Cauli Le Chat

Cauli Le Chat
Cauli Le Chat, MPL Feline Roving Reporter
Showing posts sorted by relevance for query programma mama. Sort by date Show all posts
Showing posts sorted by relevance for query programma mama. Sort by date Show all posts

Thursday, May 17, 2012

Meet Technigal and Programma Mama (Get to Know Series, Part Six)

UPDATE April, 2021:   Mooresville (Indiana) Public Library discontinued notary public services in April, 2021.
 
 
Technigal's old "Cauli nickname" used to be Anime/Manga Gal, because she knows a whole bunch about the subject matter. But she is also head of MPL technical services, so a nickname change was the order of the day. She's "also also" a Notary Public, but two nicknames per staffer are plenty.

Technigal holding her Indiana Notary Public certificate
(February 2012)

Programma Mama is MPL adult programming coordinator.  She handled teen programming, too, until the Library hired Savvy, MPL teen librarian. P.M. arranged the afternoon music and dancing at the Library's 100th birthday bigbash last Saturday.  You probably saw the videos and photos.


Programma Mama at the Library's self-checkout terminal
during our centennial bigbash (May 12, 2012)

Both agree that their favorite color is red, although Technigal likes her reds mixed with brown and gold.  Programma Mama was quick to name No Doubt as her favorite band, but Technigal protested that asking a person who is her/his favorite band "is an impossible question!" because folks like so many.  Technigal certainly falls in this category--she has wide-ranging musical tastes--but she was able to narrow her top band list to M83, the Killers, and VNV Nation.  And Vienna Teng and Nickelback and Metric and . . .

Watch No Doubt in the studio working on a new release
(slated for Sept. 25, 2012)


Official music video of "Midnight City," by M83,
from the double album Hurry Up, We're Dreaming (2011)


Technigal was born in Texas, so she is a longhorn or a lone star or whatever nickname Texans have for themselves.  Programma Mama was born and raised in Mooresville.  Neither currently lives in Mooresville (Technigal in Plainfield, and P.M. in Southport), but that may change.  P.M. is moving back to town this summer.

Technigal has worked at the Library for just over two years [she also used to work at Brownsburg (Indiana) Public Library], and Programma Mama has been an MPL staffer for slightly over 3-1/2 years, when she first started in the Circulation Department.  What are their favorite things about working at MPL?

  • Technigal:  "I really like the town and the people I work with! [MPL] Being voted the Business of the Month by the Mooresville Chamber of Commerce was an incredible feeling. It's amazing to work for a town that values its library so highly."

  • Programma Mama best likes the "patrons and the programs that we provide for our community."

What are their favorite childhood memories of libraries?

  • Technigal:  "Going to the library closer to my home (but in another town, so technically not "my" library--I can sympathize with people from Camby [Indiana]!) and seeing a gorgeous stained glass display.  It was the first time I realized libraries were more than books!  (The books were still my favorite part, though.)"

  • Programma Mama:  "I loved calling up the library, and [having] a book read by one of the librarians.  Mooresville Library had a program set up that each week you could call and have a book read to you.  It was a different book each week.  So much fun.  I also have fond memories of going to the Mooresville Library with my grandmother who was a librarian herself, and I always would check-out the same book each time, but my grandmother would always make me look it up in the card catalog first.  Ugh!  Drove me nuts, but now I laugh, because she was teaching me the Dewey system that I now use today.  Funny how life does that."

Being from Texas, Technigal had some "culture shock" in acclimating to Indiana.  "Ask my opinion of 'elephant ears' [the fried food] sometime." I'm guessing that it's not flattering.  But Technigal seems to have made the transition to Hoosier without too many bumps and bruises.

Being a native of Mooresville and Morgan County has given Programma Mama a lifetime connection with the local folks.  That helps when you work at a public library.  Knowing your community is a critical component to effective librarianship.

What have I noticed in the time I have worked with these two ladies?  Well, when I first met Technigal in December, 2010, she made fun of my bellowing meow that I used to greet patrons entering the Library while I was hanging around outside the building (as I sometimes still do when not doing the roving reporter thing).  This did not endear her to moi, but I'm not a grudge-holder.  What has most impressed moi about Technigal is her fine attention to detail, her tenacity in complete and accurate cataloging, her ability to adapt to new challenges, the vast scope of her knowledge of current events, and her sense of humor.  Actually, I rank humor first, but that's just moi.  Patrons unfamiliar with the complexities of library technical services should know how truly fortunate they (and our staff) are to have Technigal leading the adult services cataloging adventure.  The world of AACR2 (and, soon, RDA), MARC records, LCSH, DDC 23, and all the other acronyms cataloging librarians know so well is not for the fainthearted.  (Ask her to explain what all those letter jumbles mean.)

Programma Mama's strongest traits are her personal warmth, friendliness, and enthusiasm for her work. As a library program coordinator, these are absolutely vital personality characteristics.  The job simply cannot be done without them.  But, above and beyond these, there is P.M.'s extensive local networking with prominent citizens and businesses.  That makes programs come together, with sponsorships and public support and word-of-mouth publicity.  Who you know makes things happen.

Job interviewers ask prospective employees where they see themselves in five years.  I hope Technigal and Programma Mama see themselves at MPL for that and much longer.  Five human years, after all, is slightly under a single feline year.  Time has a way of microscoping.  Or telescoping.  Something like that.



Not Sure What That Meant, But It Sounded Good,

Cauli Le Chat
MPL Roving Reporter
Get to Know Staff News Beat

P.S.  Once again, our musical closers already happened.  Sort of takes the bite right out of these postscripts.

Monday, February 16, 2015

Brownsburg Lures Another From Our Nest

Programma Mama is leaving MPL to work at Brownsburg (Indiana) Public Library (BPL).

Click Logo to Visit the BPL Website

For years, MPL and BPL have been raiding each others' staff rosters. They've lured several of our staff away, and then we've lured some of them back.  I've blogged about it before. With Programma Mama, BPL is now ahead on number of our staff scooped up.  We'll just have to make an appealing offer to one of theirs now.  Say, any of you BPL librarians want to work with Scowl-Face?  Wait, I said an appealing offer.

Okay, let's start again.  Hey, BPL staffers!  Join the MPL crew and work with moi.  It doesn't get any better than this.  They should be stampeding our way any time.

Seriously, we extend our congratulations to Programma Mama on her new position at BPL. It's a wonderful library, and she will surely enjoy working with her new colleagues and patrons.



Your Roving Reporter On The Go,


Cauli Le Chat


P.S.  In this episode of MEG-A-RAE (#29, March 13, 2013), Programma Mama bid a tearful farewell to Savvy.  Now it's Programma Mama's turn. Maybe Savvy will send us a video clip wishing her good fortune.  Fair's fair, after all.

Monday, March 4, 2013

Prepare to be Thrilled

This week's MEG-A-RAE is all about thrillers.  Plus suspense.  So prepare to be thrilled.  Or suspended.  Something like that.


MEG-A-RAE #28:  A Very Special Thriller Episode,
by Programma Mama & Savvy

In addition to the standard theme music ("The Andromeda Cometh," from the CD Andromeda [2010], by the Library's composer, whom I call the Music Man), we added "Nightmares," from the CD Dreams: A Journey Through the Sleeping Mind (2008), also by the Music Man, to heighten the scariness.

Programma Mama was acting sorta strange.  Must have taken "a shining" to some popular horror novels.  (Apologies to Stephen King.)

By the way, we have a book trailer (of course we do) featuring Agatha Christie's suspense tale, And Then There Were None.

MPL Book Trailer #77
And Then There Were None, by Agatha Christie

The young adult novel reviewed in MEG-A-RAE, Ten, by Gretchen McNeil, sounds like a retread of Christie's story, but, hey, retelling a classic is itself an expression of creativity.  In fiction, everybody borrows something from somebody.

Hope Programma Mama is back to "normal" (whatever that might be) by next week's episode of MEG-A-RAE.  My heart can stand only so many scares.



Your Roving Reporter On The Go,


Cauli Le Chat


P.S.  Whenever they said the word thriller, Savvy and Programma Mama were doing some moves from Michael Jackson's music video, Thriller (1983).  It was directed by John Landis. Is there anybody on the planet who hasn't already seen it?  If so, here's your chance, courtesy of Vevo.com and YouTube.


Tuesday, October 30, 2012

Millions (Billions?) Scared by This Horror Duo

Millions (possibly billions) of readers have been plenty scared by this horror duo.  We're talking Stephen King and Stephenie Meyer.  (Okay, Stephenie Meyer is more of a vampire romance writer, but there are scary bits in the Twilight series.)  I suppose we could have been referring to Savvy and Programma Mama, but I'm guessing their audience hasn't reached millions.  Yet.

MEG-A-RAE #13
A Very VERY Special Halloween Episode
by Miss Rachel & Miss Meghan
 (Savvy & Programma Mama)


Be sure to watch all the way to the end of the video.  You won't want to miss it.  Not scary, as such.  Pretty funny, though.


Nice Witch's Hat, Programma Mama,

Cauli Le Chat
MPL Roving Reporter
Library Video Blog News Beat


P.S.  It wouldn't be Halloween without "Werewolves of London," by Warren Zevon, from the LP Excitable Boy (1978).

Tuesday, February 26, 2013

And the Crow Goes To . . .

In this week's episode of MEG-A-RAE, our readers' advisory video blog (vlog), Programma Mama and Savvy get Oscar fever while talking about all the great books that were adapted as Academy Award-winning movies this year.

MEG-A-RAE #27
A Very Special Oscars Episode,
by Savvy & Programma Mama

Savvy and Programma Mama may not have won Oscars, but they certainly deserve Crows.  That statuette is Crow T. Robot from Mystery Science Theater 3000, which created the art of movie riffing.  If you haven't seen the TV series, you should buy bunches of DVDs from your favorite online vendor.  There are show snippets available on YouTube, too, like so:

Excerpts From Mystery Science Theater 3000 (MST3K)
(Season 10, Episode 4, 1998)
Movie Riffed:  Werewolf (1996)

What's with the ever-changing hairstyles of this actor in the movie Werewolf?  MST3K made bad movies hilarious to watch.

Thanks to MST3K and Best Brains, Inc. for making the Crow T. Robot figure that we used in this episode of MEG-A-RAE.




Your Roving Reporter On The Go,


Cauli Le Chat


P.S.  If you'd like a partial listing of MST3K episodes, you can't do better than The Mystery Science Theater 3000 Amazing Colossal Episode Guide (1996).  Our book trailer elaborates.

Tuesday, March 3, 2015

A MEG-A-RAE Farewell

Before she headed south, Savvy, our former teen librarian, made MEG-A-RAE, a video blog (vlog) with Programma Mama, our former teen services & adult programming coordinator.  Here's their playlist.


MEG-A-RAE Video Playlist


In my recent farewell to Programma Mama, I reprised our farewell video to Savvy and suggested that she return the favor.  Done and done.

MEG-A-RAE Episode #30:
A Very Special Farewell to Meg from Rae

Well said, Savvy.  Thanks.

Best wishes again to Programma Mama in her new librarian adventures at Brownsburg (Indiana) Public Library.




Your Roving Reporter On The Go,


Cauli Le Chat

Monday, December 3, 2012

Books Make Great Gifts, Say MEG-A-RAE

In this week's episode of MEG-A-RAE, Programma Mama and Savvy remind viewers that books make great gifts.  Not as great as canned tuna-in-oil, but maybe that's just moi.

MEG-A-RAE #17:  A Very Special Gifty Books Episode
by Savvy & Programma Mama

Maybe books about canned tuna-in-oil would be fun for moi to read.  No--that would just make moi hungrier.

People readers should check-out the books they discussed in their video blog (vlog), if they sound appealing to you, and if you have an Evergreen Indiana library card.  All the books discussed may be found in various MPL collections around the library.  You could also look them up in our online E.I. catalog.  Cardholders may place holds on the books, if they'd like!

Want to see our book trailer for one of the books Programma Mama mentioned?  Easily done.

Les Misérables, by Victor Hugo (MPL Book Trailer #103)

Great read!  Scowl-Face first read it during his freshman year in high school, which was probably about the same time the book was first published.



Your Roving Reporter On The Go,

Cauli Le Chat


P.S.  I'd like to recommend a wonderful children's book that makes a great gift.  This book trailer, created by the Lady With the Red Hair, elaborates.

Tuesday, October 8, 2013

A Terrific Tea Time

This is your feline roving reporter lurking beneath the tables and chairs at our "Morning Tea With Tess Gerritsen" program this morning.  We have exclusive photos, of course.

 Click Images to Bigify
 

 Tess & Jacob Gerritsen (facing camera)




 Friends of the Library Book Buying Table

Our Thank You Gift Basket for Tess & Jacob

 Programma Mama introduces our Guest of Honor


Tess tells the tales




Tess shared many amusing and intriguing anecdotes from her professional career, both as a physician and a best-selling author.  She described her inspirations in writing and provided many particular examples explaining how her book topics evolved.  We were particularly excited when she said that public libraries (along with horror movies) shaped her childhood and planted the writer's seed early in life.



Programma Mama and the Decorinator presented Tess with a thank you basket from the Friends of the Library.



After answering questions, Tess signed books.

Madame Programmerama (center) queues up early

Although before my time, Madame Programmerama was my Library's adult programming coordinator before Programma Mama.



 Look!  It's OfficeMeister!







Best adult program ever at MPL, I'll venture.


Your Roving Reporter On The Go,

Cauli Le Chat
 

Thursday, July 19, 2012

Savvy & Programma Mama Pique Your Pinterest

Click Image to Bigify

Savvy, MPL Teen Librarian, and Programma Mama, MPL Adult Programs Coordinator, have started an MPL page on Pinterest.  Here's Programma Mama's description from the Library's Facebook page:

If you have Pinterest, you should check out the Mooresville Public Library's Pinterest page! That's right, we have joined Pinterest. So now you can really keep track of what we are doing at the library.

No reason to stand here gawking about.  Click this hyperlink already!

Have we piqued your pinterest?



Bad Puns Are Free,

Cauli Le Chat
MPL Roving Reporter
Library Technology News Beat

Wednesday, November 28, 2012

Our James Bond Girls? Just Asking

In this week's episode of MEG-A-RAE, the Library's readers' advisory video blog (vlog), Programma Mama and Savvy discussed spy novels, including Ian Fleming's James Bond series and the resultant motion picture adaptations [including the most recent effort, Skyfall (2012)].  Does that make them our Bond girls?  Just asking.

MEG-A-RAE #16: A Very Special Super Spy Episode,
Starring Savvy & Programma Mama

Ian Fleming (1908-1964) may still be dead, but his literary creation lives on in cinema.  Unfortunately, this renders the original James Bond novels and short stories too "dated" (and, consequently, unpalatable) for most modern readers' tastes.  Fleming's literary James Bond evokes an era that is now more than a half-century removed from contemporary events. What else could one expect?  Fleming published his Bond tales during the 1950s, and his own espionage experiences during World War II fueled plots and settings for his most famous fictional character's imaginary encounters.  In a word, the "print" James Bond seems anachronistic when compared with the character's contemporary movies, which attempt to update plot scenarios to match current events.  Perhaps this is why my Library's many James Bond books have not circulated in over two decades and consequently have suffered the indignity of the collection developer's deselection in recent fiction "weeding."

Try reading James Bond as loosely-based historical fiction.  That way, Fleming's outdated social attitudes and plot devices are acceptable as rooted in post-World War II environments.  Forget the movies--make no comparisons whatsoever and read the books without any preconceptions--and you may still glean some enjoyment from them.  For some human folks, however, there's no getting past Fleming's apparent misogynistic tone.  Well, western Anglo-American culture has certainly changed in half a century, and male chauvinism is a tiresome relic at best.  If you have trouble with that, try reading Ian Fleming's children's book, Chitty-Chitty-Bang-Bang: the Magical Car (1964).  Fleming wrote it for his son, Caspar.

Meanwhile, take a peek at the other books that Savvy and Programma Mama showcased in their video.  You could do lots worse.



I Spy Something That Starts With . . .,

Cauli Le Chat
MPL Roving Reporter
Readers' Advisory News Beat

P.S.  One of the greatest James Bond spoofs was the 1960s television series Get Smart, created by Mel Brooks and Buck Henry.  Playing Agent 86 (Maxwell Smart) was actor Don Adams, with "the Chief" being played by actor Edward Platt.

Tuesday, July 1, 2014

Winged Dinners Club, I'd Wager

Programma Mama has started Bird Club.  Winged Dinners Club, I'd wager.

It's a truly outdoorsy thing, as the club meets on the first Thursday of every month in the MPL Courtyard from 10-11 a.m.  Click the description (and photos) below to bigify.

Click to See What Fun You'll Be Having


Where Winged Dinners Club Meets

Finally, a program that caters to MY special interests!  You needn't venture far to find plenty of winged dinners around my Library.  There are winged dinner houses surrounding the courtyard along Legacy Lane.

 Hey!  That's a Winged Dinner Diner

 Deluxe Winged Dinner Condo

 Skinny Winged Dinners Only?

 Better For Butterflies
(Another Type of Winged Dinner)

Another Deluxe Winged Dinner Condo

Time For a Refill, I'd Venture

So, what are these things?  Winged Dinner nests?  Pretty pawdy (humans would say handy) for moi.



The first meeting of Winged Dinner Club is this Thursday, July 3, from 10-11 a.m.  Just in time for my lunch.

What's this?  Programma Mama says I'm not allowed to snack on the winged dinners around the Library!  No feline fun there.

Well, at least I can enjoy the winged dinners in our program trailer.



Our human patrons who enjoy watching, photographing, and listening to winged dinners will have a great time, even with Programma Mama's unfair rule for moi.  Drop by, and enjoy this outdoor adventure.  Check-out our many North American winged dinner books and winged dinner calls audiobook from our Evergreen Indiana catalog.



Your Roving Reporter On The Go,

Cauli Le Chat


P.S.  The MPL Courtyard caters to all manner of winged dinners, including butterflies, much like Greenwood (Indiana) Public Library, as this promo trailer illustrates.