Thursday, February 26, 2015
Christopher Fox Graham speaks at Osher Lifelong Learning Institute on March 4
Graham decides in part what community activities the newspaper covers, what letters, press releases, and recurring columnists it publishes, and writes the newspaper's semi-weekly editorials.
He also coordinates Sedona's monthly Poetry Slam events and has participated himself in eight National Poetry Slams.
Slam poetry is an art form that allows written-page poets to share their work in a series of high-energy, three-minute, one-person oral presentations, each as gripping as a condensed play.)
Graham will be wearing each of these hats, in turn, when he will be guest of honor at the Osher Lifelong Learning Institute's Keynote Speaker program on Wednesday, March 4, from 1 to 2 p.m. in room 34 of Yavapai College’s Sedona Center, on Cultural Park Place, across State Route 89A from Sedona Red Rock High School.
He will step up first as purveyor of Sedona's local news. Ever wonder how the guy who knows just about everything going on in town sees our community and his role in it? How do he and his reporters walk the line of objectivity in a town replete with controversies and people who feel strongly about them? He will share his personal story and his professional perspective, then answer questions from audience members.
Next, he will describe the origin and evolution of the Sedona Poetry Slam and show you what a poetry slam entry is like, providing a preview of what you might see at the next local poetry slam on Saturday, March 7, 7:30 p.m., at the Mary D. Fisher Theatre.
OLLI's Lunch & Learn is a town hall for local residents to meet, chat, and interact with speakers doing interesting and important things in town. This enjoyable, informative, weekly community event is free and open to all.
Bring your lunch (or come for complimentary coffee, tea, water, and a little snack) and join the conversation at 12:30, or come from 1:00 – 2:30 to interact with Christopher Fox Graham, the driving force behind two vital and stimulating Sedona cultural "vortices"--the Sedona Red Rock News and the annual series of Poetry Slams.
OLLI is a local, volunteer, peer-to-peer, adult education program (part of Yavapai College) that offers many learning groups and workshops each term for a nominal fee. Its Winter term is ending, but catalogues will soon be available for its Spring term, beginning April 13. For more information about OLLI or the Lunch & Learn program, please call: 928-649-4275.
Sunday, August 25, 2013
I am the new managing editor of the Sedona Red Rock News, The Camp Verde Journal, and the Cottonwood Journal Extra
Photo by Saar Ingelbert |
Graham returned as assistant news editor in October 2009. He was promoted to assistant managing editor in April 2010 and again promoted to news editor in April 2013 .... Click here for the full story.
He can be contacted at editor@larsonnewspapers.com.
Friday, April 26, 2013
I attended the talk between Vice President Joe Biden and Sen. John McCain at the Sedona Forum
A story on the talk will appear in the Wednesday, May 1, edition of the Sedona Red Rock News.
"We at Arizona State University are proud to have Vice President Biden and so many other distinguished leaders involved with the McCain Institute," said Arizona State University President Michael M. Crow. "Their participation in the Sedona Forum ensures a thought-provoking weekend."
The Sedona Forum is an annual, high-level conclave of national and international leaders from the public and private sectors brought together by the McCain Institute for focused discussions on national security and foreign policy issues, promoting economic freedom and prosperity and advancing human rights around the world.
"I am very pleased that Vice President Joe Biden, my friend of many years, will speak at this year’s Sedona Forum," said Senator John McCain. "From his decades of experience in foreign policy in the Senate to his critical role in the White House today, Vice President Biden has a unique perspective on America's role in this complex and dangerous world. We are pleased that he is joining this important gathering in Sedona and look forward to hearing from him."
The theme for this year's Forum, held April 26-28 at the Enchantment Resort in Sedona, Arizona, is, "How Can We Promote Freedom and Democracy Effectively?" Participants in this year's Forum will include GE Chairman and CEO and McCain Institute Board Member Jeff Immelt, Walmart U.S. President and CEO Bill Simon, Canadian Defense Minister Peter MacKay, former Libyan Prime Minister Mahmoud Jibril, Macedonian President Gjorge Ivanov, Georgian President Mikheil Saakashvili, former Russian Prime Minister Mikhail Kasyanov, former Belarus Presidential candidate Andrei Sannikov, former NBA star and humanitarian Dikembe Mutombo, General Jack Keane (Ret.), Arizona State University President Michael M. Crow, Senators Kelly Ayotte (R-NH), Lindsey Graham (R-SC), Jon Kyl (R-AZ, Ret.), Joe Lieberman (I-CT, Ret.) and Sheldon Whitehouse (D-RI), among many others.
Friday, May 27, 2011
Sedona jet crash
As our photojournalist Tom Hood was already on his way to cover the Sedona Red Rock High School Class of 2011 graduation, I went to the airport to get a photo.
Mac McCall, the airport manager drove me down the tarmac, but the U.S. Forest Service had closed off the area as a HAZMAT site due to a fuel leak coming from the port wing, which was ripped open in the crash.
Sedona Fire District Battalion Chief Jayson Coil, however, recommended that I hike over to Table Mesa to get a photo, which turned out to be a far better idea considering the steepness of the terrain let me shoot photos that put the whole crash site into perspective in regard to Airport Mesa.
The hike was about 0.44 miles, if GoogleEarth measurements are accurate. I got to a great angle about 90 minutes after the crash.
The two pilots and three passengers all walked away.
I love covering breaking news.
You can read the Sedona Red Rock News Story here.
Wednesday, May 18, 2011
Learn to write a press release that will publish
Learn the art of writing a press release from media professional Christopher Fox Graham, on Saturday, May 21, starting at 12:30 p.m.
Workshops taught by public relations professionals may focus on writing a press release, but as a professional newspaper editor, Graham approaches the topic from the other angle — representing the media professionals responsible for choosing which press releases to publish and where to place them in their publications.
Drafting an effective press release may seem an impossible skill to master. Press releases often lack key information, such as location, dates, costs or contact information. Others fail to provide sufficient background to be considered effective by the media outlets and news organizations that receive them.
Photo by Saar Inglebert |
Using real-world examples, Graham will demonstrate the differences between good and bad press releases; how to transform a bad release into a great one; what media professionals look for; mistakes that will get your press release thrown out and how to avoid them; how to write an eye-catching and informative press release; and how to deal with members of the media.
The workshop is designed for artists and musicians trying to promote their work, public relations and marketing professionals, nonprofit organizers and business owners.
Graham is currently assistant managing editor of Larson Newspapers, which publishes the Sedona Red Rock News, The Camp Verde Journal and the Cottonwood Journal Extra. As an editor, his duties include prioritizing and editing press releases and helping to assign them to pages for publication.
Graham earned a bachelor’s degree in English with a focus on literature and linguistics and a minor in history from Arizona State University.
He has worked as senior copy editor for The State Press at ASU, copy editor for Larson Newspapers’ three publications, managing editor of the arts publication Kudos and a private media consultant.
Graham is also a writer and performance poet. Over the last 11 years, he has toured and competed worldwide in poetry slams, a competitive art form that is focused as much on how the language is presented as on the content itself.
This workshop takes place Sedona Community Center, 2615 Melody Lane, West Sedona. Seats are $30 for the three-hour workshop. For more information or to reserve a seat, visit the Sedona Area Guild of Artists website, sedonaareaguildofartists.com.
Wednesday, November 17, 2010
Best Headline
The winning headline was "Santa puts 4 on the naughty list for drug smuggling over the holidays."
Friday, October 15, 2010
My interview with El Salvador's Ambassador to the United States
Nor did he expect his country would be dragged into a decade of civil war and that he would flee after his name appeared on a death squad’s hit list.
Yet almost 20 years after war ended, Altschul spoke at Verde Valley School and the Sedona Public Library about how far his country has come. Among those achievements was the peaceful election of leftist President Maurico Funes from the political party that once led the fight against an oppressive regime.
Tuesday, August 31, 2010
Suspect arrested in death of David Wile
Maricopa County Sheriff’s Office deputies have found the body of former Sedona resident David Ian Wile and arrested a suspect in connection with Wile’s disappearance.
Wile, 30, a resident of Sedona from 1995 to 2006, was last seen at his home in Glendale on the morning of Aug. 14.
After Wile failed to arrive at a ballroom dance competition and photo shoot at Paragon Dance Studio in Tempe, Wile’s family in the Sedona area filed a missing person’s report with the Glendale Police Department on Aug. 17.
On Aug. 24, at approximately 12:18 p.m., a couple driving on Grand Avenue in Sun City noticed a foul smell coming from outside their vehicle, according to the Maricopa County Sheriff’s Office.
Ahead of their vehicle they noticed a white truck pulling a white box trailer, with foam insulation on the rear doors. The couple followed the vehicle for a while before contacting the Maricopa County Sheriff’s Office, because they reportedly believed the decaying smell was emanating from the trailer.
Deputies were given the license plate and a general location of the vehicle. A short time later, the vehicle was stopped on 111th Avenue north of Olive Avenue, between the cities of Peoria and Sun City. Deputies made contact with the 48-year-old driver.
Sheriff’s deputies immediately reportedly smelled the foul odor coming from the trailer and asked the driver about the circumstances. He was reportedly very evasive and did not give the deputies too many details, according to MCSO.
Upon opening the trailer doors, deputies reportedly found what appeared to be a human body inside the trailer, wrapped up in a garment.
The suspect was interviewed but reportedly invoked his right to counsel and was booked on one count of abandoning or concealing a dead body and $20,000 cash bond.
The body was taken to the Maricopa County Medical Examiner’s Office for further investigation on the cause and manner of death. On Friday, Aug. 27, an autopsy confirmed the body to be that of Wile.
The Maricopa County Sheriff’s Office Homicide Unit is actively working the case. Additional charges may be pending.
A preliminary hearing for the suspect is scheduled Friday, Sept. 3.
Friday, July 9, 2010
Gov. Jan Brewer speaks in Sedona, defends immigration law SB 1070
Arizona Gov. Jan Brewer used Sedona as a platform Thursday, July 1, to discuss the nationwide reaction to Senate Bill 1070, Arizona’s new immigration law.
Brewer said that the bill merely mirrors existing federal law. Passage of the bill was necessary to secure the Arizona-Mexico border, she said, because the federal immigration process is broken.
For the rest of the full story on the Sedona Red Rock News website, click here.
Friday, July 2, 2010
Christopher Fox Graham interviews Arizona Gov. Jan Brewer
Today, I met with and interviewed Arizona Gov. Jan Brewer at Los Abrigados Resort & Spa in Sedona.
Topics included border issues, Senate Bill 1070, and Arizona's financial crisis.
See the story in the Wednesday, July 7, issue of the Sedona Red Rock News.
Tuesday, June 22, 2010
Learn to write a press release that will publish
To help, the Sedona Visual Artists’ Coalition presents “The Art of Writing a Press Release,” a workshop taught by newspaper editor Christopher Fox Graham, from 1 to 4 p.m. on Saturday, June 26.
The fee is $10 for Sedona Visual Artists’ Coalition members, $15 for the general public. The workshop takes place at Keep Sedona Beautiful, 360 Brewer Road, Sedona.
Workshops taught by public relations professionals may focus on writing a press release, but as a professional newspaper editor, Graham approaches the topic from the other angle — representing the media professionals responsible for choosing which press releases to publish and where to place them in their publications.
Drafting an effective press release may seem an impossible skill to master. Press releases often lack key information, such as location, dates, costs or contact information. Others fail to provide sufficient background to be considered effective by the media outlets and news organizations that receive them.
Creating an effective, informative, yet brief and easy-to-read press release is often more art than skill. A good press release provides succinct details to inform newspaper or magazine readers, website users and radio listeners about news events, offering just enough information to pique readers’ interest in the topic without boring them.
Using real-world examples, Graham will demonstrate the differences between good and bad press releases; how to transform a bad release into a great one; what media professionals look for; mistakes that will get your press release thrown out and how to avoid them; how to write an eye-catching and informative press release; and how to deal with members of the media.
The workshop is designed for artists and musicians trying to promote their work, public relations and marketing professionals, nonprofit organizers and business owners.
Graham is currently assistant managing editor of Larson Newspapers, which publishes the Sedona Red Rock News, The Camp Verde Journal and the Cottonwood Journal Extra. His duties include receiving, prioritizing and editing press releases and assigning them to pages for publication.
Graham earned a bachelor’s degree in English with a focus on literature and linguistics and a minor in history from Arizona State University.
He has worked as senior copy editor for The State Press at ASU, copy editor for Larson Newspapers’ three publications, managing editor for Kudos and a private media consultant.
Graham is also a writer and performance poet. Over the last 10 years, he has toured and competed worldwide in poetry slams, a competitive art form that is focused as much on how the language is presented as on the content itself.
Workshop seating is limited. To reserve a seat, send a check for the correct amount to Jerry Buley, 659 Navahopi Road, Sedona, AZ, 86336.
For more information, Buley can be reached at 282-5499.
Tuesday, February 16, 2010
My Michael Moore interview happens tomorrow
I have about 30 great questions generated by those who follow my blog or through Facebook, but more for Moore will make the interview more Moorawesome.
Moore is coming to Sedona for the 16th annual Sedona International Film Festival and I'm interviewing him for a story in Sedona Rock Rock News. Be sure and pick up the Friday, Feb. 19, edition for the whole interview.
Michael Moore was born in Flint, Michigan April 23, 1954. He studied journalism at the University of Michigan-Flint, and also pursued other hobbies such as gun shooting, for which he even won a competition.
Moore began his journalistic career writing for the school newspaper The Michigan Times, and after dropping out of college briefly worked as editor for Mother Jones.
He then turned to filmmaking, and to earn the money for the budget of his first film Roger & Me (1989) he ran neighborhood bingo games. The success of this film launched his career as one of America's best-known and most controversial documentarians. He has produced a string of documentary films and TV series about the same subject: attacks on corrupt politicians and greedy business corporations.
He landed his first big hit with Bowling for Columbine (2002) about guns in America, which earned him an Oscar and a big reputation.
He then shook the world with his even bigger hit Fahrenheit 9/11 (2004), targeting President George W. Bush and the Bush Administration. This is the highest-grossing documentary of all time.
Sicko (2007) investigates Health care in the United States, focusing on its health insurance and pharmaceutical industry. The film compares the for-profit, non-universal U.S. system with the non-profit universal health care systems of Canada, the United Kingdom, France and Cuba.
Capitalism: A Love Story (2009) centers on the financial crisis of 2007–2010 and the recovery stimulus, while putting forward an indictment of the current economic order in the United States and capitalism in general.
Moore is known for having the guts to give his opinion in public, which not many people are courageous enough to do, and for that is respected by many.
Saturday, February 6, 2010
Help me interview Michael Moore
I have a list of questions I've always wanted to ask, but do you?
Moore will be the festival's special guest, screening "Capitalism: A Love Story" at Harkins Theatres.
Film festival director Patrick Schweiss set me up with an interview of Moore that will appear before the festival in the Sedona Red Rock News.
If you have questions you want me to ask filmmaker Michael Moore during my interview, e-mail them to me at foxthepoet@yahoo.com (Subject: "Michael Moore Questions") or comment on my blog by Friday, Feb. 12, and I will try to include most of them during my interview.
Even if they do not appear in the final print edition of the Sedona Red Rock News, I will get you his answers.
Thursday, November 26, 2009
Invite neighbors to join your family for Thanksgiving
to join your family
for Thanksgiving
Thanksgiving is more than a celebration of friends and family. It's an opportunity to welcome in both our neighbors and passing strangers to share food, stories and recipes.
The first Thanksgiving in the Plymouth Bay colony wasn't families in their individual cabins.. It was a feast of 53 Englishmen and around 90 Wampanoags dining together as a community.
Growing up, my father was on the coaching staff of two Major League Baseball teams. In part, that meant every Thanksgiving our table was surrounded not only by my parents, grandparents and siblings, but also "stragglers," as my mother called them – those who couldn't make it home or had no where to go. Often we'd have more than one. Our typical dinner would an infielder from San Francisco a third-base coach from Denver a pitcher from Cuba.
My personal favorite was the four players from the Dominican Republic who mistakenly thought our pet parakeets and cockatiel might be after-dinner delicacies.
Watching my mother explain in hand gestures and extremely broken Spanish the difference between pets and poultry still makes me smile.
Six years ago, I celebrated my first Thanksgiving in the Verde Valley. Rather than go back to my mother's home to Chandler, I stayed in Sedona and celebrated with my new group of 20-something friends, most of whom lacked the time or funds or both to make it home. While a first for me, that hodge-podge potluck Thanksgiving was part of long tradition among my circle of friends and one we're planning on celebrating again Thursday, Nov. 26.
However, I'll see the holiday through fresh eyes this year. My girlfriend – a Canadian – will celebrate her first Thanksgiving in the United States. While Canadians celebrate a Thanksgiving holiday, our American flavor is new to her. In looking through our newspapers, she was surprised at all the local churches, businesses, food banks, nonprofits and clubs offering free turkeys, full dinners or financial assistance to individuals and families in need.
This Thanksgiving, rather than just your extended family and friends, invite your neighbors to join.
Attend or volunteer at one of the Thanksgiving banquets the Verde Valley offers.
Donate a turkey, turducken or tofurkey to a food bank or nonprofit.
Just stay away from the parakeets.
Assistant News Editor
Sedona Red Rock News
© 2009 Sedona Red Rock News - All Rights Reserved
Sunday, October 18, 2009
John Bradshaw for Sedona mayor?
Sedona Vice Mayor John Bradshaw is resigning, effective Wednesday, Oct. 28. He delivered his letter of resignation to the city on Sept. 22.
Bradshaw resigned as a point of procedure as he can not run for mayor in 2010 while serving on City Council.
Although Bradshaw has not yet decided whether he plans to run for mayor, he said, leaving office in late October gives him the room to look at options. Full story on www.RedRockNews.com
© 2009 Sedona Red Rock News - All Rights Reserved
Wednesday, October 14, 2009
Two die at sweat lodge near Sedona
Two people died Thursday, Oct. 8, following a sweat lodge ceremony at Angel Valley Retreat Center located down Forest Road 525B between Sedona and Page Springs.
Verde Valley Fire District personnel were called to the scene at 5:19 p.m. Crews found several victims who had been involved in sweat lodge ceremony. Approximately 48 people participated in the ceremony that lasted over two hours, according to VVFD reports.
Initially, four patients were flown to Flagstaff Medical Center and six more were taken to Verde Valley Medical Center, in Cottonwood. In total, 21 people were evacuated to area medical centers, the reports stated.
A middle aged man and woman who were taken to VVMC were pronounced dead shortly after arrival. Full story on www.RedRockNews.com
© 2009 Sedona Red Rock News - All Rights Reserved
Friday, October 9, 2009
From Azami to Barack to slam, life rocks
- Returned to the Sedona Red Rock News with a promotion Assistant News Editor.
- Running the paper under Bob Larson and Trista Steers in a most awesome fashion.
- Returned to slam in FlagSlam with the intent to go to the National Poetry Slam this year.
- Inspired to write by a new girl, too.
- President Barack Obama wins the Nobel Peace Prize.
- I think I have a girlfriend, Azami ... the first girlfriend in about six years.
Thursday, October 1, 2009
I am Sedona Red Rock News' new Assistant Managing Editor
But I am now returning to the Sedona Red Rock News as Assistant News Editor under News Editor Trista Steers and Managing Editor/Publisher Bob Larson. Rock on.
Sunday, December 14, 2008
A series of haiku
Jedi Haiku
We are Jedi Knights
our words are our lightsabers
our Force is the Word
Mother's Day Haiku
I blacked out last night
no, this isn't my blood but
happy Mother's Day
Serial Killer Haiku
Funny you should ask
my trunk can fit two Boy Scouts
and a grandmother
Nicholas is in the Will; I'm a Footnote Haiku
I thought my mother
loved both her sons equally ...
until I saw the will
Heavy Pause Haiku
Then, years afterward,
I realized the problem was ...
...
...
...
... I hesitated
American 17-syllable haiku
My Grammar Can Beat Up Your Grammar Haiku
Why isn't "phonetic"
spelled phonetically?
While you think, let's make out
Dirty Old Man Haiku
And old man told me
the way to stay young
is sleep with 18-year-olds
Ella Garrett Haiku
We copy editors judge you,
reporters,
when you use bad grammar
Crucifixion Haiku (stolen from a joke by Dan Seaman)
Why did Jesus Christ
die on the cross?
Because he forgot the safe word
Bruce Haiku
Fathers should suffer
labor like mothers so they
don't bolt on their sons
Why I Act Like a Child Haiku
The older you get
the younger you feel.
At 40, I'll be fetal
Pudenda Haiku
My hand rests on your cleft:
the moist doorway from where
poems and poets are born
Theory of Relativity Haiku
The illusion of light
traps believers in the past
must move faster
Emigration Haiku
America is taxing my dreams
so I'm moving
to Canada
Arboreal Haiku
A tree falls in the woods
and no one is around.
Termites have no crowd
Insurance Haiku
"Drop your pants
and give me $100."
I hate my HMO.
Call Center Haiku
Work is so boring today.
I'll liven it up
with a homicide
Urban Violence Haiku
We were children once,
remember?
why do you now hold a gun?
Lisa Gaston Haiku
Somehow you can make
the words, "fuck me"
the most romantic phrase I know
Atheist Haiku
You ask why I am an atheist?
Fathers are our models
for God
Punk Rock Chick Haiku
Punk band patches
tats, pink hair, pierced attitude ...
I want her to break me
Michael Bay Haiku
If we're really headed to hell
in a hand basket,
I call shotgun
Why I Need My Sins Haiku
The histories we try to forget
end up
defining who we are
Nearsidedness Haiku
I should have seen
fucking you was dumb;
my testicles need spectacles
Thanksgiving Haiku
Before we start, I
want to say I hate you all.
Pass the salt, aunt Beth
Was it True Love Haiku
Loving you was
endless disappointment
with moments of denial
I Need a Front Page Story Haiku
Wildfires threaten Sedona
but I work for a newspaper.
So light up.
My Longest Relationship was 42 Days Haiku
Whales beach themselves
when they know it's over;
We stayed at sea way too long
Head to Head Haikus
Greg Nix Haiku
Greg Nix once said
he admired me.
Will he slobber on my pecker?
Greg Nix Haiku #2
I doubt it
a bottle, his foot and his shame
already fill his mouth
Damien Flores Haiku #1
Damien is cocky
about his haiku
but he still can't buy beer
Damien Flores Haiku #2
Easy way to win:
"Damien is 20, officer,
and he's drunk."
Why it's Hard to Kill Aaron Johnson With My Car Haiku
God damn lefties!
Aaron Johnson hitchhikes
facing oncoming traffic
Thursday, August 9, 2007
Workplace Revelation
Ruland pours incompetence like a fountain.