So check this out:

From the filmmakers of Mad Hot Ballroom comes a new social justice cause documentary, what’s your point, honey?

The doc puts a “new face on political leadership” by introducing 7 possible contenders coming down the pipeline, while revealing the inequalities that still exist today. The aim is to start the conversation — again. Teens and tweens, weave in and out to present the next generations’ take on the topic, giving the film punch. On the doc’s trail is a soon-to-be published book, She’s Out There! The Next Generation of Presidential Candidates, presenting a “doc in book form” to a mass audience.

Runtime is 87 minutes, and the film includes a 30-page study guide written by two faculty members at PACE University. Here’s the trailer — spread the word!:

It’s great to have models for married life, I tell ya. On Sunday, one of our favorite older married couples hosted a brunch for 4 newly marrieds — one of which still had “just married” painted on the back of their car, absent the tin cans.

From left to right: John, Sheri, Marco, me, Dawn, Isaac, Rebecca, Jeremy. Awww. (Thank you, Ricki and Jeff! You guys are the best!)

A quick pic from the Writopia Lab blogging workshop I led last week. Stay tuned for more posts from the girls coming next week! In the meantime, we’re loving everyone’s comments on Jessica’s post (below)…

Have a good weekend, all!

Jessica Zalph is a student at Hunter College High School in Manhattan and will be in ninth grade this coming fall. She is a member of Writopia Lab and has won various awards in the Scholastic writing contests. As an author, Jessica usually writes short stories and poetry, but she decided to break out of character to write this “coming out” piece about vegetarianism. With a dash o’ feminism mixed in. Here’s Jessica! -GWP

October is Vegetarian Awareness Month. If only people knew about it.

“Among men [vegetarianism is] regarded as, if not a girl thing, then at least a girlie thing — an anemic regimen for sensitive souls subsisting on rabbit food and tofurkey,” says Holly Brubach in her recent New York Times article “Real Men Eat Meat.” If the male gender sees vegetarianism as a “girl thing,” then that’s got to be our hardest obstacle to overcome. Whenever compassion and eating “rabbit food” became a girl thing, it became taboo for boys, because sexism is rooted so deeply in our society that girls are seen as weaker overall. But maybe making a harder decision wouldn’t be weak at all. Maybe it’d be more macho, if that’s what you’re after, to overcome the stereotypes. Overcoming the expectations society has of you could be “manly,” no?

I’ve been a vegetarian for the fourteen years of my existence – my parents stopped eating meat four years before I was born. They were told by a number of smug acquaintances that, just wait, I would become all “teenager-y” and start eating meat once I became obsessed with fitting in and defying my parents out of spite. We’re still waiting.

Probably the reason I’ve stuck with vegetarianism and animal rights is because it’s not just an arbitrary ritual I inherited, but is based on the unfortunate reality that the thing on the plate is the same as the cute little thing on the farm. I know I must have adopted this concept at an early age, because I recall feeling appalled fury at a boy in my preschool class who took the unsuspecting snails out of their tank and stepped on them.

Most of the attitudes I’ve encountered haven’t seemed to change much over time.

“Vegetarians are stupid” is the bluntest of the accusations I’ve received – this one coming just recently in our eighth grade hallway from a guy flaunting an anti-Wendy’s flyer, sparking the debate that flares up every now and again at school. It’s only in hindsight that I realize that these heated I-wish-they-were-discussions-not-shouting-matches are generally divided by gender. Girls my age tend to be considerably more tolerant, even if they don’t adopt the practice of not eating meat themselves, because boys, in general, have macho stereotypes driven into their heads from babyhood.

The anti-Wendy’s flyer is waved tauntingly. “Meat is good,” comes the challenge, which lingers in the air. Whatever futile hope has caused me to take this bait all these years rises in me again. And so it begins. Detailed description – the cruelty the animals face, the fact that they can feel emotions and pain, even if they don’t have your intellect, thank-you-very-much. Wild rebuttal – ending with “Vegetarians are stupid,” and exasperated disappointment from me. It’s not worth it.

And yet, in a grasping-at-straws way, it is. It’s a success any time that you can make someone confront the cruelty involved in butchering animals, because getting people to face the truth is the hardest thing you can make someone do, and possibly the first step toward creating a change.

I’m not sure when vegetarianism became seen as a sign of weakness. Maybe it always has been. “It’s human nature to eat meat. The food chain and all that,” says my friend. And maybe it is human nature to eat meat, but it’s also human nature to use violence to get and keep political power, and yet many countries have incorporated democracy to overcome this problem. If we can overcome our natural tendency to physically fight for power, surely this October we can overcome the meat-eating part of our omnivore selves as well.

Chew on that.

Man, I hate the book proposal stage. It’s so mushy! My writer friend in the woods with me today is in the final throes of her manuscript, and I have manuscript envy over here.

Thanks for those comments on my previous post (anniegirl, Renee) — you gave me a push to give the outline thing a try today. And I have to say, it seemed far less anxiety inducing to work on an outline than it did to face a blank screen and start pushing words around on the page. Which is what I generally do, and which ends up taking me AGES.

As for my next steps, I like Renee’s approach, which she describes as follows:

The key thing about that outline for me is that I use the outline to make a VERY detailed To-Do list. That is the list that I then work from in completing the work — items on it might be as difficult/conceptual as “Restructure introduction to add in the literature on social movements….” or as simple as “Add citation to McClurg and Mueller…”

At the end of any work period, I decide on two or three things on the to-do list that I will work on the next day/work period — so I can percolate on the conceptual tasks I’ve set for myself, and then I warm up on the work by doing the easier/simpler tasks.

I’m gonna give it a try. Anyone got an answer to Renee’s question (see comments, previous post), about deviating from the outline once you’ve got it? How strictly do you outliners out there hold yourselves to it? Inquiring minds wanna know 🙂

I’ve tucked myself away at a fellow writer’s house in the woods for the next two days to re-jumpstart myself on my current book proposal, which I’ve been away from these past few months. So in addition to some guest posts, I myself will be writing over here about, well, writing.

Since I’m all about beginnings this morning, thought I’d share this quip from James B. Stewart’s Follow the Story, which I’m reading upon recommendation of my authors group (aka the Invisible Institute):

“The key to a successful lead [beginning] is quite simple: it must attract and hold readers by re-creating in their minds the same curiosity that drove you to undertake the story in the first place.”

And here’s Stewart’s pitch for outlining:

“I have been amazed to discover how much time I have saved, and how much anxiety I have avoided, by having a clear structure in mind, if not on paper.”

And I have been amazed to discover how difficult it is to get myself to outline. I’m always curious to hear about other people’s processes. Tell me, dear GWP readers–many of whom I know are also writers–do you outline? Does it work for you? Tips?!

So I’ve been spending part of this week teaching a blogging workshop for girls over at Writopia Lab. The posts these girls are writing are SO GOOD that I’m posting them here on GWP. Stay tuned for some thoughts from the next generation of thinkers and writers. They will knock your socks off. They are definitely knocking mine.

(cool logo design by Marco Siegel-Acevedo!)

A few quick hits for ya’ll this morning:

Sisters, This Is an Election We Can’t Sit Out, says the Rev. Valda Combs in a piece for Women’s eNews, urging Hillary supporters, who have reason to be bitter about the primary, have to pull it together. The most vulnerable women in our society need our unity too much.

The Center for New Words launches a new election season project, This Is What Women Want!

And Girls, Incorporated launches the Dear World public education campaign in which girls express their daily realities, hopes, fears, and dreams in 30- and 60-second television spots and a website.

image cred

As an addendum to the post I wrote about the new Catalyst study earlier this week just came in from GWP’s resident sociologist, Virginia Rutter:

Related research: In “Working for the Woman? Female Managers and the Gender Wage Gap” (October 07 issue of the American Sociological Review), Philip Cohen and Matt Huffman demonstrate that the greater representation of women in management jobs narrows the wage gap among non-management workers. When ladies are boss, all the ladies do better. But for it to really make a difference, women need to be in the higher levels of management. In fact, the authors reference the “title inflation” phenomenon: they saw evidence of a concentration of women in lower management–and that concentration doesn’t give the workers much relief in terms of the gender wage gap. Reason I like this story–and the one on board membership here–is that it gives us concrete evidence for the glass ceiling, and why breaking through matters.

And btw, for Philip Cohen’s latest, check out his post last month at HuffPo (“Women May Be Losing Jobs Too, But They’re Different Jobs”) in response to the NYTimes piece on how hard economic times are affecting women’s employment rates. -GWP

Sandra Tsing Loh’s new book, Mother on Fire: A True Motherf%#$@ Story About Parenting! comes out this month and I give her brilliant f&#%g credit for the subtitle. For a taste of Loh, see her latest, “I Choose My Choice!” in The Atlantic. (Thanks, Heather, for the heads up!)