Occupy The Rose Parade. Occupy The Media.... genius.

Yvonne de la Vega's picture

What a beautiful day for a parade. It was 80 degrees!

PHOTOGRAPH BY: Gina Ferazzi / Los Angeles Times
 
 
At Last. Coverage. And to think for all the flack Pete Thottam got from fellow occupiers at Occupy Pasadena and yes, even here at Occupy LA, the result of his "in your face" lack of diplomacy and timing in regard to event coordinating, the truth is, in the end, between him and Occupy Los Angeles' media genius "G", and Occupy Los Angeles point person for The Rose Bowl Actions, Mark Lipman, the event accomplished a media feat that has never been reached in the action packed 3 month life span of the Occupy Los Angeles movement in it's Solidarity with Occupy Wall Street. Yes, of course it got more coverage than the raids around the nation and the globe (remember, this is a Global Revolution).
 
The coverage before yesterday given us by the big show media was political campaigning at it's best in tactic: just slander them. Make them smelly, pot-smoking, confused hippies that didn't really know what they wanted, except to ruin the lawn and leave TONS of debri behind. Nevermind that the tons of crap was our belongings they slashed and smashed and then put a fence around, so not only did we not want our broken things from 2 months of our lives, but we couldn't sift through the disaster even if we wanted to.
 
And then came "pushy" (thank God) Pete Thottam and control freak (thank Buhdda) G, and the over-excited and often loud poet-activist (thank Hermes) Mark Lipman. And their teams of course, that gave regardless of it all, because their hearts remain strong in the movement and in solidarity and not because they carried convictions of a confusing concept of marching in the march of the 1%ers delight. And they did carry convictions and pain for the progress, but still rose to the call for solidarity, the powerful bond that keeps the revolution alive. Bravo occupiers! Genius. To this day, through all the menial incidents and disagreements that became common at almost every encampment and amongst and between this "leaderless but leaderful", leaderful but alas, leaderless movement, the downfall of man has always stemmed from the true root of all evil, his ego.
 
Wherever ego, they go, and however in the closet the ego-full may be within this movement, the efforts on behalf of whatever it took to keep the plan in motion, worked. Can you say co ver age?
 
As Bruno of Occupy LA's Facillitation commented, "...it's impossible to put praise on only certain individuals."  Agreed, and perhaps too, the high spirited anticipation in everyone, when  getting ready for the Big Parade brought with it, an openess that also contributed to the success and inspired the openness of all, including the journslists that were there to report the events of the Occupy presence at the Parade. In concern for the correct portrayal of the Occupy movement,  Bruno adds, that credit should be given and put some "praise on everybody that came, that helped to ensure that the  Occupy The Rose Parade was an Outreach Action, and we were not merely a spectacle."  He concludes, "I wish the march had continued for more than just a couple of blocks. The parade went for two hours more down the streets  and that's hundreds of thousands of onlookers that did not get to interact with  the Occupiers in the streets."

Still, hundreds cheered and chanted, they too are the 99% a a mass of voices joining for the length of the parade. Men and women with their families, who represent the remnant of the middle class worker, struggling at another end to keep the country stable, until Occupy has succeeded to halt the swift progession toward greater poverty.
 
Online and in newspapers around the world, there are THOUSANDS of stories about how Occupy Los Angeles and Occupy Pasadena "Occupied the Tournament of Roses Parade". The 123 year old parade began with horse and carriages parading and competing for trophies for the best display of roses and buggies and eventually became the most famous parade in the world, (hmm, I forgot to research which float won, partially because every article really didn't mention results all that much, most articles were about Occupy) the Pasadena Rose Parade is an an American Iconic Event. And I have to admit, I was there, and it was hilarious to me personally to see my good ol' neighbors from Camp OLA marching in the Big Parade behind 76 trombones, baton twirlers and floats that were so magnificent and grand that the cost of a third of one the floats' length probably cost enough to pay my rent for 2 years. And feed a lot of us too. Behind all the glitter and color of money came... us. Though many key occupiers in the Los Angeles movement refused for whatever reasons to support it, there were thousands of occupiers that came from all over, such as Occupy San Diego, Occupy Riverside, Las Vegas and more. It was warming, and a relief to validate that if not here in moody Occupy LA, Solidarity still lives in the movement everywhere else.
As Bruno in fa
 
Here are some article' excerpts worthy to be considered great and if anything honest and generously written on our behalf, beginning with a realistic article/blog from The LAWEEKLY's Simone Wilson.
 
 

 

Occupy the Rose Parade: 5,000 Protesters, Giant Octopus Fail to Make Live TV

Apparently the 70-foot octopus float carried by an estimated 5,000 Occupy L.A. protesters at the end of today's Rose Parade wasn't awesome enough for KTLA, the premiere local station covering the event.

Reporters gushed over marching bands, floral arrangements and even a police horse brigade led by LAPD Chief Charlie Beck. But after float No. 43 had passed the finish line, the cameras shut off.

"Raw video" of the unofficial Occupy entry has been relegated to a corner of KTLA's website, because...

... the station is surely aware of the immense national (and international) interest in the parade-ending spectacle. It is, after all, Occupy's much-anticipated answer to carrying its last three months of momentum into the new year.

Unlike the usual motley crew of nutty picketers at the end of the parade, the Occupy the Rose Parade endeavor was thousands-strong, with 250 feet of visuals. Aside from Octupy, protesters carried two huge U.S. Constitution scrolls, cardboard houses tagged with "foreclosure" and a "1 percenter" in a throne.  



 

The Associated Press: Occupy protest follows 123rd annual Rose Parade
PASADENA, Calif. (AP) — The 2012 Tournament of Roses brought its flowery floats and strutting bands to a worldwide audience Monday under clear blue skies, and in its wake came a scruffier parade — hundreds of anti-Wall Street protesters.


The 123rd annual New Year's Day event, with the theme "Just Imagine," flowed along downtown Pasadena to the cheers of hundreds of thousands of sidewalk spectators.
An estimated 40 million people viewed this year's procession of 44 floats, 16 marching bands and 22 equestrian troupes on U.S. television.


On the heels of the two-hour parade came anti-Wall Street protesters in a pre-arranged demonstration.
The thunder of the retreating marching bands mingled in the air with chants of "Banks got bailed out, we got sold out" as the Occupy the Rose Parade demonstrators retraced about 1.5 miles of the 5.5-mile parade route before veering off for a rally near City Hall.


They carried a 250-foot-long banner that said "We the People" to represent the U.S. Constitution. Some also held a 70-foot-long octopus made from recycled plastic bags that represented the tentacles of perceived corporate greed.


"This is about getting money out of politics," said Greg Stevens, a 38-year-old public health lecturer at the University of Southern California. "I support everything this movement is about."
As the protesters marched by, some Rose Parade spectators yelled "get a job" while others snapped photos and cheered.
"It's kind of crazy but kind of exciting," said Alana Olvick, 26, of Valencia, Calif.
The ragtag group of protesters made an interesting comparison to the slick, glittering Rose Parade offerings.


"It's contradicting the parade," Olvick said. READ MORE...

 

And while you can't win them all, if they're not talking slanderously at all, that's when we should really begin to worry. Here's an article from a B Journalist that titles his effort to mirror the big boys with the title of his piece beginning with the word "Despite..."

Despite few disruptions Rose Parade 2012 was truly magnificent


"...Even though all preparations were intact and the event was also planned meticulously, things didn’t turn out the way it was expected. Turned out some protesters ended up disrupting the fleeting march, the group Occupy ended up at the Rose Parade carrying signs drawing attention to their cause of income inequality, and dozens of protesters planned to march at the end of the parade with an Occupy Octopus "live" float constructed of plastic bags.


People were highly disappointed to witness this disruption, especially those who had come in from such far-flung areas in advance and even had taken up the most strategic places to view the 5 1/2-mile parade route."

 

Here's a generous and honest excerpt from the detoxing from bad cops and city "Privatitis", of all places, Burbank, which is become truly a reborn city when once any one with anything on their traffic record dared not drive through Burbank, the infamous Burbank P.D. has made necessary changes and the officers there are actually very, very nice now. And it seems, so are the journalists.

Thousands turn out for 123rd annual Rose Parade - Burbank Leader

"...The event this year was punctuated by a demonstration: The group Occupy the Rose Parade carried signs drawing attention to their cause of income inequality, and dozens of protesters planned to march at the end of the parade with an Occupy Octopus "live" float constructed of plastic bags.


That prospect appeared not to dent the enthusiasm of thousands of parade-goers, many of whom spent the night camped out on air mattresses and in sleeping bags to claim coveted positions along the 5 1/2-mile parade route.

 

:..."I saw the Occupy people following the parade, and they seemed like a peaceful group so I decided to join them," said Pasadena resident Michael Cornwell, 78, who lives near the parade route."

 

"It's great they're using this forum to get the word out," said Chris Hansen, 48, of Pasadena, who watched the parade with his 8-year-old son Jake. "I'm glad he's seeing this."

 

And Look! From the LA TIMES:

Rose Parade 2012: Sunny skies, smaller crowds and an Occupy march - latimes.com

"...Carla Watson held a bright green sign that said “retired teacher 99%” with a rose and an American flag attached.


She and a friend, Nancy Kredell, 69, who said she was a parade princess 51 years ago, planned to join Occupy protesters during the middle of the parade route.
“We believe in the Rose Parade, but we believe that it is time for the people to be heard,” said Watson, 70."

 

Now isn't that a sweet human interest angle? Gotta love it.


Occupy protesters and organizer Mark Lipman (orange shirt) march along Colorado Boulevard during the 123rd Tournament of Roses Parade in Pasadena, Calif., Monday, Jan. 2, 2012. Several hundred Occupy protesters marched at the end of the Rose Parade in a prearranged demonstration.
Credit: AP Photo/Ringo H.W. Chi

 

AFP: Cheers, boos for occupy protesters at US parade

"...Demonstrator Mark Lipman said the media had "done a good job putting a fear factor in people's minds of what they can expect from us, but we are a peaceful, nonviolent movement, and we're a very creative movement."


"We understand the tradition of 123 years that people are looking forward to enjoying .. and we don't want to disrupt that in any way," he added."        (Copyright © 2012 AFP. All rights reserved.)
                         


And from The Huffington Post.  Although the elderly woman came all the way from New York City to come to the Rose Parade, 78-year-old Josephine Clare, gets the Honorary Little Old Lady From Pasadena Award:

Protesters Occupy The Rose Parade  


"...Raul Plata, a parade-goer from Washington, D.C., told the Huffington Post that he was impressed with the Occupy the Rose Parade marchers.

 

"To me, it was a surprise that they were so clever to take advantage of a free opportunity to show off their case, which is change in the world," said Plata. "I think the very long Constitution was a very unique and impressive. Maybe they'll keep on taking advantage of world-wide promoted events."


Bystander Logan Chandler, who came to Pasadena from San Diego to watch the parade and the game, was less enthused. He told The Huffington Post, "I get it. Money runs everything, but I think the protest is pointless. You need to vote and push legislation to really make change."


But protester Josephine Clare, a 78-year-old poet and translator from New York, had a different view of the morning's events. "I thought it was very successful," said Clare. "It's very important that there be a reaction to the abysmal, abysmal economic and political state of things."

 And from OCCUPYLOSANGELES.ORG  and Occupy LA,

Orlando Avilla took his 2 year old and his mom he describes as a "child of the 60's". His wife from work kept him updated onthe Occupiers movements down Colorado Blvd.

Orlando Avilla says he stayed up all night, "... the night before and made a 5ft  sign with all kinds of occupied art on it, and when I showed up in pasadena I walked down a back street past all the people leaving and people said hey where are your people? I said they aren't MY people they are OUR people, a few people clapped and wishtled, as I got close to colorado I heard the drums!! I arrived!


It was OUR streets that day people in the stands stood and applauded and screemed with our chants! The cops were nice and people there were awesome.  I give credit to all the people who showed up and relaized that this movment is truely organic because as soon as u get to the group of people there you don't feel alone, you feel like you are really a part of the entire Movement."

 

 

 

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5 Comments

Genius

The action was fab. The genius was the Constitution ensemble & all the regular folk who showed up with their homemade signs. The GENIUS was the regular folk who then didn't stay around for the "entertainment."
The funny thing about OLA is the 99% get the movement more than the OLA leader(less).
I would have loved to attend, in a Guy Fawkes mask, but didn't know when we would be lead in the Big $ high school cheerleaders fight song "LONG" "Unofficial OFFICIAL" "OLA Theme Song," which personally makes me want to puke and wearing a mask, No Thanks.
P.S. Occupied Pasadena did not endorse, but signs at hand showed up. That was cool.
The 1,000's that attended the pre-raid party...

big money

The person named [edited: no personal attacks]. The one that hands out a flyer about how to take the money from LOTTO that goes to schools... oh the churches don't need to PLAY, just support his LOTTO mania, that that money & everyone gambling in the world, that that money would pay for all the ills in the world, provided everyone plays the lotto. One of the many "Unofficial Official" bonker leaders of OLA.

If you look at the video of the entertainment part of the Rose march, he then gets up to lead "The Theme Song of OLA, "his" adaptation of a high school cheerleaders fight song..."

I'm tired of posting the OBVIOUS of what is wrong with OLA. I'm taking a break from OLA. My deepest wishes, hopes that the GA's become for the people, by the people and not Of some bonkers.

TechnoZeus's picture

There may be more to something than you see in it

I have seen his ideas and it doesn't look to me like he is trying to encourage people to gamble. People do that anyway. As long as some people are going to insist on throwing away money in the unreasonable hopes of it making them rich, I see no reason why it should not go into improved educations. Afterall, a better education might reduce the amount of money people spend on such things in the first place as they realize that the jackpot is made up of a fraction of what's spent on tickets and the odds are stacked unreasonably against breaking even or better.

Adventurer and problem solver by reputation, Actor by profession and peaceful Activist at heart - Donald Arthur Kronos, Ph.D.

http://DonaldKronos.info

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