Friday, February 15, 2008

Volunteer Team Building at Essex Media Workshop




A couple of weeks ago, the Onsight Project volunteers met at Essex Media Workshop for a teambuilding activity. Essex Media Workshop is a charity that provides training in television and video production. We had a tour of the facility and learned what happens behind the scenes of television production. We were able to put on our own talk show - 'Out and About in Essex' - and each of us took on a role in production (from Director, Stage Manager, Video, Cameramen, and Presenters). Since I was the only female who wasn't shy in front of the camera, I was one of the presenters, along with a gentlemen volunteer. The script was from a show previously produced and it was fun reading from the tele-prompter and cueing to video clips. While our show was recorded, it was only for our purposes. Sadly I won't be on televesion for real. Haha!
The Onsight Project is one of the projects I volunteer with in Basildon. Onsight facilitates community tea afternoons for elderly in local libraries, as well as provides transport and shopping assistance for elderly in the Town Centre.

Monday, February 4, 2008

Courtesy of the Apostrophe Protection Society

The Apostrophe Protection Society was started in 2001 by John Richards, now its Chairman, with the specific aim of preserving the correct use of this currently much abused punctuation mark in all forms of text written in the English language.

The rules concerning the use of Apostrophes in written English are very simple:

1. They are used to denote a missing letter or letters, for example:

  • I can't instead of I cannot
  • I don't instead of I do not
  • it's instead of it is

2. They are used to denote possession, for example:

  • the dog's bone
  • the company's logo
  • Jones's bakery (but Joneses' bakery if owned by more than one Jones)

... but please note that the possessive form of it does not take an apostrophe any more than ours, yours or hers do

  • the bone is in its mouth

... however, if there are two or more dogs, companies or Joneses in our example, the apostrophe comes after the 's':

  • the dogs' bones
  • the companies' logos
  • Joneses' bakeries

3. Apostrophes are NEVER ever used to denote plurals! Common examples of such abuse (all seen in real life!) are:

  • Banana's for sale which of course should read Bananas for sale
  • Menu's printed to order which should read Menus printed to order
  • 1000's of bargains here! which should read 1000s of bargains here!
  • New CD's just in! which should read New CDs just in!
  • Buy your Xmas tree's here! which should read Buy your Xmas trees here!

Note: Special care must be taken over the use of your and you're as they sound the same but are used quite differently:

  • your is possessive as in this is your pen
  • you're is short for you are as in you're coming over to my house
The Apostrophe Protection Society23 Vauxhall Road, Boston, Lincs. PE21 0JB United Kingdom