Thursday, April 1, 2010

Mystery Solved - Champ the Monster and Champlain the Explorer Mixed up by Mascot Movers from Maryland


At a hastily called, late-afternoon press conference at Champlain College, a college spokesman announced the mystery of the missing French explorer statue had been solved.
Turns out, he explained, an out-of-the-area mascot moving company's paperwork was mangled in their fax machine and their crew, delayed by having to take the ferry after discovering the Champlain Bridge had been blown up, was running late and thought they were supposed to pick up the Champlain statue, when really they were supposed to get the "Champ" statue from the Waterfront Ferry dock.

The aging plastic model of the infamous "Champ" monster alleged to live in Lake Champlain has seen better days and is slated for refurbishing and scale-lift.
"We thought that damn statue was a lot heavier than expected, but it was dark and we didn't want to disturb the students in the IDX Student Life Center enjoying their weekly Grind Open Mike session," said the driver, who asked not to be identified.

"It's bad enough my back is never going to be the same, but if my boss finds out we caused all this ruckus in Vermont, New York and Quebec, somebody going to get their butt kicked, and it ain't gonna be mine."

By 5 p.m. the statue was back in its rightful place, the media storm has quieted and students heading to dinner were able to stop by and touch the foot of the brave bronze explorer back from his journey and happily kneeling on the smooth pedestal bearing his name.

A planned candlelight vigil was called off, and students were urged instead to attend a "Murder-Mystery Evening" in Hauke Conference Center, attend a free movie, or a "Zombies vs. Humans" club meeting in the Digital Computer lab.

"It was really quite touching how many people responded today, especially some special members of the media who helped get the word out during the uncertainty and angst of losing the Champlain College namesake," the spokesman said. "Some of those Tweets and Facebook notes really tug at your heart," he said speaking for a diverse student population, both here and abroad at campuses in Dublin and Montreal, that could now return to what passes for normal at Champlain College and begin once again to worry about getting a job after graduation, a social media internship or landing a cool apartment with six buddies for fall.

CSI Champlain Gets Horatio Help

http://ow.ly/i/VNe/original
Click here to see how law enforcement agencies are kicking into gear to find the missing statue - in high definition and supersaturated - YYYEEAAAH......

Historical Perspective


In times like these, it helps to get some historical perspective on Champlain statues, and who better than the venerable New York Times to turn to:

http://query.nytimes.com/gst/abstract.html?res=9F03E1D8143CE433A25751C2A96F9C94699ED7CF

Journalism Like We Remember It!

Just when those of us in public relations (aka spinmeisters) were losing faith in journalists - beleagured by furloughs, cutbacks and more work than anyone one person can possibily do in a day, higher education reporter Tim Johnson of The Burlington Free Press came through like the Clark Kents of a gone-by era of print journalism - he left his desk, stopped blogging and tweeting and walked up the hill on a beautiful, sunny day to check out a press release.

You can read the full account of his out-of-office experience - on his blog, of course, at http://bit.ly/b8g6Wl
Super job, thanks Tim!

Confusion over Missing Statue







There appears to be some confusion in the media and on Twitter about which Champlain statue is missing. It is not any of these. At last reports, all were exactly where they were yesterday.
It is the Champlain College statue that is missing.

Local weekly paper goes daily in wake of news

7 Days Newspaper, which really only comes out one day a week, announced today it is going to publish daily so it can keep up with the continuing saga of the missing Champlain College statue.
"It's like when Nightline went to every night during the Iranian hostage crisis back in the '70s," according to Cathy Resmer of 7Days, referring to a news event that must have occured before she was born.

For more details on the move to daily journalism - http://www.7dvt.com/seven-days-a-week

The Statue crisis was also featured in their 5x a week email news summary (guess not much happens on the weekend) Glad this happened on a Thursday.

Alien Abduction link explored

Burlington Free Press poses question - was it an alien abduction and was it related to the events of a year ago. The ABC show "V" did return to the air this week - coincidence?
Watch the video and decide for yourself.

http://bit.ly/amZufg