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  • Help for the Hardest Parenting Nightmare Imaginable

    We're usually pretty big on the bad news around here, what with the news wires crammed with one tragedy or another on a daily basis. But this one, while tragic, thankfully has a silver lining -- and there's something you can do to make it even better.

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  • Attack of the Strippers

    Stripper Golf

    During a children's golf tournament in Broomfield, Colorado, the children were exposed to -- and I hope you are sitting down as you read this -- strippers. That's right. They actually saw women who dance and take their clothes off while men throw money at them.

    Were the women naked? No. Were they -- again, stay seated, this is a bombshell that could shake you to the very core of your being -- scantily clad? Yes, dear reader, they were. Undies. According to CBSNews.com, the children wanted to know why "the men joining the strippers had water guns and why the women wore only their underwear." (That must have been a fun conversation.) Evelyn Koch, the manager of the golf course, apologized for...

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  • No presents for this kid - just donations

     No gifts please, just some canned goods

    More nice news – an 11-year-old in Greensboro, North Carolina told her friends not to bring presents to her birthday party. Instead, she asked them to bring canned goods that she will donate to a local food pantry.

    This isn't the first time Audrey Mangum decided to forgo gifts...

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  • Because Pregnant Women Can't Make Mix Tapes

    Disclaimer: I love the March of Dimes. The March of Dimes does great work and is a force for good. This, however, is a silly idea.

     

     

     

     

     

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  • Saving the World in Junior High

    Kids today. Why, when I was Tara Suri's age, I was…well, doing not a whole hell of a lot, actually, compared to what she's accomplished.

    When she was 13 years old, Tara went to India with her family. She was profoundly saddened by the poverty she observed, and wanted to do something to help the orphaned children she saw there and the Sudan.

    "It was somewhat of a revelation for me," Tara, now 16, told CNN. "It was the first time I recognized the economic disparities and the gender inequalities that were there. And that really touched me and I knew I had to do something about it."

     So she began HOPE, for Helping Orphans Pursue Education...

     

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  • Babble Talk: Gimme, Gimme!

     

    The birthday party debate is coming full circle! Instead of the previous (now demonized) competitions of high-end gift bags and exotic party locales, it is now all the rage to see who can be the most selfless by making your baby’s birthday about charitable giving and/or anti-consumerism. Amy Lutz takes on the ‘no gifts please’ movement making the point that, “. . . you can still be pro-gifts and anti-spoiling.”

     

    This need to say no, does seem to be the response to the birthday parties and gifts getting out of hand, which is a good thing. But also as one reader pointed out, dictating anyone’s gift choice is, well, rude. Lutz promotes another positive about shopping for the kiddos in the idea that our children will learn to be gracious in the presence of an unwanted gift; and that is a lovely sentiment, one that we all can agree is important. However, if your kid is the greedy one who needs to have the reigns taken in because she’s already demanding all the Barbies, it’s doubtful that lesson will be learned on her birthday. But also as Lutz points it, the teaching of life lessons should maybe take a birthday break. There are plenty of other days in the year to take on those issues. It’s like the time my friend let her recently toilet-trained two-year old wear a diaper at her birthday party. You’re not taking away the lesson by showing your little ones that they can relax and enjoy their special day. What do you do readers? Show restraint? Or have a free-for-all?


  • The Charity Birthday Party

    The New York Times covers the no-gift birthday party 'trend'. Increasingly parents are asking guests to forgo gifts and instead donate to a specific charity. The trend is part philanthropy and part a defense against the clutter a large birthday party can bring. Judith Martin, Miss Manners, says the idea is ridiculous, “People seem to forget that you can’t spend other people’s money, even for a good cause.” She suggests it's better to get parents together and decide on small gifts to keep the idea of the child's birthday party in mind.

    Hey, great idea Miss Manners, that way my kid can have 40 small pieces of clutter I have to find storage for. 40 small things they'll likely tire of in a week. Not to mention the gifts they'll get from well meaning aunts, uncles and grandparents. We have video from my daughter's second birthday party, she's opening a mountain of gifts from family and after about 10 items she breaks down into sobs, totally overwhelmed.

    At some point, for a lot of kids, enough is enough. They end up in a feeding frenzy where they can't really appreciate the gift or the sentiment behind it, that's something I want to avoid. I get a sick to my stomach feeling when my kids have 20 gifts to open at once, I agree with Miss Manners in that you can't decide how people spend their money but I see nothing wrong with politely declining gifts at birthday parties. I know my kids have plenty of opportunities to experience the joy of gift opening, they don't need to be beaten over the head with the 'joy'.


  • Fighting hunger with muffins.

    When I read the title of this article, "Native Sun's new muffin line helps fight childhood hunger", I imagined a genetically engineered super muffin. One which could feed a child for a month! One which, when half eaten, reforms itself into a full muffin once again. I was wrong, Native Sun is simply participating in Share Our Strength's Great American Bake Sale, donating 10% of the sales of it's new mini muffin line to the charity.

    The Great American Bake sale runs May 19 - August 31 and is used to raise money for local organizations which, "work to increase participation by low-income children in summer and after-school feeding programs and to support nutrition education programs for low-income families." 

    Owner of the Native Sun bakery says usually his sales droop in the summer months, but with this new line and charity sales have remained high. Who says altruism's dead? 


  • Ava Cipriani, RIP

    In January I blogged here about an auction to help offset the medical bills of Ava Cipriani, a three-year-old girl suffering from an aggressive form of cancer called neuroblastoma. I'm sorry to report that Ava passed away last month. I can't even begin to get my head around what her family must be feeling.

    To add insult to injury, the Ciprianis are still in the hole for massive medical costs relating to Ava's treatment. Don't even get me started on the state of healthcare in the United States; instead, I'd rather focus on how amazing some individuals are. I know nothing about Ally and Larry Cipriani, but I can guess that they must be incredibly cool people indeed because of the way their community has rallied around them in this darkest time. First the auction in January, and the latest example is a series of teeshirts being produced by 70 Star 7, an organization that screenprints shirts with unique and beautiful designs by various artists and donates a significant portion of the proceeds from each limited-edition run to the charity of the artist's choice. Several artists are on board to support A Wish For Ava (Henry "H" Lichtmann's already got a couple of designs up on the 70*7 site), and a special child-sized shirt and hoodie from Kathie Olivas will be available soon at LA's Monkeyhouse Toys.

    I can't really think of a better legacy than having people love you and your family so much that they're willing to put their hearts into doing whatever needs to be done to help you.

    (via boingboing


  • Mizrahi to Design Limited-Edition Teletubbies Handbags

    If you heard a loud and kind of squishy sound just now, that was my head exploding. My love for fashion designer Isaac Mizrahi collided with my loathing of the chubby plushies known as the Teletubbies when I learned that Mizrahi will be designing five Tubbie-themed purses in celebration of their tenth anniversary (has it been that long? It seems longer).

    Mizrahi is only one of the big guns that Ragdoll Entertainment is packing in anticipation of a huge relaunch of the Teletubbies brand: they've also got apparel lines in the works to be aimed at tweens, teens, and young adults (dear God in heaven, please tell me this doesn't mean that people are going to start throwing raves again).  

    The Mizrahi bags will be auctioned off to benefit Cure Autism Now and Autism Speaks. Now if you'll excuse me, I'm going to go curl up with my Isaac For Target cashmere sweater and my clearance-rack-at-Saks Isaac driving shoes and watch Unzipped until my head feels better.


  • The Grinchettes Who Stole Xmas: Women Accused of Stealing Donated Toys

    ToysOh you're a BAD one, Mrs. Grinch! Here's yet another tale of woe, misery, and downright asshattery from Florida, the source and fountainhead of some of the world's best reality blogging. Karen Lewis and Donna Thomas didn't have  good story for the police officer who questioned them in their pickup truck parked at the back of the Lakeland Children's Donation Center. And then the officer noticed the Center's peeled-back chain link fence. And the toys piled outside next to it.

    Lewis and Thomas eventually admitted to the officer that they were up to no good. Next week, Merriam-Webster will vote on whether to include a picture of the duo next to the definition of "red-handed" in next year's dictionary.


  • Tuesday Is National Pancake Day

    Did you know there was such a thing as National Pancake Day?  Me neither!  However, in honor of this auspicious holiday, IHOP is giving away free short stacks of their famous buttermilk pancakes all day today. 

    In exchange for the free panckages, they ask only that you kindly consider making a donation to support children's hospitals through the Children's Miracle Network.  Last year, people eating at IHOP raised over $340,000 for children.  This year, they're hoping to give away enough free panckaes to raise over $500,000.

    So, if you have a yen for pancakes and want to help out a very worthy cause, head over to IHOP today and grab some free pancakes.  Anyone care to join me for a Rooty Tooty Fresh 'N Fruity? 


  • Most Photogenic Baby Contest: Charity Scam?

    I just don't know about America's Most Photogenic Baby. I don't know about the website with its low-res images of babies who presumably aren't America's Most Photogenic Baby, but merely a Tribute To America's Most Photogenic Baby. I don't know about the fact that you have to bring your kid to a mall to be photographed for the contest, where most of the contestants are sure to wait around in line so long that they become tired and frustrated and crap on themselves. I don't know about the fact that there's an entry fee, effectively ruling out as photogenic any babies whose parents are too poor or too smart to pay to enter a contest of this nature. I definitely don't know about the four categories of fashionable, comical (?), precious (???), and beautiful ("a closeup shot of beauty and innocense [sic]"). I'm a little put off by the charity angle, which is kind of unclear to me. Couldn't the overhead be lowered and more money raised for charity by eliminating the photography venues and just accepting digital submissions?

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