Events

Golden Girls – The New Generation of Role Models

DillyTante is inspired and amazed by our Golden Girls – The athletes of Olympic 2012 

 

 

I’ve had a strong dislike of sport for a few years now. Oh, when I was young I made a good pretence of liking football. I supported Chelsea from a young age, and when I was a teenager I used to buy Chelsea Magazine. It helped keep me knowledgeable, with a view to keeping up with the boys’ conversations, specifically one who I fancied liked crazy who also supported Chelsea. But now I’m in my 30s, two kids, and so much going on I just don’t have the time or energy to maintain an interest simply for conversational purposes. In fact my faux interest has turned full circle to active dislike.

I’ve fully embraced my distaste for sport, and can quite often be heard muttering about “inflated pay and under performance”, “bad behaviour of sportsmen” and “breeding ground for aggressive behaviour”. Until recently I thought sport was frivolous, pointless, and a waste of money (I know, this from a girl who gets her kicks from yarn bombing.)

The hazy days of London2012 mania, have been a revelation to me: it’s not sport I hate, it’s football.

I watched gripped as Heather Stanning and Helen Glover breezed to the finish line in their boat to grab Team GB’s first gold medal. I could barely suppress the tears watching Jessica Ennis giving the performance of her life, clinching the gold for the women’s heptathlon.

I’ve quickly gained skills as a judge for events like the Synchronised Diving, and Artistic Gymnastics, giving the TV the benefit of my wisdom, picked up from the BBC commentators. “Ooh, very little splash, that’ll be a good score”. “Look that that, totally out of synch.”

 

I’ve marvelled as the country has united in it’s support for TeamGB, and basked in the glow of success, if not the sun. People on Twitter are reporting feelings of joy and humility simply from watching these people compete. Joy and humility are the emotions that I associate with watching major football competitions.

Jessica Ennis Olay AdvertPoster girl for the new generation?

 

 

Jessica Ennis: young, attractive, successful; the media made her the poster girl for London2012, and under that immense pressure she delivered. It’s too early for me to count properly, but my rough estimates are that about third of our medal haul so far has come from women. How refreshing for our daughters to see these women as role models. People like Katie Price, Cheryl Cole and anyone from the cast of TOWIE (I couldn’t name a single one) are revered for their looks, what they wear and their diva-like behaviour.

Jessica, Victoria Pendalton and Rebecca Adlington are also being lauded for the bodies, but for for what their bodies and do when combined with the drive, the dedication and the grace under pressure from their minds. These are people who have worked single mindedly for years in the pursuit of one goal. They have respected their bodies, and honed their minds to get the maximum from them. And on winning they have thanks everyone from the crowd to their PE teachers. They’ve hugged and congratulated opposing teams. They’ve beamed in pride and shed tears of joy atop the podium.

Here’s what they haven’t done:

Scissor kicked a member of the crowd
Sworn at the referee, team mates or any of the spectators
Deliberately sabotaged an opposing team by kicking, hitting or elbowing them
Got blind drunk and made a spectacle of themselves during a major competition
Refused to shake hands with an opposing team member
Been accused of racist abuse of opposing team members

Ashley and Cheryl Cole Lottery AdvertThou shalt not worship false idols 

 

Do you know what Heather Stanning does when she is not training to be an Olympic Rower? She’s a Captain in the Royal Artillery. Jessica Ennis is a Psychology graduate, and Victoria Pendleton is also a graduate. These are women with brains and brawn, and a drive to succeed.

Now let’s talk money. Team GB athletes are funded mainly by the National Lottery World Class Performance Programme. They get this money in two ways:firstly through their Performance Programme, which pays for coaches, sports psychologists, acclimatisation and other training needs. This is worth around 55k for “Podium Level” athletes. They can also apply for a personal award, which covers their personal living and sporting costs. This ranges from 13k to 28k. Obviously being a world class athlete costs more than that so they have to rely on other sources such as sponsorship, with many athletes having other jobs, to earn money, but also as a stepping stone to life after relatively short careers. There is an earnings cap set at £65,163 above which the athlete’s award will start to be deducted, meaning that once an athlete starts pulling in the sponsorship money, their contribution from the WCPP is reduced.

Estimates vary, but Chelsea footballer John Terry reportedly earns about £150,000 a week. Yeah, look at those noughts.

Maybe now we can get over our eternal disappointment at the performance of our footballers. Isn’t it time that football and footballers stopped dominating sporting coverage. At last we have some real role models gracing our screens and our papers.

Real people, real faces, real achievements. And it’s not just me who thinks this; my Twitter timeline was awash with similar sentiments. Most of this in the control of the media, but we can control what we chose to consume, and we can tell them what we want.

We want to see more of these hard working and committed young people. We want to see more women in sport. We want to see more interesting sports than a bunch of men kicking around a ball for 90 dull minutes before the penalty shoot out which we will inevitably lose (don’t they train for these things?). The BBC must also be praised for its excellent, comprehensive coverage of the Olympics (bar a few inane presenters, Gary Linekar I’m looking at you). But if we have another all male short list for BBC Sports Personality of the Year I’m cancelling my licence fee.

Personally I think Ennis should win it, fortunately it doesn’t matter, because she has already won the biggest prize of her career.

 

 

This article was originally posted on DillyTante’s blog

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Events

Happy Yarn Bombing Day!

What on earth is yarn bombing, I hear you ask, and why does it have a day of celebration? 

Yarn bombing is described as the “art of knit and crochet graffiti”. The blogger DillyTante knows more, and has even made our very own Jump! Mag Yarn Bomb. 

 

Time to play hookey!

There’s no denying that crafting is currently cool, well, if not cool, certainly popular. There are countless books being released on a weekly basis dedicated to all kinds of craft and making. No longer are granny squares the preserve of your granny, all kinds of crafting is being done by all kinds of people. It’s a rebellion against the mass produced culture of the cheap and quick which we now live in.

Crafting was traditionally the preserve of women; well, decorative craft was, you know, the sort that is just to make things look pretty. The real craft work, leather tanning, shoe making, stone masonry, was done by the men, who were known as artisans. Women sewed cushions and samplers to demonstrate their sewing skills to future husbands. Now craft is not only facing comeback, it is bringing with it a rebellion…

Subversive craft is about taking a traditional feminine and twee activity and giving it a twist, or giving it a message. Women and girls no longer have to embroider flowers and hearts, and we no longer just knit baby blankets and misshapen jumpers.

My current favourite renegade craft is yarn bombing, also known as yarn storming or knit graffiti. Basically it is knitting or crocheting something and leaving it in a public space. Sometimes it has a message or a tag, sometimes it is political, but for me it is mostly about brightening up the world and putting a smile on someone’s face.

Today is International Yarn Bombing Day, so it is a perfect excuse for you to give it a go yourself. It’s easy to do and I’m going to give you some guidelines for a simple project yourself.

 

 

Step 1: Well, first you need to know how to knit or crochet. Either is fine, though I must admit I am a crochet evangelist. If you don’t have a handy granny to show you how to knit or crochet, there are some excellent YouTube videos that can help you.

Step 2: You need yarn and a hook or some needles. The great thing about yarn bombing is the brighter the wool the better, so you don’t need to spend money on lovely but expensive yarns. Any old yarn lurking around is good.

 

 

 

 

Step 3: Knit or crochet a simple rectangle. You can pick your target and measure it, or you can just make your rectangle any size and find a target it will fit. If you like you can embellish it with a message. You can see here one I made especially for you guys!

 

 

 

Step 4: There are two ways of depositing your yarn bomb: you can either do it in the dead of night so no one can see you, or you can do it in broad daylight, in which case the key is to just act naturally and as if you are meant to be there. Now I don’t recommend you go out in the middle of the night so I you’ll have to go with the second option. It helps to rope in a friend to keep you company, and make you feel less of a weirdo!

 

Step 5: Pick your target and sew your yarn bomb on.

 

 

 

 

Step 6: Don’t forget to take a photo for posterity!

 

 

You have to accept that your yarn bomb isn’t permanent, left out in the wild it is open to prey or wondering off to its own devices. Like the hideous china kitten your great aunty Mary got you for your birthday, your yarn bomb is a gift to the world and it can do what it wants with it. If your yarn bomb disappears you just have to hope that someone has taken it home because they love it so much!

 

 

 

If you want to see more excellent examples of yarn bombing and for inspiration check out these websites:

Knit The City 
Yarnstorming 

Yarnbombing
and of course DillyTante’s website 

 

A high profile Yarnbomber, or Guerilla Knitter, Agata Oleksiak recently hit the headlines by creating a cosy full body jumper for the Antony Gormley sculptures on Crosby beach.

 

Picture by Agata Oleksiak

 

 

 

Happy Yarn Bombing Day!

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Events

Listening To Girls

When 12 year old Victoria Grant talked about the Canadian banking system at the Public Banking Institute Conference in Philidelphia, she had no idea what would follow. The video of her speech went viral, and suddenly she was on TV talking about her views.

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Events

V&A Dundee – what’s all the fuss about?!

There’s a new museum set to be built in Scotland – in Dundee, to be precise – and people are getting rather excited about it. Dundee journalist Julianne Roberstson explains why it is a big deal

 

 

What is it?

The V&A at Dundee is an offshoot of the famous Victoria & Albert Museum in London, which claims to be ‘the world’s greatest museum of art and design’.  The idea behind the Scottish version is that it will be an international centre of design for Scotland, showing off the best ideas from the past, present and future, and helping people understand who they are and where they come from.

 

 

So what will be in it?

There will be displays which have already been seen at the V&A in London, plus exhibitions celebrating how things which have been designed or made in Scotland have had an impact across the world.  Did you know the telephone, television, lawnmower, fountain pen and stamps were all created by Scots?

 

 

 

Why does it look like THAT?

Japanese architect Kengo Kuma has been chosen to design the museum, after winning a architectural competition.  It’ll be right on the waterfront in Dundee, an area which is currently being massively rebuilt to make the city look better.  People in Dundee wanted a really striking building in the centre of this new area and they believe this design will become well-known across Europe.  It will cost £45 million to build!

 

How many people will visit it?

The people in charge of this project believe about 500 000 visitors will come to see the new museum in the first year.  They think people from across the world will be attracted to the building and its galleries.  That means a big tourism boost for Dundee and the surrounding area, and will probably create a lot of new jobs – both of these things are very good for the local economy.

 

Sounds fab!  When can I go?

Not so fast – it’s not even built yet!  Because the museum will be built right beside the River Tay, studies of the riverbed are currently being carried out.  Construction is expected to start in 2013, and the V&A at Dundee should be ready to open in 2015.

 

 

Julianne Robertson is a freelance journalist, based in Dundee. Her background is radio news, and she now writes features and reviews, specialising in parenting, faith and religion, events and lifestyle issues.

 

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Events

Million Women Rise March

Contributor Aine is 11 years old and this year she accompanied her mother to the Million Women Rise March in London.

The Million Women Rise (MWR) Coalition is a diverse group of individual women and women representatives from the Voluntary and Community Sector who are united by our outrage at the continued daily, hourly, minute-by-minute individual and institutionalised male violence enacted against women worldwide. We believe that every woman and child has a right to live free from violence and that ongoing violence devastates not only the lives of the individuals directly affected but also the communities of which they are part. We have come together to organise a national demonstration against violence against women.

The Coalition has no formal or informal links to any particular or specific feminist or political networks. The Coalition is not partisan and brings together women who want to highlight the continuation of all forms of violence against women and demand that steps are taken to put an end to this.

 

 

This is Aine’s report.

 

The march took a very long time to start.

I was there last year, and there weren’t quite as many women and children this year.

I hope more girls come next year – I only saw about twelve girls my age.

It’s fun. It’s good exercise. It’s good to know about stuff before you get older.

I was carrying the giant LFN banner and it was really heavy. I couldn’t feel the wind – it just felt really heavy.

My friends and I got to make up our own chants. I e-mailed one of the organisers beforehand with some chants from radical cheerleaders that we changed a bit.

 

‘hey
Ho
Patriarchy has to go’

 

They were printed out and lots of people used them.

After I finished carrying the banner, my friends and I led some chants. We were loud enough to start them without a megaphone.

I think if you have more girls around who are your age, you get really giddy and that helps with being brave enough to shout.

There were some very good dancers at the rally who were about my age.

After the rally, we walked to the after-party. There was lots of food. We danced. Someone sang a song. It was a good evening.

 

 

 

 If you liked this, click on the little heart next to the title. <3 

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