Denver, Day 5
May. 25th, 2007 11:49 pmA Friday...normally the end of a work week, but the start of the week here as a half-staff caller. Err...I mean...
After reasonably successful sessions of A2 and C1 in the morning, the rest of the day was a hodge-podge mix of socializing, dancing and other convention related jobs.
Vince from Atlanta had asked Danny earlier in the day if we wanted to go to dinner. By the time dinner time came, the entourage ended up as 7 people. We ended up at the Rialto Cafe in two booths, and didn't get to visit with Vince, Trevor and Curtis at all. Weird.
I got drafted to run the upstairs "queue up" music for the Grand March. These things do tend to drag on since they're supposed to be the pageantry part of our event (like the Olympics), but mercifully between the Grand March, the anthyms (the Japanese anthym is still sung, although the Japanese presence is down to about one person), the (unfortunately not-well-planned) Memorial tip, and the announcements, they ended up 15 minutes early. I was sad about how the Memorial Tip happened. No one knew it was coming up...Bear announced a parting of the floor and several RMR volunteers walked the memorial panels up and down the path this left, while Garth Brook's "The Dance" was playing. The callers had the best view of this...most of the 1000 or so dancers couldn't see much of it, and had no idea what was going on, other than some music was playing. Oops.
The Bear Hour was festive enough, for sure. Bear Miller is a hoot to work with...the hard part for me is being tagged to call the Bear Hour for past several years now and try to keep it fresh somehow. I tried to make it an event, rather than just do the same-old, same-old Mainstream Lite dance. I was trying to think of something to do, in the realm of the Wet Tshirt type of idea, and came up on the fly with the Furriest Bear in Your Square contest. I'll have to expand that idea if I ever do this again. We had the Front Range Bears who were promoting the Octobearfest come up in the 3rd tip to learn some easy square dancing. I walked through "Running Bear" as something different to do toward the end of the hour, and MOST (but sadly not all) of the squares did quite well at it. I hope we succeeded in the hour, because although the sound wasn't optimal, it was still much better than the other systems the rest of the convention was using. WE at least had a yak stack to work with!
I really enjoy these specialty sessions! The hall had to be opened larger, since the room (normally the Plus hall) was absolutely packed with men. I'll be looking forward to see what other callers do with it in the next 4 conventions, since I get to be a dancer participant and am not on staff. (Tradition seems to dictate that the Bear hour and the Leather hour get their own prime time slots, but all the other specialty tips are just add-ons...maybe these should be put back to add-on status?) . I'm sad the LJ tip is happening when I'm calling my Hexagon hour.
After that fun was done, we did a social tour of the bar area, wandering with our $2 coaster beers from spot to spot visiting the few souls that hadn't beaten a path to the Honky Tonk Queen contest.
Danny just came back from a quick stop at the HTQ. Mustang Mary (aka Ken DiGenova) won! Danny just posted it on the IAGSDC website. Ima Cornholer came in 2nd (a stunning rout I'm sure) and Charlie Robertson (the caller escort!) came in 3rd!
After reasonably successful sessions of A2 and C1 in the morning, the rest of the day was a hodge-podge mix of socializing, dancing and other convention related jobs.
Vince from Atlanta had asked Danny earlier in the day if we wanted to go to dinner. By the time dinner time came, the entourage ended up as 7 people. We ended up at the Rialto Cafe in two booths, and didn't get to visit with Vince, Trevor and Curtis at all. Weird.
I got drafted to run the upstairs "queue up" music for the Grand March. These things do tend to drag on since they're supposed to be the pageantry part of our event (like the Olympics), but mercifully between the Grand March, the anthyms (the Japanese anthym is still sung, although the Japanese presence is down to about one person), the (unfortunately not-well-planned) Memorial tip, and the announcements, they ended up 15 minutes early. I was sad about how the Memorial Tip happened. No one knew it was coming up...Bear announced a parting of the floor and several RMR volunteers walked the memorial panels up and down the path this left, while Garth Brook's "The Dance" was playing. The callers had the best view of this...most of the 1000 or so dancers couldn't see much of it, and had no idea what was going on, other than some music was playing. Oops.
The Bear Hour was festive enough, for sure. Bear Miller is a hoot to work with...the hard part for me is being tagged to call the Bear Hour for past several years now and try to keep it fresh somehow. I tried to make it an event, rather than just do the same-old, same-old Mainstream Lite dance. I was trying to think of something to do, in the realm of the Wet Tshirt type of idea, and came up on the fly with the Furriest Bear in Your Square contest. I'll have to expand that idea if I ever do this again. We had the Front Range Bears who were promoting the Octobearfest come up in the 3rd tip to learn some easy square dancing. I walked through "Running Bear" as something different to do toward the end of the hour, and MOST (but sadly not all) of the squares did quite well at it. I hope we succeeded in the hour, because although the sound wasn't optimal, it was still much better than the other systems the rest of the convention was using. WE at least had a yak stack to work with!
I really enjoy these specialty sessions! The hall had to be opened larger, since the room (normally the Plus hall) was absolutely packed with men. I'll be looking forward to see what other callers do with it in the next 4 conventions, since I get to be a dancer participant and am not on staff. (Tradition seems to dictate that the Bear hour and the Leather hour get their own prime time slots, but all the other specialty tips are just add-ons...maybe these should be put back to add-on status?) . I'm sad the LJ tip is happening when I'm calling my Hexagon hour.
After that fun was done, we did a social tour of the bar area, wandering with our $2 coaster beers from spot to spot visiting the few souls that hadn't beaten a path to the Honky Tonk Queen contest.
Danny just came back from a quick stop at the HTQ. Mustang Mary (aka Ken DiGenova) won! Danny just posted it on the IAGSDC website. Ima Cornholer came in 2nd (a stunning rout I'm sure) and Charlie Robertson (the caller escort!) came in 3rd!
no subject
Date: 2007-05-26 07:04 am (UTC)