Tuesday, February 18, 2014

Webification

Photograph Distracts Fan from Meeting Celebrities 
A fan missed her moment to meet a favorite band because a photograph of the band members captivated her.
 By Allyson Cole
The Photograph
As we were on our way to the concession stand at Six Flags Over Georgia, a group gathered by the gated stage entrance of the amphitheater. The group consisted of mostly girls looking up and pointing at the ride from which my friends and I had just escaped: Superman: Ultimate Flight. The girls were enthusiastically discussing a group preparing for the takeoff of the next ride. We realized that the band performing later that day, had just been harnessed into the ride. The band members looked down and waved at the shrieking crowd that had gathered below.
My friends and I went back up the ramp and once again gazed at the action photos taken on the ride. We saw the crazy faces of the band members on the display screens. However, as we looked at the overpriced photos this second time, this captured celebrity moment didn’t seem as expensive as the memory of our ride. It even felt necessary to buy, an obligation given our near brush with the stars.

Missed Moment
As we were digging into our bags for money, we heard young men laughing breathlessly while looking at photos of the most recent ride. They spoke of the looks on their faces, and how their hair was so misplaced and disheveled. When the middle-aged woman behind the counter asked if they wanted to buy the photo, they politely declined and began walking out of the store.
Just as the man selling me the photo had handed me my change, my friend tapped me on the shoulder. Distracted, I only glimpsed at what she pointed at and continued to put the loose change in my wallet. She once again tapped my shoulder and told me to look at what she saw. In plain view, I saw four men and two bodyguards being tailed by a throng of animated girls. I realized then that the young men standing behind me were one of my favorite bands. I didn’t know they were a mere foot away. I was so distracted by getting my hands on an image of them that I missed a chance to witness a moment with them in real time.

Memory
That band no longer influences me, but I still have the photograph. It’s in a small keychain that hangs on the wall of my bedroom and collects dust, reminding me that at that moment in time, I chose to spend my money on a photograph of four people who didn’t know me, rather than one of my friends and me.


Tags: photo, photograph, roller coaster, band, concert, ride, celebrity, stars









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United Way Infogram


United Way 

BY KANYE SOUTH
Staff Writer, Rome Herald

ROME, Ga. -- The Floyd County United Way Monday awarded $28,312 in supplemental appropriations to three agencies whose programs were threatened by inadequate funding.

The United Way board of directors appropriated $15,137 to the Women’s Out Service to enable the agency to operate through the end of the current fiscal year. Director Brenda Trapp said the supplemental funds will help pay her salary and those of two part-time professional counselors.

The United Way board of directors also appropriated $10,000 to the Front Door Center, a personal crisis counseling center that caters to those with drug abuse and alcohol problems. The Front Door Center will use the funds to pay higher rent at its new facility, located at 800 N. Broad St. The city condemned the center’s old facility in June 2005.

“If we hadn’t approved the additional monies, Front Door likely would have to shut down,” said William Nichols, chair of the United Way board of directors.

A supplemental appropriation of $3,175 will go to the Boy Scouts for a summer camp program for disadvantaged youths. The amount matches a similar sum given to the Girl Scouts during the board’s regular funding process, which concluded in the spring. The Boy Scouts plan to spend half of the supplemental appropriation on improvements to a recreation center and the balance -- $1587 -- on field trips.

During the regular funding process the board appropriated $1.3 million for 15 other United Way agencies in Floyd County.