All this time I’ve been preaching the need for businesses and organizations to beef up their media savvy. Leave it to the stodgy Brits to make a game out of it.
Thumbs up for speed-dating councillors
RICHARD BATSON
The babble of voices grew louder over the “speed dating” session as the young questioners tried to get all the information they needed before the three-minute gong sounded.
But the race against the clock was not in search of romance; it was to quiz local councillors.
The novel training method is being used by more and more councils to help their members’ communication skills.
But it is also helping to break down youngsters’ stereotyped views about councillors, as the latest session in North Norfolk proved.
Seventeen-year-old Will Grey said afterwards: “I thought they were going to be a bunch of boring old Tories. But they are not.”
Fellow North Walsham student Steven Thompson said: “I was surprised to find out they were in touch with things we are concerned about – like there not being enough to do in town.”
Diana Rackham, 16, added: “I thought they would be negative about the needs of teenagers, but they were concerned about the whole community, including us.”
And Rosie Jones, 17, was impressed the councillors were knowledgeable about issues that concerned her, from coastal erosion to affordable housing.
Councillors moved around the tables when signaled by a DVD featuring a cheesy pop figure called “Big D Mocracy”, who said his hits included It’s My Party, and I’ll Resign If I Want To.
The youngsters’ questions ranged from how councillors got involved in politics and what the council had done for young people, to the war in Iraq and the need for lights at a new skateboard park.
Funny, I’ve actually had political clients where the goal was to “unstodgy” and “un-Torie” them.
The babble of voices grew louder over the “speed dating” session as the young questioners tried to get all the information they needed before the three-minute gong sounded.

Francisco Oaxaca is the guy’s name, and to an untrained eye, it would appear that he took a beating. Cuomo made the case that Metrolink was running recklessly by “pushing” trains on return trips instead of pulling with a heavy locomotive.
Since the Glendale accident, Metrolink has made an important change in the cab car: The area where people are most often hurt is now roped off.




























