Archive for May, 2010

Over 50 and Out of Work: Weirton, WV

Thursday, May 20th, 2010

We’ve wrapped up our trip to Weirton — interviewed the town’s mayor, as well as four 50-plus laid-off steelworkers and a few others in the town and nearby Steubenville, OH who are over 50 and out of work.

Mark Harris, mayor of Weirton, below, is trying to revitalize the town since employment at the Weirton steel mill has declined from 14,000 in the 1970s to 923 today.

The steel mill, which only produces tinplate currently, is now owned by Arcelor Mittal.

Over 50 and Out of Work: got the blog going

Tuesday, May 18th, 2010

We’ve got the Over 50 and Out of Work blog up — check it out!  We arrived in Weirton, WV yesterday, and we’ll be here, interviewing people, until midday tomorrow.

Over 50 and Out of Work: West Virginia

Saturday, May 15th, 2010

On Monday, we’re headed to Weirton, WV to interview steelworkers who have lost their jobs, as well as other laid-off workers for our Over 50 and Out of Work project.

Over 50 and Out of Work: DC Career Fair

Wednesday, May 12th, 2010


Yesterday, Sam, Max and I covered the Work@50+ Career Fair, held at Nationals Park in Washington, DC.

Three thousand job seekers over the age of 50 attended the fair, sponsored by EmploymentGuide.com in collaboration with AARP and wiserworker.com. Below, they hurried into the park at 10 am when the gates were opened for entry into the career fair.

We’ll be posting interviews with Deborah Russell, AARP Director, Workforce Issues, Education & Outreach, and Laurie McCann, Senior Attorney, AARP Foundation Litigation, on our Over 50 and Out of Work site soon.

Over 50 and Out of Work: at the AARP

Saturday, May 8th, 2010

Monday, May 10, we’ll be interviewing Deborah Russell, AARP Director, Workforce Issues, Education and Outreach, Social Impact Group, and Laurie McCann, Senior Attorney, AARP Foundation Litigation, at their offices in Washington, DC for our Over 50 and Out of Work project.

Over 50 and Out of Work: Back to DC

Thursday, May 6th, 2010

Net Tuesday, we’ll be covering the Washington DC Career Fair in Partnership with AARP to be held at Nationals Park for our Over 50 and Out of Work project.  The fair’s organizers are expecting at least 3500 job seekers.

Catching up on documentaries

Sunday, May 2nd, 2010

As background research for Over 50 and Out of Work, I’ve been watching (catching up on) documentaries: Paper Heart, The September Issue, Roger and Me and Food, Inc.

Quirky and fun, Paper Heart follows Charlyne Yi as she sets out across the country to interview people, searching for the answer to the question: What is love?

I was jealous when she interviewed owners of wedding chapels in Las Vegas – there was an Elvis impersonator and a clean-cut owner wearing his pants buckled way too high. They told great stories about marrying impulsive couples, but I’m sure they had many more to tell. I also wanted to know how these two got into that crazy line of work to begin with and if they could make a living at it.

In the end, I also found the entire documentary unsatisfying. Over the course of the film, Yi herself appears to fall in love for the first time, and she pledges to keep filming whatever happens. But when she follows her friend or lover (Michael Cera) to his family home in Toronto for a surprise reunion and he opens the door, she tells her crew to turn the camera off. Advised by her producer that the inconclusive scene didn’t work, she concocted an animated ending for the film that still didn’t answer the question — Did she find love? — and that also reminded me, regrettably, of Disney’s Mulan.

The September Issue is luscious and lovely. Also, fun, unless your livelihood depends on the fickle, fast-moving fashion industry. Watching Anna Wintour and Grace Coddington spar over the creation of the September 2007 issue of Vogue from the vantage point of 2010, though, was a bit painful. Making a living from fashion and art has become even dicier since then.

Saw yesterday that the fashion designer Mario Pinto, favored by Michelle Obama, is closing up shop and about to declare bankruptcy.

More on the other documentaries later in the week.