The Puppet Co’s “Carnival of the Animals” – Don’t Miss It!

Narrator Christian Beltran in guest performer Bob Brown Puppets’ production “Carnival of the Animals.” Photo by Christopher Piper.

On Saturday, we delighted in the Puppet Co’s “Carnival of the Animals” – the first show performed in English and Spanish at the theater in honor of Hispanic Heritage Month. The 40-minute show alternates between English and Spanish seamlessly as life-sized, brightly colored puppets delight children. on stage. The play opens with the main character, Nicholas, frustrated with piano practice and instead he opts for a nap. During his nap time, the stuffed animals in his room come to life while the music plays through his radio.

Fourteen animals in total appear throughout the play, performed in the bunraku-style puppet show, which is a Japanese term for black theater, in which the audience cannot see the puppeteers manipulating the life-size puppets. The two pupeteers are dressed in black, including black face masks, and initially me and Mr. Wired Momma were a little distracted by it – but then we quickly forgot they were even there. In classic kid form, my kids didn’t even seem to notice they were there, which clearly is the point.

Actor Christian Beltran narrates the show and talks the kids through the different music styles and how that music matches the kind of animal puppet coming to life on stage. I loved the educational component of this show from Puppet Co, not just in the alternating languages but also the teachable moments in learning about music, speed, pitch and thinking creatively about how that sound mimics the movement of the animals. Hands down, my favorite puppet was the turtle who transforms into a graceful ballerina. The youngest Wired Momma’ette adored her the most as well. I also thought the neon fish were really cool. Beltran points out to the kids that they can learn what is being said by music and encourages them to listen for certain cues, like the clarinet and strings, to express the movement of the fish.

At just under 40 minutes, this show is the perfect length even for little ones. My almost 4-year-old remained seated at the front next to her older sister and didn’t even look for us once during the entire show, which says a lot. The variation of animals and puppet styles, I think, helps keeps their attention because everyone wants to know who will come on stage next.

Mr. Wired Momma noted this might have been his favorite show yet at The Puppet Co and it certainly ranks in my top five. I highly recommend it to anyone with kids ages 3.5 and up but act quick because it’s only a three week run: Sept. 21 – Oct. 7. Especially with pesky rain in this weekend’s forecast – and the beautiful carousel still open on weekends at Glen Echo Park – I’d put this at the top of the weekend activity list.

If you are making plans (Read: looking to avoid the chaos that is pumpkin patches and apple picking), you can catch the show Fridays at 10 & 11:30am or  Saturdays and Sundays at 11:30am & 1pm. Tickets are $10 and now you can purchase tickets online with no extra fees. For anyone with kids ages 0-4, don’t forget the fabulous Tiny Tots program at Puppet Co. which you can catch on select Wednesdays, Saturdays and Sundays. Beauty and the Beast opens next on October 12, which is sure to be a hit among my little ones.
Disclosure: The Puppet Co is one of my advertisers and they provided me and my family the tickets to see “Carnival of the Animals.” My opinions here are my own.

Dine Local & Support Your Community

Look, I am a food snob. You probably figured it out by now. In particular, I try to avoid national chains like the plague. Why eat at some generic chain when there are countless delicious locally owned and operated restaurants beyond our front steps, especially here in DC??

For the next two weeks, Restaurant.com has paired up with Cash Mobs founder Andrew Samtoy to launch the Dine Local Dish Mobs campaign. Through  my work with Restaurant.com, this whole concept was new to me until last week. It’s actually really cool. Too bad they didn’t include DC on the list! The purpose of the campaign is to encourage restaurant goers to dine at local, independently owned restaurants. The campaign began yesterday and goes through October 7th. This year, they are hosting Dish Mob events at five restaurants in five markets:  Chicago, Cleveland, Minneapolis, St. Louis and Denver. Maybe next year DC will be on the list?

The idea is help a select local restaurant thrive by sending consumers to each business on a designated date and time. Ultimately what really makes this campaign unique is it targets specific restaurants to help rejuvenate them. Look, I don’t just love local, independently owned restaurants because the food is better than say, a national chain. I also enjoy supporting these businesses because they are part of the community and they give back to the community in ways a national chain just doesn’t.

In fact, an August 2012 study by Civic Economics notes that local restaurants return almost 80 percent of their revenue locally compared to just 30 percent for national chain eateries.  It’s the local restaurants who support our kids’ little league teams, who sponsor fundraising nights for local preschools and elementary schools, who provide jobs to our residents and support local farms by purchasing their produce. So maybe we should we starting our own Dine Local Dish Mob campaign here in DC?? Is there a local restaurant where you live that could use some extra support? Is there a local restaurant that always supports your kid’s school and maybe deserves some extra business? If so, then maybe we can each take to Facebook and Twitter on our own and encourage the people in our neighborhoods to frequent that special place over the next few weeks? Feel free to give shout outs to local restaurants you love on the Wired Momma Facebook page. I, for one, am always eager and happy to learn about a fabulous local eatery – and feel free to note whether it’s great for kids or better for date night.

And if you live in one of this year’s 5 Dish Mob cities, check here for more details on the local restaurant in that area.

Disclosure: I am a paid blog ambassador for Restaurant.com but my opinions here are all my own.

WM Working Mom Hero Awards…..At Long Last

I am months delayed in the first recipient of today’s highly sought after Wired Momma Working Mom Hero Awards series but better late than never, right? First, some context. Earlier this summer, pretty much all of us read and talked about Anne-Marie Slaughter’s piece in the Atlantic Monthly on “Having It All.” Some agreed, some disagreed, some of us were pleased she used her platform to raise the importance of the struggle we all face to manage work and family life – even if we found Slaughter herself self-righteous and annoying (cough, cough).

Whatever the case may be, I struggled to put my finger on exactly what bothered me about Slaughter’s essay, no matter that there were parts of it I enjoyed and agreed with. Something was still gnawing at me.  Until I read a piece in the New York Times way back in June honoring Nora Ephron. You guessed it – she is today’s first award recipient, posthumously of course, of the Wired Momma Working Mom Hero Awards. The reasons to honor Ms. Ephron are, of course, endless. Do you have all day?

Meg Ryan in the iconic scene

I mean – the scene with Meg Ryan mimicking an orgasm during “When Harry Met Sally” and Ms Ephron placing her own mother-in-law in that scene to be the woman asking to order whatever Meg’s having – isn’t that right there reason enough to love her and honor her?

But it’s her wit, wisdom and common sense that appeals most to moi. In  Alessandra Stanley’s New York Times piece I mentioned above, Stanley mentions Slaughter’s piece and references a commencement speech Ephron gave to Wellesley graduates in 1996 where she said the following: “Maybe young women don’t wonder whether they can have it all any longer, but in case any of you are wondering, of course you can have it all. What are you going to do? Everything, is my guess. It will be a little messy, but embrace the mess. It will be complicated, but rejoice in the complications. It will not be anything like what you think it will be like, but surprises are good for you. And don’t be frightened: you can always change your mind. I know: I’ve had four careers and three husbands.”

Right there. She says it all. She is exactly right and in those few sentences, she also addresses the very thing about Slaughter’s piece I couldn’t put my finger on – quick taking yourself so god damn seriously. It’s annoying. And self-righteous. And unrealistic. That is exactly what bugged me this entire time.

Instead, Ephron nails it with her common sense advice to embrace the mess, embrace the complications, to be realistic about life and her own self-deprecating humor in noting she’s had four careers and three husbands. For anyone following along, one of the qualities I admire most in WM Working Mom Hero Award recipients is they tend to discuss their mistakes, their failures and move on. I admire this in a person because, again, it is real. It isn’t about perfection at all, quite the opposite, it’s about realistic approaches to life.

Following Ephron in today’s Awards ceremony (isn’t it a fancy ceremony) would be intimidating for pretty much anyone – except probably today’s other winner – and this particular woman is long over due for the award. Like Ephron, she is also, personally, one of my favorite and most beloved public figure moms; successful professional and overall star – she is none other than Michelle Obama. Now, you might not agree with her or her husband politically, but I challenge you to not find some thing useful in some of her recent parenting rules. I also challenge you to not absolutely adore many of her great outfits and her steadfast effort to fight childhood obesity and promote healthy, active living. But that aside, let’s focus today on specifically what she’s done to earn today’s award. It’s really what she said and frankly, I believe she meant it.

Mrs. Obama with her girls. Photo Credit: http://michelleostyle.blogspot.com/2011/06/girls-trip-first-lady-michelle-o-first.html

First – partly what inspired my reaction to her words was something I witnessed on Friday morning. I left the gym around 7:02AM and on the corner by the gym were four teenage girls. They were standing there waiting for the school bus. Wanna know what they were doing? Every last one of them? They were TEXTING.

It had everything in me not to knock the phones out of their hands and tell them to get over themselves and TALK TO EACH OTHER. They weren’t even standing close to each other. Each one was strategically positioned a substantial distance from the other, totally engrossed in their cell phone. Who were they texting at 7am? Some girl at a bus stop three blocks away? What the hell? Now, don’t get me wrong. Rewind the clock back to 1991 and give me a cell phone and crazy rabid dogs would have had to rip that thing out of my hand. I would have had

SO

MUCH

TO
SAY

No matter the time of day.

#Shocking,I Know

That being said, I also pretty regularly got in trouble for talking in class (and passing notes to my friend Sara Teater), so I feel confident that I would have had plenty to say IRL (that’s In Real Life for anyone hoping to never learn teen acronyms. I secretly love acronyms but I hate emoticons. Teen moi would have over-used emoticons, however.) In fact, as a teen, my freshman college roommate, Keeley, deliberately avoided me in some lectures because she knew I would talk to her the entire time and she actually wanted to listen.

#Loser

#NoWonderIAlmostFailedFreshmanYear

#AndIWonderWhyMy6yoNEVERSTOPSTALKING

Back to Mrs. Obama. I absolutely couldn’t stop thinking about these obnoxious teens texting at 7am when there were live teen girls standing next to them that they could have been gossiping with. I was struck by the reality of it. I was consumed with what I needed to do to make sure my girls don’t end up like this. Sure, they can text, but I so badly want them to want to talk to a human being when there is one standing next to them. Especially one their own age. Look, I’ve been to conferences on raising good cyber citizens, sat through lectures on raising kids with technology and already plan to implement the whole “cell phones charged in mom’s bedroom every night by 8pm” regimen that so many others employ. But in case you missed this from Mrs. Obama, here’s the parenting rules recently covered by Jodi Kantor in the New York Times:

  • “When the girls go on trips, they write reports on what they have seen, even if their school does not require it.”
  • “Technology is for weekends. Malia may use her cellphone only then, and she and her sister cannot watch television or use a computer for anything but homework during the week.”
  • “Malia and Sasha had to take up two sports: one they chose and one selected by their mother. “I want them to understand what it feels like to do something you don’t like and to improve,” the first lady has said.
  • “Malia must learn to do laundry before she leaves for college.”
  • “The girls have to eat their vegetables, and if they say that they are not hungry, they cannot ask for cookies or chips later. “If you’re full, you’re full,” Mrs. Obama said in an interview with Ladies’ Home Journal. “I don’t want to see you in the kitchen after that.”

Okay – something tells me she lives by those rules and doesn’t bend. This isn’t to say that I’ll be quite as strict. On some level, if I’m going to preach no technology but for weekends – should I also live by that one a little? So I’ll figure some variation on that one but I am quite intrigued by her decision to choose an activity for the girls and make them understand what it feels like to do something they don’t like and still improve. I respect that about her and think too often, our kids are overly coddled and catered too. Just the other day I let my first grader pick her two after school activities. She chose art and science. I really wanted one of her two activities to be either French or Spanish but she objected and I conceded because I felt art and science were perfectly solid choices.

Would Mrs. Obama have wavered? I know that learning a language at a young age is the ideal time to do so. And why am I letting the 6-year-old pick – she isn’t paying for it? No one ever said it was a democracy chez moi. So why did I cave and not push the foreign language as one of two activities?

Maybe next session, I pull a Mrs. Obama. Her logic is solid, in my opinion.

So, while there are myriad reasons Mrs. Obama earned the WM Working Mom Hero Award today, I’ll stick with her recent list of parenting rules. I am certain she actually does lives by them.  It’s refreshing to have a first lady in office with younger kids and hear her speak so openly about how she’s raising them. Say what you will about parenting today, and by no means am I generalizing enough to say that American parents are alone guilty of this, but we coddle our kids. So many of us do. And to what end? Until my kid is texting her way through a foreign language class she never wanted to take to begin with?

Not under my watch.

Famous last words?

I hope not.

To keep up with more fun, frolic and WM Working Mom Hero Awards….or to suggest a winner…..”Like” Wired Momma on Facebook. Also – the next Wired Momma book club is tomorrow night in Tysons Corner…you’ll have to log onto the Facebook page to learn the details.

 

The Uncensored Guide to the ABCs: An 80s Theme for the Letter C

The Gallagher sisters are the following:

  • Snarky
  • Hilarious
  • Sarcastic
  • Pretty
  • Smart

Oh….and we love a theme.

We also love the 80s. Legwarmers, hair spray, neon, Belinda Carlisle, you name it, even Rick Astley.  So, this week, for the “Make sure your kid’s preschool teacher is actually not falling asleep” on the Letter C day, we bring you our best list yet. Move aside lame and boring C day options, we’ve got new ones for you.

For example, what kid needs Cinderella the fairy tale when she could instead have Cinderella the hair band?  Right?

But wait, there’s more. Is your child into more cuddly things? Still searching for the perfect Halloween costume for Dad? Then look no further….we can kill two birds with one stone: CARE BEARS

Because that's not creepy at all

Not into Care Bears? Who can forget the furor over Cabbage Patch Dolls….and let’s make this one even more current:

That's right, a Sarah Palin Cabbage Patch doll

Now, if we haven’t given you some compelling C words to think about, there’s always:

Clamdiggers

Chucks

Cold War

rubik’s CUBE

Clapper

C. Thomas Hall

the Cure

Cosby Show (note: I still love catching re-runs of the Cosby Show)

Teen Heart Throb Corey Haim. Take that Justin Bieber...the 80s boy toy heart throbs really did have cool hair.

Corey Haim

Corey Feldman

Culture Club

Cyndi Lauper

Captain & Tennille

Cutting Crew

Chicago

Cassette tape….I dare someone to dig up their old mixed tape they made for their boyfriend and send it in with their kid. If you do this, we will invite you to a private, exclusive, super fun happy hour with -why – the Gallagher sisters. Nothing could be more fun! But you’ll have to share the playlist with us first.

With that, I’ve posted some pretty hilarious pictures on the Wired Momma Facebook page this week. If you haven’t liked the page, please do because we keep it light there. I’m including the most popular Someecard I’ve posted yet, below…..because I’d hate for anyone to miss out on the fun:

And seriously….dig up those old casette tapes. And share the playlists with us either here or on Facebook. It could inspire a new themed guide. Like maybe the scorned lover 80s themed playlist? The tired parent 80s themed playlist? The possibilities are endless. Until next time friends, anything could happen next week with the Letter D guide. The Gallagher sisters always take suggestions, especially if it’s a themed list suggestion.