
I took two days to write this blog entry, while surviving a bad cold, and it was worth it.
I started this blog about a year ago, right after completing the performance of “The Last Play on Earth,” the play I wrote and directed in collaboration with the children at OAS Middle School. It was titled “There’s Life After The Last Play on Earth”
For the last few months, I have been busy with writing and directing “The End of Rainbows,” and with other fun projects that I haven’t been posting here. This play deserves its own post, which I may do later, but in the meantime, you can visit its website, and/or the gallery of photos I took during the second performance.
I also have to admit that I got tired of blogging, and of blowing my own horn. I know that some people enjoy my horn-blowing, and thus, I will continue to post here about the creative projects I’m involved in, as long as blogging doesn’t keep me from creating fun plays, emotive paintings, informative articles, entertaining books, flabbergasting videos, or engaging photographs.
One of these projects was filming a video of Paul Diaz, a whistle-blower for the San Onofre nuclear plant. It was published in El Mundo, with editing and Spanish subtitles by Piero Menor.
I’ve also written several pieces on nuclear power for the El Mundo blog I contribute to, in Spanish. The last two were the most-read blogs in all of elmundo.es the day they were published. “The Big One for Today” talks about the dangers of a large earthquake in California. “Trusting the Devil” talks about the history of the nuclear power plant at Diablo Canyon, practically in my backyard. The third piece, written right after the Japanese earthquake; “California Trembles with (Atomic) Fear” made it to the top ten of elmundo.es.
I heard a quote today about a woman speaking against the renewal of uranium mining in Virginia. I paraphrase: “They say not to worry because it’s 30 miles away from our town. That’s not justification. I love all of my state.”
Today I wrote “Winners and Losers after the Oil Spill” for the newspaper and it is right now on the cover of both editions of the digital El Mundo, the one from Spain and the one for the Americas, plus as the main article in the Science section (it later became the second most-voted story of the day). Interestingly enough, the blog I wrote about oil spill quotes, “Don’t Cry for the Spilled Oil”, on June 2, 2010, is among the most-read US blogs this week.
The piece about Virgil Peck, “Shoot the Immigrant Pigs“, also made it to the top ten. I am still shocked by the comments from some of the readers. I actually like to answer my readers, even if I don’t agree with them. For this reason, and because I tend to document my stories exhaustively, I don’t believe I’m a good blogger. By the time I’m done, I spend more than my share of blogging hours. Nevertheless, I enjoy the conversation. I would love to have the energy to also translate them to English after I’m done. Otherwise, there’s always Google Translate… Still, I keep writing them. I wasn’t very happy about the one I wrote to commemorate International Woman’s Day. I would have liked to write something more positive, like the story I wrote about Zainab Salbi, founder of Women for Women International, the year before. Zainab is my hero.
Finally, my friend and editor Carlos Fresneda, published several blog entries with the portraits I took with him for the EcoHeroes Project:
• Liz Walker, director of Ithaca EcoVillage, and author of “Choosing a Sustainable Future”.
• Ubaka Hill, drummer and founder of the Million Woman Drummer March.
• Graham Hill and Ken Rother, who started Treehugger.
Other projects deserving their own posts:
• Completing the design of an amazing children book about monarch butterflies.
• Painting the largest self-portrait I’ve ever made.
• Continuing the 100 self-portrait phone photo project.
• “Waste to Resource” video, shot and edited for the Green Short Film Festival.
• Photo shoot of Law & Order event at UCSB’s Carsey-Wolf Center.
And more. I’ll keep you posted.



It’s been longer than it probably should have been since my last 


I’m proud to communicate that I’ve been chosen to write and direct the play for