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Thursday
Mar032011

Detroit Moxie's Weekend Roundup

The calendar is playing a fun trick on our livers and stomachs this year with Paczki Day and St. Patrick’s Day falling so close together. The Metro Times Blowout, Paczki Day, the St. Patrick’s Day Parade, and St. Patrick’s Day all fall within a week and a half time frame.

Be careful out there and pace yourself!

Paczki!

Weekend Roundup

1. Countdown to Paczki Day Celebration - Paczki Day (March 8th) is just around the corner. Head down to Hamtramck for this annual celebration complete with Mr. Paczki, free samples of the glorious fried goodies, and Paws from the Detroit Tigers. March 5th.

2. Metro Times Hamtramck Blowout - Now in its 14th year, the music event promises 200 local bands at 14 venues over 4 nights. Hamtown will be rocking this week! March 2-5.

3. Dearborn SOUP (Facebook link) - Inspired by Detroit Soup, the monthly dinner will fund micro-grants for projects in the community. Local entrepreneurs with creative ideas in arts, humanities, or green initiatives will receive funding for their projects. March 6th.

4. Sweet on Maple Sugaring - Do you love maple syrup? Five Huron-Clinton Metroparks have programs throughout the month of March that will show you the process of how trees are tapped and sap is collected. Some of the programs even offer breakfast! March 5-6, continuing throughout the month.

5. The Moth StorySLAMS - The theme for this month is Animals. Prepare a 5-minute story or just sit in the audience and be entertained. March 3rd.

Do you know of a great event going on in Metro Detroit this weekend? Add it to the comments and share it with us!

Tuesday
Mar012011

Winter Beer Festival served up Michigan brews & snow

What do you get when you put together an empty parking lot, falling snow, and craft beer made in Michigan? A fabulous fun time!

This past Saturday I headed to Grand Rapids to attend the Winter Beer Festival thrown by the Michigan Brewers Guild at Fifth Third Park. Almost 60 Michigan brewers were on hand showing off 370 different craft beers.

The event had been sold out for a month and as we arrived at the ballpark a huge line to get in had already formed. Having never been to a beer festival before, I had no idea what to expect. I mean, I love good beer but I am by no means a beer snob. So I won’t be reviewing the beer, I’ll leave that to the experts.

The brewers certainly come up with some creative names for their libations. There was a cheeky shout-out to the current It Boy ‘Justin Bie-beer’ from Copper Canyon, a nod to a has-been from Right Brain with their ‘Bonaduce Ginger IPA’, and the cute ‘Under the Kilt Scottish Wee Heavy’ from Dragonmead in Warren.

One of highlights and most anticipated moments of the festival was the tapping of Founders’ KBS Imperial Stout. The lines were long and the chants were loud.

Another standout was newbie Brewery Vivant, named one of the 12 breweries to watch in 2011 by Draft Magazine, they specialize in French and Belgian style beer. I was a fan of their Contemplation Ale while my friends enjoyed the Big Red Coq Hoppy Belgian Ale.

The snow started coming down soon after the festival started but it didn’t damper the mood; people were friendly and having a great time. The veterans came bundled in snow pants and overalls and most were wisely bundled up. The fashion was fantastic, especially the headwear and hats. The fire pits in the center of the lot were a popular place to warm up and talk about beer.

Entertainment and food were also on hand; many attendees were chomping on huge turkey legs. Experienced beer festivalgoer’s prefer to wear their food around their neck, though. I mean, who wants to stop and eat when you can just take a nibble off of your neckwear.

I was introduced to pretzelaces earlier in the week by the team at Drink Michigan and they made me an extreme pretzelace, complete with donuts, cookies and peach rings. Basically, any food with a hole made it on the necklace. We had so many people stop us and tell us ours were the best of the fest.

Me, Nick Nerbonne from Crystal Mountain, and Trisha Verma & Audrey Walker from Drink Michigan.

Grand Rapids has so much to offer and it makes the perfect setting for the beer festival. Restaurants, nightlife, and culture are in abundance. I loved seeing some of the Artprize pieces around town, including the Steampig and a stunning mosaic in the lobby of the lovely JW Marriot.

The Artprize Steampig.

Winter Beer Fest is now a must-do Michigan event for me. I can’t wait to get back to Grand Rapids and explore more of the city.

Thursday
Feb242011

Detroit Moxie's Weekend Roundup

I was sorting through the thousands upon thousands of photographs I have of Detroit for the new gallery when I came across the picture below. I snapped the picture in Campus Martius last summer and it made me smile because a) it was summer and warm and b) what the heck? I hope it made you smile too.

Anyway, there are tons of fun things happening in Detroit this weekend. Get out there and enjoy yourself.

Weekend Roundup

1. Scotch & Cigars Open House - 1701 Cigar Bar and Lounge opens its doors to celebrate a new series of invitation-only art events. Complimentary wine tastings, cigars, live entertainment and the the art of Alphonso Cox. February 26th.

2. Anansi the Spider - Family Sundays continue at the DIA with the Paul Mesner Puppets. Four classic African and Caribbean tales of this trickster spider will be prensented. February 27th.

3. The Pretty Things Peepshow - Burlesque and sideshow entertainment that combines the classic style of the 1930's vaudeville along with a more modern rock and roll style. February 26th.

4. Autorama Detroit 2011 - This is the Motor City and we do love our cars. Hot rods, custom cars, concepts, and specialty cars will all be on show at Cobo. February 25-27.

5. Our Underground Railroad Story: The Descendents Speak of the River - This special presentation at the Detroit Historical Museum discusses the history and stories of the Underground Railroad from both sides of the Detroit River. February 26th.

6. The Social: My Worst Day as a Creative - Calling all creatives! AIGA Detroit presents this storytelling event where they invite professional creatives to tell that horrid story about their job. February 24th.

Do you know of a great event going on in Metro Detroit this weekend? Add it to the comments and share it with us!

Monday
Feb212011

Hackerspaces: The Community Centers of the Future

Tucked away in an industrial area in Ferndale sits a building that looks like any other small manufacturing plant. Once you walk through the doors of i3Detroit however, you’ll find a new kind of workshop filled with cupcake cars, Twinkie cannons and fire statues.

This giant named Red Green stands 16 feet tall. Click the photo to see what he can do!

The oldest and largest hackerspace in Michigan, i3Detroit is a place where makers, tinkerers, DIYers, coders and crafters meet to learn, collaborate, and make. What do they make? That’s only limited by imagination. After all, the three i’s in the name stand for imagine, innovate, and inspire.

Don’t be afraid of the word hacker, they aren’t trying to get your bank details and passwords.

If you made it out to Maker Faire at The Henry Ford last summer, you get the idea. In fact, the i3Detroit community played a huge part in bringing the largest DIY festival to the area. Maker Faire is already set to return in 2011 & 2012.

i3Detroit is a collaborative environment for people to explore the balance between technology, art and culture. We feel the best way to create this environment is to bring like mind people together that share a common passion for technology, art and culture. ~ From their website

The hackerspace movement in the United States began in 2007 and is hitting its prime in metro Detroit with 3 distinct and different communities. Nick Britsky, founding member of i3Detroit explains that each hackerspace has a slightly different personality and that’s what makes them unique.

All Hands Active based in Ann Arbor is fueled by college students. Britsky says, “it’s a very high energy crowd. They are often engaging with young students hacking and remaking electronics to make cool music. Or, inventing new whimsical contraptions to share with Make Magazine.”

The third hackerspace in our area, Omnicorp Detroit in Eastern Market “is in the heart of Detroit and has a passion for its local culture and people. They are very industrial and do a lot of unique classes,” Britsky explains.

Equipped with woodworking and metal working tools, electronics, a chemistry lab, podcasting studio and crafting area, you could call i3Detroit the epitome of a man cave. Except hackerspaces and i3Detroit aren’t just for men, plenty of women create and tinker in the space.

This awesome cow was made using their laser cutter.

Britsky talks about hackerspaces being the community centers of the future. He explains, “I would love to see a community center that was more integrated with the community that utilizes home improvement tools, up-to-date computer labs & classes that are relevant to current living. All of this is very expensive.” He proposes partnering with local businesses. “Think of Home Depot coming in to teach proper technique on the table saw or Production Tool Supply showing people how interesting and rewarding working with metal is or even Best Buy teaching people simple computer techniques. There is a pent-up demand for this in the community.”

Besides working on individual projects, i3Detroit offers classes and partners with local community groups. They’ve hosted Clawson High School's FIRST robotics team for the past two years. “This is a great partnership with the high school where we provide the tools, staff & facilities to give the students a first class and very cool experience in hands-on science and math,” Britsky said.

The Clawson FIRST robotics team gets to work.

Currently, i3Detroit is gutting and revamping an old trailer into a podcast studio. Once finished, the production trailer will feature a 4-person microphone set up, ham radio gear, audio/video editing equipment and all the “creature comforts of home.” With additional donations they’re also looking at adding cameras, Wi-Fi, and air conditioning.

The future production trailer.

So can these hackerspaces really be the new community centers? Britsky says that, “local community centers are struggling and need to be updated for more modern times.  Look at Troy's community center; it will be closed in July along with a number of other municipal buildings. On the flip side, Ferndale has a unique community center but awareness and pricing of their facilities is what I believe holds them back.”

The Detroit area hackerspaces are already the community centers of the future, albeit for a very small community. As the word spreads, these spaces are sure to grow, expand, and become a strong resource for the community.

The next big event on tap for i3Detroit is Penguicon, a sci-fi and writing convention in Troy. They’ll be teaching classes on electronics, sewing, and more. Two area groups, Tweetea and Girls in Tech Detroit, will be invading the i3Detroit space tomorrow night for an informal chat on jobs in tech. 

Friday
Feb182011

RoboCop spawns other Detroit projects

“I’m not going to write about the RoboCop statue in Detroit.”

I wrote that down 5 times the other day to get my inner Bart Simpson out of my system. So much has been said about the Robocop statue, both pro and con, that I didn’t have anything remarkable to add. And I'm sick of all the rants on the subject. But Bart always breaks the rules and so will I.

Three micro-funding projects have sprung up in retaliation against response to the RoboCop statue and I wanted to shine a light on them.

RoboCharity is raising money for Forgotten Harvest, an organization devoted to relieving hunger in metro Detroit. Gary Whitta, who wrote the film ‘The Book of Eli’ and comic book author Ron Marz were the inspiration behind the idea with help from Detroit’s own Ryan Meray. See the full RoboCharity story on WXYZ's website.

Keep Detroit Beautiful wants to “show people all over the country how much we care and love the city of Detroit!” The funds raised will go to the Greening of Detroit Foundation. They’re already 20% funded!

Le Tigre Park is a collaborative effort to build a public playground, picnic area, garden and sculpture park. Originally, the organizers hoped the site would be old Tiger Stadium, hence the name. Since that isn’t possible, they are looking at other locations including Brush Park.

These are the 3 projects that I saw pop up yesterday. Are there others out there?

Photo credit: RoboCharity.