Coast to Coast for Charity

Coast 2 Coast for Charity

Friday, May 28th, 2010

Barrie with bike
I know it will rain and I will toil up a steep drenched track against a head wind wondering why I???m doing it. But I love the feeling of just me and a bike pitched against the elements in some remote corner of Britain. This year it???s a route form Sea to Sea ??? Whitehaven to Sunderland. On the way it winds 140 miles through The Lake District and over the Pennines.

I???ve set myself three days to complete it so that there???s time to enjoy the ride and stop at the odd tea room or two on the way. I leave Cumbria on June 23rd and arrive at the North Sea June 25th 2010.

But the real reason for the challenge is to raise money for two good causes.

I am a trustee of Riding Lights Theatre Company in York. A professional company that depends largely on the donations of its many members. To donate to them click this link C2CforRLTC

In the remote villages of Funzi and Bodo in Kenya people are threatened by a serious outbreak of cholera. Some have already died. The Funzi and Bodo Trust, which is run by Ashley Peatfield ??? an old colleague from the BBC, has been active in the area for some time. They have already provided a school and medical centre. Recently they have expanded the medical centre and increased the staff to combat the cholera outbreak and treat the people living there. Your sponsorship of my ride will provide funds for that charity. To donate click here http://www.justgiving.com/C2CFunziBodo???

I will be updating these pages as I train and during the ride so keep checking back.

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No further explanation needed – just click the links and dig deep. Thanks

Her last mobile phone call

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??Sometimes only a picture can get our attention!

Her last call was from a cell phone.

Do you see the motorcycle?

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Now do you see it?

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The Honda crotch rocket rider was travelling at approximately 85 mph(137km/hour). The VW driver was talking on a cell phone when she pulled out from a side street, apparently not seeing the motorcycle. The riders reaction time was not sufficient enough to avoid this accident.

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The car had two passengers and the bike rider was found INSIDE the car with them. The Volkswagen actually flipped over from the force of impact and landed 20 feet from where the collision took place.

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All three involved (two in the car and the bike rider) were killed instantly. This graphic demonstration was placed at the Motorcycle Fair by the Police and Road Safety Department..Pass this on to car drivers or soon to be new drivers, or new motorcycle owners AND ESPECIALLY EVERYONE YOU KNOW WHO HAS A CELL PHONE!!!!!

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A picture is worth a thousand words.

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Save a life???

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Stop talking on Cell phones and Texting while trying to drive. The life you save may be your own or mine.

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I don’t like Flash

Please use Safari or Firefox instead of Chrome ??? Acrobat.com is unsupported on the Mac when using Chrome and this version of the Flash Player.

Chrome has just come out of beta and everything works except – yes you know who ADOBE

BBC News needs a religion editor, says Radio 4’s Roger Bolton | Media | guardian.co.uk

Roger Bolton, presenter of Radio 4’s Feedback, today called for BBC News to appoint an editor for religion, as it has for business and finance.

Bolton said the BBC needed such an appointment to improve its coverage of religious affairs but also bring a spiritual perspective to general news stories.

“I believe BBC News similarly requires a religion editor, able to appear on the networks to interpret the latest religious story at home and abroad, but more importantly to bring a religious perspective to the vast range of areas such as foreign affairs and medical dilemmas where that perspective is so often, and so bafflingly, absent, both on air and behind the scenes in internal editorial discussions,” he added, speaking at the annual Sandford St Martin Trust awards for religious broadcasting, at Lambeth Palace, where he chaired the judging of television programmes.

The judges, though delighted by the quality of entries, noted that the overall number of TV entries was down ??? from 43 five years ago to just 27.

“With no entries to the main Sandford Awards from either the ITV Network, Sky or Channel Five, it’s tempting to lay blame in the virtual elimination of public service regulation in the commercial sector as well as perhaps a lack of imagination among commissioners generally,” Bolton said.

“But even at the BBC, television (unlike BBC radio) seems to be in the hands of the secular and sceptical, who view religious coverage as a rather tiresome obligation to be minimised rather than a rich and promising area to explore One can certainly pick cherries from the corporation’s television cake, and there are often very succulent ones such as the recent series on Sacred Music presented by Simon Russell Beale, though that was commissioned by a minority channel, BBC4, which has just had its budget cut back.

“The BBC also has a relatively new commissioning editor of religion, Aaqil Ahmed, with a proven record of success in his previous job at Channel 4, but his playing field is more the size of a fives court than a football pitch.”

Rabbi Roderick Young, chairman of the radio awards, said that though there a tendency to stick to well-known topics, “the quality of all 15 (radio programmes judged) was outstanding. “To choose four was quite simply painful,” he added.

A full list of winners follows.

Rabbi Lionel Blue was presented with a special personal award for more than 30 years of contributions to Thought for The Day

Television award

Winner: The Bible, Howard Jacobson’s episode on his loss of faith (Channel 4)

Runner up: History of Christianity, episode 1 (BBC4), presented by historian Professor Diarmid MacCulloch, also the winner of the Radio Times readers’ award

Merits: 1984: A Sikh’s Story (BBC2); Did Darwin Kill God? (BBC2)

Radio award

Winner: Two Sisters: Two Faiths (Radio 4)

Runner up: The Understanding (Radio 4)

Merits: Treasures out of Darkness, from the All Things Considered series (BBC Wales); Dear God (BBC Coventry & Warwickshire); Something Understood presented by Mark Tully in conversation with Jean Vanier (Radio 4)

Does BBC TV News need a “Religion Editor” Discuss

The free digital lunch is over. Now we pay with our lives | Jemima Kiss | Comment is free | The Guardian

Facebook and Google are fashionable and intriguing targets for sensational headlines. In truth, most Facebook data is meaningless and conversational ??? while most of us are still listed by our home address in BT’s online phone book.

Worried about what the public knows about you? They’ve known where you live for years – and in my case they’ve never turned up on my doorstep – not even at election time!!