is only as evil as its people will allow it to be, and ignorance and complacency are the only real treasons in our fine country.

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  • Everest announces fall tour dates w/ Neil Young, Wilco & Death Cab for Cutie
    Everest will open for Neil dates with Death Cab for Cutie from October 14 through November 5 on the West Coast and East Coast with Wilco from November 29 through the tour's conclusion at Madison Square Garden on December 15th.

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  • Everest announces fall tour dates w/ Neil Young, Wilco & Death Cab for Cutie
    Everest will open for Neil dates with Death Cab for Cutie from October 14 through November 5 on the West Coast and East Coast with Wilco from November 29 through the tour's conclusion at Madison Square Garden on December 15th.

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  • All Points West Music & Arts Festival
    Opportunity – This is the reason why many of our ancestors came to the United States. When they arrived here, more than likely they came through Ellis Island. Trey Anastasio touched upon this in his set on the final day of the festival, while explaining how his grandfather made this pilgrimage in 1910 from Italy before playing “Drifting.” Nicole Atkins also remarked about the beautiful location of this festival with clear views of the Statue of Liberty and the New York City skyline. She said, “Look at the view. It’s cool because we’re from New Jersey, and we’re pointing at Lady Liberty’s ass.” The festival’s name originates from the fact that immigrants who came to Ellis Island would go to the Central Railroad of New Jersey terminal, which is located on Liberty State Park, and then hop upon trains labeled “all points west.”

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  • All Points West Music & Arts Festival
    Opportunity – This is the reason why many of our ancestors came to the United States. When they arrived here, more than likely they came through Ellis Island. Trey Anastasio touched upon this in his set on the final day of the festival, while explaining how his grandfather made this pilgrimage in 1910 from Italy before playing “Drifting.” Nicole Atkins also remarked about the beautiful location of this festival with clear views of the Statue of Liberty and the New York City skyline. She said, “Look at the view. It’s cool because we’re from New Jersey, and we’re pointing at Lady Liberty’s ass.” The festival’s name originates from the fact that immigrants who came to Ellis Island would go to the Central Railroad of New Jersey terminal, which is located on Liberty State Park, and then hop upon trains labeled “all points west.”

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  • Ben Harper Returns to Brazil This Fall
    Ben Harper and the Innocent Criminals will play the eco-friendly About Us Festival in Manaus on September 26th and Săo Paulo on the 28th. Then they'll hit the Pepsi On Stage festival in Porto Alegre on Tuesday, September 30th. Tickets go on sale for all shows on August 22nd.

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  • Ben Harper Returns to Brazil This Fall
    Ben Harper and the Innocent Criminals will play the eco-friendly About Us Festival in Manaus on September 26th and Săo Paulo on the 28th. Then they'll hit the Pepsi On Stage festival in Porto Alegre on Tuesday, September 30th. Tickets go on sale for all shows on August 22nd.

  •  
  • Clare & The Reasons Release Song For Obama
    As the world enjoys the last days of summer, Clare & the Reasons are headed back to the UK for a tour that is still adding dates. The tour includes stops at landmark UK festivals, such as Fringe, Connect and End of the Road. The group will join up with My Brightest Diamond halfway through for a co-headlining European leg.

  •  
  • Clare & The Reasons Release Song For Obama
    As the world enjoys the last days of summer, Clare & the Reasons are headed back to the UK for a tour that is still adding dates. The tour includes stops at landmark UK festivals, such as Fringe, Connect and End of the Road. The group will join up with My Brightest Diamond halfway through for a co-headlining European leg.

  •  
  • Jazz Museum Events: August 26-29, 2008
    Last week instructor Greg Thomas continued the month-long tribute to Dr. Taylor with a focus on trio configurations throughout his career, from the 50s ‘til this century. Tempos ballad to brisk, and styles from straight-ahead swing to spiritual solemnity to dance-groove funk to a classically-tinged composition featuring his trio with a symphony orchestra, were appreciated by the attendees at the National Jazz Museum in Harlem’s Visitors Center.

  •  
  • Jazz Museum Events: August 26-29, 2008
    Last week instructor Greg Thomas continued the month-long tribute to Dr. Taylor with a focus on trio configurations throughout his career, from the 50s ‘til this century. Tempos ballad to brisk, and styles from straight-ahead swing to spiritual solemnity to dance-groove funk to a classically-tinged composition featuring his trio with a symphony orchestra, were appreciated by the attendees at the National Jazz Museum in Harlem’s Visitors Center.

  •  
  • Jackson Hole Music Festival Photos!
    The Grateful Web's Sam Holloway trekked up to Jackson Hole last weekend to cover the inaugural Jackson Hole Music Festival. Sam is working on his write-up now, but in the interim we invite you to check out his photos from the weekend. Jackson Hole is one of the loveliest places in the lower 48 and we cannot think of a more pretty setting for a music festival. Thanks to the folks who put on the event for their hospitality. Please be sure to check back soon for Sam's review.

  •  
  • Jackson Hole Music Festival Photos!
    The Grateful Web's Sam Holloway trekked up to Jackson Hole last weekend to cover the inaugural Jackson Hole Music Festival. Sam is working on his write-up now, but in the interim we invite you to check out his photos from the weekend. Jackson Hole is one of the loveliest places in the lower 48 and we cannot think of a more pretty setting for a music festival. Thanks to the folks who put on the event for their hospitality. Please be sure to check back soon for Sam's review.

  •  
  • Rothbury: The Journey There & First Impressions
    We veered off to the left and found ourselves at the Tripolee Domes. You know those big half-circle, old-school jungle gyms? Think three of those on steroids with pieces of fabric stretched amoeba-shaped between them in front of a small stage. An intimate, small-venue experience with the cool artsy atmosphere of rest of the fest perfect for morning yoga and late, late night partying.

  •  
  • Rothbury: The Journey There & First Impressions
    We veered off to the left and found ourselves at the Tripolee Domes. You know those big half-circle, old-school jungle gyms? Think three of those on steroids with pieces of fabric stretched amoeba-shaped between them in front of a small stage. An intimate, small-venue experience with the cool artsy atmosphere of rest of the fest perfect for morning yoga and late, late night partying.

  •  
  • Jackson Hole: A Little Festival with Big Acts & A Lotta Heart
    Summer seems to be coming quickly to a close, and the end of festival season is in sight. This summer was somewhat special, as I was able to witness the birth of two new music festivals onto the scene. In July it was the mega-sized Mile High Music Festival, and on August 16th and 17th the smaller, cozier Jackson Hole Music Festival. Set in Teton Village, at the foot of the Jackson Hole ski resort, and only a stone’s throw away from Grand Teton National Park, I can’t imagine a more beautiful location for a musical weekend. Over the course of two days, ten bands shared a single stage, playing to a crowd of only a few thousand people who danced, drank local Wyoming beer, ate organic pizza, and basked in the fantastic vistas and warm, clear skies.

  •  
  • Jackson Hole: A Little Festival with Big Acts & A Lotta Heart
    Summer seems to be coming quickly to a close, and the end of festival season is in sight. This summer was somewhat special, as I was able to witness the birth of two new music festivals onto the scene. In July it was the mega-sized Mile High Music Festival, and on August 16th and 17th the smaller, cozier Jackson Hole Music Festival. Set in Teton Village, at the foot of the Jackson Hole ski resort, and only a stone’s throw away from Grand Teton National Park, I can’t imagine a more beautiful location for a musical weekend. Over the course of two days, ten bands shared a single stage, playing to a crowd of only a few thousand people who danced, drank local Wyoming beer, ate organic pizza, and basked in the fantastic vistas and warm, clear skies.

  •  
  • Crossroads - the World of Hasil Atkins and Cuzn Wildweed
    But Hasil Atkins was anything but an average person, as a new documentary about him by film-maker, musician and painter Ron Smith, (aka Cuzn Wildweed), reflects. I recently had the opportunity to speak with Smith about Hasil, their music and the film, “My Blue Star”. It was just screened at the Deep Blues Festival in Minnesota, where it won in the Trailers category and the Don't Knock the Rock Festival in Hollywood.

  •  
  • Crossroads - the World of Hasil Atkins and Cuzn Wildweed
    But Hasil Atkins was anything but an average person, as a new documentary about him by film-maker, musician and painter Ron Smith, (aka Cuzn Wildweed), reflects. I recently had the opportunity to speak with Smith about Hasil, their music and the film, “My Blue Star”. It was just screened at the Deep Blues Festival in Minnesota, where it won in the Trailers category and the Don't Knock the Rock Festival in Hollywood.

  •  
  • Crossroads - the World of Hasil Atkins and Cuzn Wildweed
    But Hasil Atkins was anything but an average person, as a new documentary about him by film-maker, musician and painter Ron Smith, (aka Cuzn Wildweed), reflects. I recently had the opportunity to speak with Smith about Hasil, their music and the film, “My Blue Star”. It was just screened at the Deep Blues Festival in Minnesota, where it won in the Trailers category and the Don't Knock the Rock Festival in Hollywood.

  •  
  • Lotus Releases HAMMERSTRIKE and Announces Fall Tour
    This fall, Lotus releases their highly anticipated studio album, Hammerstrike, and steps out on their most ambitious tour yet. The months ahead will wrap up a huge year of growth for Lotus; a year that has positioned this instrumental post-rock outfit for a breakout 2009.

  •  
  • Lotus Releases HAMMERSTRIKE and Announces Fall Tour
    This fall, Lotus releases their highly anticipated studio album, Hammerstrike, and steps out on their most ambitious tour yet. The months ahead will wrap up a huge year of growth for Lotus; a year that has positioned this instrumental post-rock outfit for a breakout 2009.

  •  
  • Turbine Picking Up Speed In Colorado
    Turbine's new album Reward, released in 2007, brings their songwriting and musicianship to the next level. In it you can hear the many influences that have made them who they are today, from the songwriting of Bob Dylan to the futuristic sounds of Radiohead. But who are Turbine…

  •  
  • Turbine Picking Up Speed In Colorado
    Turbine's new album Reward, released in 2007, brings their songwriting and musicianship to the next level. In it you can hear the many influences that have made them who they are today, from the songwriting of Bob Dylan to the futuristic sounds of Radiohead. But who are Turbine…

  •  
  • "Live From Abbey Road" airs this Thursday
    Watch Ben Harper and the Innocent Criminals perform in the legendary Abbey Road Studios this Thursday, August 28th on the Sundance Channel at 10PM ET/PT.

  •  
  • "Live From Abbey Road" airs this Thursday
    Watch Ben Harper and the Innocent Criminals perform in the legendary Abbey Road Studios this Thursday, August 28th on the Sundance Channel at 10PM ET/PT.

  •  
  • Rothbury: Thursday with the Biscuits, EOTO, Lotus & Others
    The funky, jammy, L.A. based Underground Orchestra proved to be a good start to the music of the weekend before the chaos started. Anthony Rogers-Wright proved to be an entertaining bassist and just one component of this group. Sam Feldman plays the mandolin, which I love, so this group had an instant in. The rest of the guys obviously enjoyed their time @ the Domes together, but those two were my favs of this newly discovered group, both for me and lots of others from the sound of it. Not only did I talk to several people over the course of the weekend that mentioned that these guys were a great new find for them but their Myspace site boasts several comments from converts.

  •  
  • Rothbury: Thursday with the Biscuits, EOTO, Lotus & Others
    The funky, jammy, L.A. based Underground Orchestra proved to be a good start to the music of the weekend before the chaos started. Anthony Rogers-Wright proved to be an entertaining bassist and just one component of this group. Sam Feldman plays the mandolin, which I love, so this group had an instant in. The rest of the guys obviously enjoyed their time @ the Domes together, but those two were my favs of this newly discovered group, both for me and lots of others from the sound of it. Not only did I talk to several people over the course of the weekend that mentioned that these guys were a great new find for them but their Myspace site boasts several comments from converts.

  •  
  • Jackson Hole Festival Part II
    I woke up in Grand Teton National Park to the sounds of crazy mountain birds, and was glad not to have been eaten by bears or wolves during the night. The festival itself provides no camping but there is plenty to be found in the park and in the surrounding forests. On the drive to the festival grounds, I saw a moose, and nearly 30 people taking a picture of it. There was a lot to look forward to, and anyway I’ve seen moose before, so I didn’t stop until I hit Teton Village.

  •  
  • Jackson Hole Festival Part II
    I woke up in Grand Teton National Park to the sounds of crazy mountain birds, and was glad not to have been eaten by bears or wolves during the night. The festival itself provides no camping but there is plenty to be found in the park and in the surrounding forests. On the drive to the festival grounds, I saw a moose, and nearly 30 people taking a picture of it. There was a lot to look forward to, and anyway I’ve seen moose before, so I didn’t stop until I hit Teton Village.

  •  
  • My Morning Jacket Lands at Red Rocks
    On Thursday, August 21, My Morning Jacket played Red Rocks, supported by the Black Keys. Both bands have only recently garnered any mainstream attention, and what attention exists is fleeting, and each has yet to become a household name, but persistence and growth is a quality shared by both. Having worked their ways up from obscurity over a great many years, and churning out quality work in the studio along the way, both My Morning Jacket and the Black Keys have built large cult followings, and each seems primed to explode at any minute.

  •  
  • My Morning Jacket Lands at Red Rocks
    On Thursday, August 21, My Morning Jacket played Red Rocks, supported by the Black Keys. Both bands have only recently garnered any mainstream attention, and what attention exists is fleeting, and each has yet to become a household name, but persistence and growth is a quality shared by both. Having worked their ways up from obscurity over a great many years, and churning out quality work in the studio along the way, both My Morning Jacket and the Black Keys have built large cult followings, and each seems primed to explode at any minute.

  •  
  • YMSB to Perform at Obama's Acceptance Speech Today!
    Yonder Mountain String Band, hailing from Nederland, Colorado (forty miles northwest of Denver), is honored to perform at this year's Democratic National Convention held on Denver August 24-28. Yonder will take the stage on the final day of the convention - August 28th at INVESCO Field at Mile High Stadium - just prior to Barack Obama's highly anticipated acceptance speech for the Democratic nomination. Also scheduled to perform at the event are will.i.am, Stevie Wonder and Dave Matthews Band.

  •  
  • YMSB to Perform at Obama's Acceptance Speech Today!
    Yonder Mountain String Band, hailing from Nederland, Colorado (forty miles northwest of Denver), is honored to perform at this year's Democratic National Convention held on Denver August 24-28. Yonder will take the stage on the final day of the convention - August 28th at INVESCO Field at Mile High Stadium - just prior to Barack Obama's highly anticipated acceptance speech for the Democratic nomination. Also scheduled to perform at the event are will.i.am, Stevie Wonder and Dave Matthews Band.

  •  

FLOATER

Journal for the American Worker

JOB:   Newspaper Carrier/Delivery

SHIFT: 2:00 am – 7:00 am, 7 days a week

SALARY:  $500 - $800 per month

AMENITIES PROVIDED: Tea, Instant Coffee and Hot water

RATING:

The small white map fell from the newspaper on the embroidered “Househusband” lettering of my kitchen apron.

Make extra money as an Adult Paper Carrier. $600-$800 a month.

It was a map of my neighborhood. Hhmmmmmmm. $700 a month… a few hours a day… In my own neighborhood? Looks like another job for FLOATER!

It was a big paper out of Denver, The Denver Post, looking to muscle more market share in our northern suburb. I called the pager number listed and punched in my number. ‘Jesse’ called me back. Sure enough, the route was in my neighborhood. “You’re paid while you train,” he said, ‘and you can start immediately.’ The Mid January forecast was for minus 10 degrees, so I told him I could start next week. I was to report to the warehouse at 2:00 am. Proud of my new found employment, I called the wife at work.

‘Are you nuts!!!??? You’re going to get up at 1:30am, every day?! I could have married a doctor with better hours then that!’ ‘A Floater, poops, I promise. Just a Floater.’ Next Monday the bedroom AM radio alarm rings 1:30, set to Rush Limbaugh because it’s the only AM station my 1968 GE radio can get, and he’s saying “Hillary, Hillary, Hillary.” And the feeling, 'I cannot get up' never changes throughout this stint.

I drive, a zombie, to an industrial park near a local brewery. A cavernous room is divided by plywood sectioned worktables. People stand among stacks of tie-wrapped and unwrapped papers. With a 20% chance of snow, tonight is ‘Bag Night.’ Grown men and women pull different stacked sections together, fold the mass, and stuff it into a bright traffic orange bag (the competitor’s bag is green). Then toss the bag into a five foot high, stainless steel leaning cart. From among the carts appears a heavy dude with broad shoulders, muscular with a pony tail. “Floater?” I nod, recognizing the voice as Jesse’s. He introduces me to my route trainer, ‘Fig.’

He says his name is Alan Prill, but everyone in the warehouse calls him Fig. Fig is a grown up nerdy kid, the kind you expected in fifth grade to mature to run a Fortune 500 company, but lo and behold, here he is, 25, with the same sophomoric fart wit, an assistant manager in the graveyard shift of newspaper delivery. What went wrong? All I remember that first night driving with him was falling asleep at the wheel and Fig screaming, ‘Watch the curb!’

By the third night I was on my own, driving up and down the suburban streets looking for house numbers. This job taught me never to put cute little address numbers that match the house siding. Homeowners with illegible or missing street numbers are the scum of the earth.  I took my ‘Max Million’ Million Candle light car spotlight and trained the laser beam into the bedrooms of these people, hoping just one of them emerges in bathrobe so I may ask them at 3:40am where the hell their house number is.

My first Sunday I learn my paper count doubles due to “S/O’s”, Sunday’s only delivery. By 7:30 Sunday morning I was only halfway done delivering the Sunday route, that’s when Jesse showed up in his Bronco. He slid the car into a 180 degree turn as I stood in the middle of the ice covered street looking for 805 Arapahoe.

“Pop your trunk” he boomed, and I saw those shoulders and arms swing into action. He scooped up 100 papers with both arms, dropped them into his passenger door. “I’ll finish from here!” I heard him say as he moved away down the street, octopus arms flailing papers from both sides of the car like a World War Two destroyer firing v path depth charges, disappearing in the morning light. He was a good man,  working for the evil empire. The paper paid every two weeks, and by then I had started to size up the gig. It was not the $700 I was told…

Deducted from my $314 two week check was a bunch of ‘Fees.’ The most heinous were ‘complaints.’ Every time a subscriber called the paper to comment on paper delivery, $1.00 was deducted from my pay. Subscribers may simply be asking to have the paper thrown in a different spot – Boom, the paper took out $1.00. I was paid $.06 cents per paper. My astute math mind saw each complaint deducted from my pay was 16.66 papers I folded and threw for nothing. At $26 per day, 5 complaints out of 300 papers thrown were 20% of my supposed salary, gone back into the pockets of the publisher.

A recurring complaint was ‘porching.’ Some people would lie and say they were handicapped. A few were handicapped. The bottom line was getting out of the car and porching the paper took time. In winter it means snow freezing, melting, then refreezing on your shoes all night long. If everyone demanded it, the route would be impossible to complete by the guaranteed 6 am, and management knew it. They banked on low percentage, but in reality many carriers battled a high percentage of porching requests. The woman behind me, Camille, was deaf, she and her son showed up every morning, dutifully folding papers and delivering. This family NEEDED every penny of the promised income. Since the publisher’s telemarketing salespeople promised anything as they pitched subscriptions, sales promises translated into daily printed messages posted over our plywood work areas: ‘305 Martin St. – Bagged and labeled everyday, hung on doorknob.’

‘Sandal Floor Apt.#212: Third Floor terrace, on west side of building.’

Multiply these two 1 minute round trip consuming requests by 350 papers…it would take 11 additional hours to comply if everyone demanded this service. So, under pressure of a guaranteed delivery of 6am, there were always complaints. Camille stares at her paycheck wondering why, after gas and car expense, complaints, insurance (no, not medical, ha, ha!) and just a plain old “Fee” of 10 bucks per paycheck, she’s drowning as she treads water with her son in the clicking gears of the Newspaper empire’s warehouse at 3am, every morning of every day of the year. Why does she keep it? Its one of only a few available jobs ‘accommodating’ her handicap, she writes me.

On Friday a local, smaller weekly paper appears on our workbench. This paper gives the impression it is a liberal, environmental, ‘hip’ thang. Its cut a deal with the Post to have carriers ‘insert’ and carry it on their back to throw along. The additional time inserting another paper adds 50 minutes and 40 pounds to the fold. But Camille and I see we get $.01 (that’s a penny folks) per inserting this hip paper into our Friday mass. Or in complaint math, one Friday complaint means deaf mother and child threw 100 of these hip publisher’s papers for free. Whatever the local paper agreed to pay the big paper, they didn’t bother about the amount the actual worker delivering this extra product would be making to do it. There of course, is no option about the Friday insert. 

Why go after Kathy Lee? Slave labor is right on your morning doorstep.

Strangely, in the State of Colorado, citizens cannot go after Newspaper’s operations with that crazy, communist, minimum wage argument. The paper hires each individual carrier as its own independent business! This saves the POST from any labor law violations (and there are tons here), but as you can read in Floater's review of the Boulder County Jail, the Bolder Colorado University Police broke the law and seized the papers I owned due to this law after putting Floater, the paperboy in jail. Nice, efficient justice in Colorado, folks, protect the powerful with lawless degradation of the poor. The Colorado University Police become thieves, when the powerful need them to be...*

Camille the deaf mother is her own business, whether she like’s it or not, understands it or not. If she and her 11 year old son are getting up at 1:30am to work for $1.50 an hour, that’s their own business, not the papers, not the State of Colorado’s.

I’m not deaf yet, I don’t have a kid, and I’ve learned not to rely on paid off politicians for justice. They don’t know it yet, but they’ve just chinked FLOATER into their chain gang. Some handwritten advice passed to Camille and her son to even the score: 

1)     Don’t throw ‘Bonus’ Papers:

Two or three times a week, the paper has “Bonus Days.” This means everyone on the route gets a paper, even if they don’t want it, didn’t order it, are not expecting it. The paper does this to artificially boost its supposed circulation numbers to potential advertisers. I experimented and found I could load some of the unfolded papers on my workbench into my cart, cover them with folded papers and wheel them out, never throwing a single extra paper. The next day I’d drop them off at Recycling. Not one person complained. This shaved over an hour off my route each bonus night. 

2)     Get ‘hard to deliver’ addresses to cancel their subscription (if they aren’t REALLY handicapped). The ‘Porchers’ as we carriers call them, are the Bain of the Profession. They turn fast, drive by, warm music on the radio car work into stop, walk, throw, sometimes miss, rethrow work. If allowed to get to a high percentage, Porchers can turn an already arduous route into a nightmare. It’s expensive, but playing hardball with the Porchers can sometimes get them to either acquiesce or stop the subscription. It means eyeing the manager with a stupid look on your face while he explains for the sixth time where the third floor terrace is at 418 Marine. One house kept demanding porch delivery, so finally I threw 10 old Sunday papers on its roof one Wednesday morning. He quit the next day. Victory! But it cost $15 in complaints over 15 days. 

3)     Take more papers then you need.

Having extra papers in the car means when you miss, simply throw another one! 

4)     Don’t insert the local paper. 

For a penny a paper, these guys deserve it. Like the bonus papers, smuggle ‘em out and visit recycling. So much for “editorially free.” 

5)     Make deal with other carriers.

I met the carrier for The Rocky Mountain News every night at the same apartment complex. He handed me 120 of his papers for 113 of mine. We halved our route mileage by delivering each other’s papers. Workers Unite!

6) Steal Coupons. Arm & Hammer ran a Sunday coupon for $2.00 off on their toothpaste. There was no limit on the coupon. Safeway was running a “2 for 1” Arm & Hammer special on toothpaste. I got 120 tubes of toothpaste for $.25 cents each. Gave ‘em out as presents, have a two year supply…

Summary

For some, a Floater is a menial, easy way to get a job to pay some bills. For most, these jobs represent the difference between subsistence and welfare. While some of us may be able to move on when being exploited, most of the workers I met could not, whatever the conditions. If the paper simply paid its carriers per hour, much of the exploitation would correct itself.  The State of Colorado needs the guts to take on the Newspaper Industries labor practices, but don’t hold your breath. Newspapers are powerful influences on who gets elected.

The waste of gas and labor, the added pollution, and extra expenditure having competing papers sending out separate carriers to the same neighborhoods is tremendous. Some smart entrepreneur should incorporate an independent business combining routes of different papers and passes these savings to the carriers, subscribers, and even the competing publishers. Carriers would drive less; deliver more papers in a smaller zone.

As it stands, if you’re a night person and need extra cash, take the job only if you follow Floater’s advice. For the abuses listed, this job gets Floater’s lowest rating, one (1) Star. To make matters worse, Colorado University Police threw Floater in jail one morning doing the route for making a right on red at Marine and Arapahoe at 4am in the morning (See Floater review: “Boulder County Jail”). The exposure and expense of driving your car around is a fortune.

Finally, if you are a paper subscriber, take the time to investigate the conditions of the people YOU employ before renewing your paper’s subscription.

Floater, © 1997

*added text (ed note)

Ed note: Addresses and names have been changed to protect the innocent

****

FLOATER Articles:

Production Assistant

Boulder County Jail

Boxing Tea

NewsPaper Carrier [You are here]

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