Summary of Aaron’s Digital Portfolio

The first sample is from one of my contributions to The Hockey Writers, which was a very valuable and rewarding experience. I had an opportunity to utilize a platform to publish opinionated pieces with an ongoing dialogue with editors, helping to improve my quality of writing. One of my core beliefs is that opinionated pieces are what engage readers and maintain their readership whether that is to have their shared opinion validated or state their case. Beyond the subject matter related to hockey in the article, I believe it demonstrates what I was referring to as an opinion piece and provides sufficient evidence that can back up stated claims which is an invaluable strength in media – specifically journalism today.

The second sample, A Few Love Poems, is a trio of poems I have written over the last year that conceptually deal with personal experiences in discovering love, heartbreak, and trying to conquer the obstacles that love may create. As a creative form of writing, poetry satisfies my drive to recognize my emotions, express them, and convert those ideas into art.

The third sample is from my first-year of post-secondary at Mount Royal University, in which I learned in a newsroom on a day-by-day basis on the theory, ethics and practice of media. Through our partnership with the Calgary Journal, I had the chance to publish an article about the band Peach Pit leading to the opportunity of communicating with public relations, garner interviewing experience and observe live music, which is already a passion of mine, from a fresh perspective. The conceptual idea behind the Peach Pit piece was to put an underrepresented band in the spotlight, show their personality through my line of questioning and bring the reader on the journey of their becoming.

Overall, my portfolio demonstrates some of my core interests and strengths that can continue to improve in the Bachelor of Media Studies program.

Blake Wheeler’s Case for the Hart Trophy

 

When conversation emerges about Winnipeg Jets’ captain, Blake Wheeler, one thing comes to mind: 100% effort.

“He’s without a doubt the leader of this team,” said Bryan Little. “With him, you know what to expect every day. He’s going to bring his 100% effort and I think he’s a great role model for our young guys.”

Despite Little enjoying his eighth season as a teammate of Wheeler, one doesn’t need more than a brief exchange with the Minnesota native to realize the determination and character he brings to the table.

“Looking at Wheels going 100% every shift makes us do it as well,” said budding superstar, Nikolaj Ehlers.

Despite the 6-foot-5 forward on pace for career highs in both assists and points, he still isn’t getting the recognition he deserves, which is nothing new for the 2004 fifth overall pick. One of the worst trades in recent history involved the 2014 U.S. Olympian as he was shipped along with Mark Stuart from the Boston Bruins to the Atlanta Thrashers in exchange for Rich Peverley and Boris Valabik.

While Peverley played a significant role in the Bruins winning their 2011 Stanley Cup, it is undeniable that they could have used the Plymouth product as a power forward for the next decade.

Five years after the trade, Wheeler was named the captain of the Jets on his 30th birthday.

Blake Wheeler

Blake Wheeler has been the Winnipeg Jets’ most consistent player since relocating from Atlanta. (Amy Irvin / The Hockey Writers)

Over the past five seasons, Wheeler ranks ninth in total points league-wide with 336, more than Ryan Getzlaf, Anze Kopitar and Vladimir Tarasenko.

This season is the first time he has been named an All-Star in his career, but did manage to win the 2009 NHL YoungStars Most Valuable Player when he participated in the event which includes exclusively the league’s best rookies. Participating in the 63rd All-Star Game is a distinguished honour, however, earning the NHL’s most coveted award would be a monumental accomplishment and isn’t out of reach for Wheeler.

Hart and Soul Player

While Wheeler’s game is flying under the radar of some, others have begun to notice that the season after season results are no longer a fluke and his status should remain among the league’s elite.

Frank Seravalli, TSN’s senior hockey reporter and member of the Professional Hockey Writers Association, selected Wheeler as his mid-season Hart Memorial Trophy winner despite placing fifth in PHWA voting overall.

“Blake Wheeler has been driving the bus on everything the Winnipeg Jets have done this season,” said Seravalli.

He isn’t the only knowledgeable hockey voice to have this opinion either. When asked what player he thinks will be the toughest opposition in the All-Star game’s fastest skater competition, Connor McDavid singled out Wheeler.

The direction the game is heading, a premium is put on speed and a compliment from likely the fastest skater with the puck on his stick in NHL history is certainly high praise.

What it comes down to for the Hart Trophy is the definition it abides by being awarded to the “player judged most valuable to his team.” Which is exactly why a duo of Tampa Bay Lightning forwards should not qualify.

This is to take nothing away from Nikita Kucherov or Steven Stamkos, who are unbelievable players in their own right, but a squad having two players in the top-five scoring leaders should not justify the award honour.

In other words, despite leading the league in scoring, how can Kucherov be the most valuable player on his team when the team also has another player only five points behind him? Not to mention the leading candidates for both the Norris and Vezina trophies in Victor Hedman and Andrei Vasilevskiy, respectfully.

Nikita Kucherov, Victor Hedman

Victor Hedman and Nikita Kucherov are two of a handful of Tampa Bay Lightning players having career seasons.  (Charles LeClaire-USA TODAY Sports)

Wheeler is Captain Consistency

Wheeler exemplifies putting a team on his back as the Jets’ first line centre, Mark Scheifele, who was having a Hart-worthy season of his own, went down with an injury in late December which will likely sideline him until early-March.

“That’s my running mate, man,” said Wheeler regarding Scheifele’s injury. “That’s part of my livelihood, a big part of what we do as a team. Irreplaceable.”

Instead of doing what most teams do and recalling a centreman to replace the irreplaceable, head coach Paul Maurice decided to shift the Jets’ leader to the middle, a position he hasn’t played in over a decade.

In 12 games since Scheifele went down, the Jets are 8-2-2 with Wheeler attaining point-per-game status over that stretch.

If scoring isn’t enough, the die-hard Minnesota Vikings’ fan leads forwards in blocked shots and plays both special teams units.

General manager, Kevin Cheveldayoff wants to take it one day at a time, however, with Wheeler under contract for only this year and the next at a steal of a deal $5.6 million per season, their priority this summer should be crystal clear.

The Jets enter the All-Star break first in the Central Division, which is widely considered the toughest division in hockey, with Wheeler leading the charge scoring 18 points in 14 divisional contests.

Now with their next ten games at the MTS Centrem where Wheeler has contributed 33 points in only 21 home games, which is tied for the least amount of home games in the league, they will surely try to take advantage.

A Few Love Poems

A Few Love Poems

 

Let Me Lay Still in Your Silence

I feel so empty.
as if I can’t take anything in at one time
my mind is always bouncing from
word to word, face to face walking around me.
a tree blowing in the wind
overshadows a best friend’s voice.

I could watch the rain with you
for an eternity
laying in the sand I’ll stay
watching you turn blonde
dip a toe
wrinkle your nose
visionary eloquence
right before my eyes

 

Jericho

I’ve tried to recreate your eyes
so many times
in my head, in my heart
on paper

I’ve tried to recreate your smile
I hadn’t seen since our last night together
what I wouldn’t do
to see her light up the room

when I look over the mountains
I still can’t find you
the city lights dance
like we were supposed to do under them

I would leave everything today
if we could just leave tomorrow
the wind gentle on my skin
yet the moon is unforgiving to my heart

 

Breakneck Speed (Free Verse)

I woke up like I had been dreaming of you all night
I walked to my bus without any music on,
just hearing stale raindrops from the night before
trickle down leaf to leaf. few cars pass me
just as the world has been
while my feet remain in cement,
leaving my head to only turn
left to right
watching everyone continue their lives
waiting for a hand to pull me out
before the cement turns to quicksand.

The rebirth of Vancouver’s Peach Pit, an indie-pop band that embraces weirdness and quirky performances after learning from past failures

Peach Pit lead singer and secondary guitarist, Neil Smith, shows his quirkiness while shredding on his guitar solo. Photo courtesy of Els Durnford.

The smell of hotdogs and anticipation floats through Tubby Dog, the Calgary-famous restaurant that provides live music to pair with their award-winning weenies.

As opener Andrew Phelan finishes his set, the gathered crowd shuffles forward trying to get as close as they can to the stage where the main attraction, Peach Pit, would be in the spotlight.

Once the sound of the first guitar chord echoed through the speakers, there wasn’t a single body in the crowd not moving and grooving to the beat, despite being shoulder-to-shoulder.

However, the Vancouver-based band, Peach Pit, didn’t always have such a compelling beat, having lost out in the first round of a local battle of the bands for “being so normal.” They took the criticism to heart and now, as a result of that feedback and their commitment to an enthralling social media presence, are touring around the world and are set to release a new album.

Peach Pit lead vocalist Neil Smith and bass player Peter Wilton said that, while most of them – including guitarist Christopher Vanderkooy and drummer Mikey Pascuzzi – met when they were young, they didn’t become good friends until they were about 20 years old.

“Like four years ago is when we actually became friends,” said Smith, who also plays guitar.

“We got critiques from the judges — and there was positive and negative critiques — and one of the negative critiques was, ‘being so normal’.” – Neil Smith

Nevertheless, they’ve all been playing music together since they were kids. Despite the group forming prior to becoming what Smith dubbed as a “level two band,” they hesitated to play live because they wanted to deliver the best possible show to their fans.

“We practiced for like a year before we played any shows, which I think was a good thing because we never had any really bad shows,” said Smith, who wears a purple sweater with an orange collar – his attire for every show. “Sometimes we have ones we’re not that happy with but we’ve never really sucked at the beginning, which I think is a pretty common thing.”

When Peach Pit began touring, they didn’t get the reception from fans and critics they were originally hoping for. This was showcased at a local battle of the bands competition in Vancouver.

“We got critiques from the judges – and there was positive and negative critiques – and one of the negative critiques was ‘being so normal,’” said Smith. “It definitely inspired our change of image,” said Wilton, while sipping on a can of Pilsner.

For their first full-length album release, they tried to embody the opposite, using their West Coast high school experiences as the foundation.

“I think for this album we didn’t really try to write an album. All the songs I just wrote over the course of a few years when we were kinda becoming a band. That was in a transitionary time in our early 20s when you’re not yet fully an adult, you’re still thinking about what happened in high school,” said Smith.

Peach Pit is unique in the way that they wear the same outfits for every show, with a look that is designed to try to make them look like five-year-olds at a birthday party. Photo courtesy of Kelli Anne.

Their music attracts the attention of many angsty teenagers, but their active social media presence and unique music videos are something fans really find value in.

“We spent so much money on the “Drop the Guillotine” video we did and then the “Seventeen” one we spent like no money on. … And then it went viral and got way more views,” said Smith. “It’s hard to say what people are gonna like. It’s such a crapshoot and that’s what the internet is,”said Wilton.

“You just get lucky sometimes.”

The man behind many of the artistic perceptions of the band is Lester Lyons-Hookham, who has a unique notion of the creative direction Peach Pit should head.

“I try to bring imagery for the band that I think is maybe a bit different from the norm in terms of the music industry, or things I think are lacking. Even if it’s just taking a new perspective of aesthetics that have already passed, or combining older trends in different ways,” said Lyons-Hookham.

From skateboarding and smoking cigarettes with Smith on their former retail night shift, to having a shared vision while creating new ideas, Lyons-Hookham found Peach Pit to be a particularly interesting project to work with for several reasons.

“Neil’s good songwriting and inherently natural collaboration of the group – not just musically – they’re just all around great life collaborators. They write really good songs,” said Lyons-Hookham, who believes they have found a successful recipe so far.

Now as they’re wrapping up their North American tour, they’ll be touring Europe for the first time in the new year.

“It’s going to be really fun. I’m mostly excited – unashamed about this too, but there are a couple songs on the album that are about my ex-girlfriend and she lives in Europe, so she’s probably going to be at one of the shows. So I’m kinda excited to play the sad songs I wrote about her,” said Smith.

“I’m really excited to go, not just as an adult, but to play music. It’s like, the best thing we could ever do,” added Wilton.

Their Andy Shauf-inspired songwriting takes a backseat with the vigorous touring schedule but whenever they can find some time, it’s back to business.

“We’ve got a couple new songs that we’ve been working on and I’m going to try to do some more songwriting. I’m actually kinda scared. The last album we didn’t really try to write, we just did it. Now with this one, it’s like, ‘You have to write another album now.’ We’ll see how it goes. I’m excited,” said Smith.

Editor: Sarah Kirk | skirk@cjournal.ca

Source: https://calgaryjournal.ca/arts-entertainment/4107-the-rebirth-of-vancouver-s-peach-pit-an-indie-pop-band-that-embraces-weirdness-and-quirky-performances-after-learning-from-past-failures.html

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