Yummy Mummy – Think About It

The term “Yummy Mummy” has become quite well-accepted in common “parental talk”. What used to refer to sugared cereal is now used to label a mother who portrays herself as glamorous and fairly unaffected by the birth of her children.

The Georgia Straight has an interesting article on how this term is becoming contentious and divisive in the parenting circles.

The Birth Lounge, which held an alternative baby fair at Britannia Community Centre on March 10, promotes the idea that the transition to motherhood is a major one: bodies change, focus changes, work changes, and relationships change. For a mom’s life even to slightly resemble her former world, it takes lots of money–enough for a nanny, a diaper service, a maid service, and the “right” baby wardrobe and accessories. The term yummy mummy has serious class overtones, they agreed.

In fact, they think that yummy mummies are a myth. No matter what a mom looks like on the outside, you never know what’s going on beneath her mascara–or tank top.

I’ve long felt that this term was becoming somewhat dismissive and … … pejorative, to borrow the phrase from the article. It’s nice to see local community discussion about it. And frankly, this article is an excellent one.

Parting words:

Yummy mummy, Williams said, challenges the yuckiness of motherhood in the same way that the perky 1940s housewife challenged her grandmother and the supermom challenged her. Like those stereotypes, the yummy mummy is totally unrealistic for today’s women anxious to appear to have it all.

P.S. Anyone interested in sending our ladies to see Mom’s the Word 2: Unhinged. We missed the original Mom’s the Word, but this one looks like it could be useful in a decade or so…

Stop Supporting The RIAA

I think it is sad that the RIAA is approaching their customers with lawsuits rather than with purchasing options that suit today’s digital media world. However I get incensed when I hear that they are not only suing a (then 7) ten year old girl, but also insisting on being given the chance to question her directly rather than through less confrontational methods usually used for children in court cases.

I strongly urge everyone to avoid supporting this evil conglomerate.

How do you know if you’re supporting them? The RIAA Radar website allows you to check a particular artist, album, label, etc. to see if they are part of the sinister corporation. Before buying your music, check out that radar and see if you’re going to be supporting this kind of company, or if perhaps you want to forgo that particular album.

P.S. I’m always happy to provide music suggestions if you’re not sure what non-RIAA music you’d like to listen to.

Testing Video Codecs – What Is Working For You?

As we’re finally figuring out how to take video from our camera, resize it down for web access, and post it here and I am finding it quite bewildering as to the options involved in video capture and display. As an example, look at the Wikipedia article on Xvid – that chart down the bottom actually simplifies things!

So in that spirit, I’d like to hear who can play what. I have a choice to make and I want to choose a video format that most people can play. My platform naturally lets me play pretty much anything, but I understand you poor Windows users are having trouble. So please, let me know in comments which videos work for you below.

Xvid video (2.3 MB)

MPEG-4 video (2.2 MB)

UPDATE:
Well, it seems Windows users will need to install the Xvid codec in order to view the videos. Xvid is a free, open source alternative to DivX, a proprietary and popular video codec. Feel free to install DivX if you want, but given the choice I’m going to stick to Xvid. You can download a Windows and MacOS plugin here.

Compact Cassettes – The Beginning of the End

Maybe it is the incessant rain, but I feel a little blue today. Nothing like some music to make me feel better however – and in that vein I did a little reminiscing with Wikipedia. We all remember the audio cassette, don’t we? How uncomplicated was that format!? Forget DRM. Forget lossless reproduction. Forget sound quality. I remember feeling good when I managed to grab a new song off the radio with the stupid DJ talking over top. I could at least listen to the song whenever I wanted!

Those were much simpler times.

Home Taping Is Killing Music

Now go read the “Home Dubbing” part of that article and see if it sounds familiar at all. Flash back a few decades and the recording industry was warning us consumers about the same problem they are today – the end of music due to reproduction in the home. Maybe the music industry just takes a long, long, LONG time to die?

Resilient stuff, that music.

Holy Cow! theBside is 2!

Wow, I realized today that theBside just turned 2 years old a few days ago!

2 wonderfully irreverent and meaningless years behind me … what do I plan to do? Oh, the possibilities!

First up is a theme change – now who among you are really surprised by this? I thought not.

Truly a new bold direction, taking the lead in legitimate and informative blogging. Wait – aren’t some of those terms contradictory?