Sunday, December 27, 2020

2021 Streaming Service Power Rankings

1. HBO Max

Cost: $14.99/month

HBO: His Dark Materials, The Wire, The Sopranos, Oz, Deadwood, Curb Your Enthusiasm, Game of Thrones, Bored to Death, Flight of the Conchords, Succession, Euphoria, Watchmen, The Leftovers, How To with John Wilson, True Blood, Last Week Tonight, Silicon Valley, Lovecraft Country, Veep, Larry Sanders

Originals: The Flight Attendant, Search Party

Quality T.V.: Friends, Rick and Morty, South Park, Adventure Time, Big Bang Theory, Gavin and Stacey, Men of a Certain Age, Nathan For You, The Office (U.K.), Tanner '88, The Thick of It, Alan Partridge, Wallander

Quality Films: The Shop Around the Corner, The Wizard of Oz, The Lord of the Rings, Jaws, Austin Powers, The Matrix, Alien, Citizen Kane, Casablanca, Eraserhead, North by Northwest, 2001, Bicycle Thieves, Breathless, Rashomon, City Lights, Bringing Up Baby, The 400 Blows, 8 1/2, After Hours, Blood Simple, Boogie Nights, Hoop Dreams, King Kong, The Maltese Falcon, Paris, Texas, Rebel Without a Cause, The Thin Man, Superman, Batman, Wonder Woman, Spirited Away, My Neighbor Totoro

Brands: HBO, Warner Brothers, Turner Classic Movies, Studio Ghibli, Looney Tunes, Cartoon Network, Sesame Street, Adult Swim, D.C., Crunchyroll (anime)

The HBO library is the best there is and HBO continues to create new quality programming such as Lovecraft Country and How To with John Wilson. Warner Brothers' film vault is the deepest in the world. Add to that a fair number of non-HBO shows, all of Studio Ghibli, cartoons of all stripes, and Max originals, and you have the best collection of content of any streaming service.

In 2021 HBO Max will also have Warner Brothers films debuting on the service at the same time the films are being made available to theaters. This has upset many in the film industry as it will harm theaters, which will be trying to come back as the pandemic (hopefully) recedes. Peter Labuza has a great piece in Polygon in which he analyzes HBO Max's place in AT&T's corporate structure. Highly recommended.

HBO Max doesn't have the sheer quantity of new stuff Netflix has, but the depth of its library makes it the top streaming service in my opinion.

2. Netflix

Cost: $13.99/month

Originals: Stranger Things, The Queen's Gambit, The Crown, Grand Army, Orange is the New Black, Black Mirror, The End of the F***ing World, Sex Education, Kimmy Schmidt, GLOW, Russian Doll, Master of None, Never Have I Ever, Babysitters Club, BoJack Horseman, 

Quality Series: The I.T. Crowd, Arrested Development, Community, Schitt's Creek, Breaking Bad, Twin Peaks, Hannibal, Rectify, Broadchurch, The Good Place, Derry Girls, Twilight Zone, Better Call Saul, Halt and Catch Fire, Crazy Ex-Girlfriend

Quality Films: Bonnie and Clyde, The Departed, GoodFellas, Back to the Future, Fargo, Hunt for the Wilderpeople, Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind, Being John Malkovich, Lady Bird, Her, Taxi Driver, Carol, E.T., The Florida Project, 20th Century Women

Specials: John Mulaney, Hannah Gadsby, Dave Chapelle, Bruce Springsteen

Original Films: Marriage Story, The Irishman, Rolling Thunder Revue, Ma Rainey's Black Bottom

Netflix produces by far the most new content of any service and a lot of that content is excellent. It all spends a lot of money to license content from others. There is always a lot on Netflix and it is still an essential streaming service. Netflix also has had a HUGE head start on everyone else and that has created an enormous amount of brand loyalty. However, Netflix now has a lot more competition.

A lot of shows that Netflix made hugely popular are now no longer on Netflix. Being on Netflix helped turn shows which were minor hits such as Mad Men, Breaking Bad, The Office, and Schitt's Creek into huge hits, and helped turn Friends, which was a huge hit in the nineties, into a huge hit all over again in the last decade with a new generation. Moving forward, Netflix is not going to have the same access to content from other studios, as those studios now have their own streaming services. Netflix will soon have exclusive streaming rights to Seinfeld, but it had to pay huge money to get them.

It will be interesting to see how Netflix fares against the big studios in the years to come. For now it remains an essential streaming service.

3. Hulu

Cost: $11.99/month

FX: Better Things, Fargo, Atlanta, Devs, Justified, It's Always Sunny, Baskets

Originals: PEN15, High Fidelity, Normal People, Ramy, Little Fires Everywhere, The Great, The Handmaid's Tale

Quality TV: Mary Tyler Moore, Friday Night Lights, Broad City, Party Down, Brooklyn Nine-Nine, 30 Rock, Letterkenny, Nathan For You, Bunheads, The Office (U.K.), Please Like Me, Lodge 49, King of the Hill, Frasier, MASH, Skins, Superstore, Veronica Mars, Parenthood, Firefly, Lost, Buffy, Twin Peaks, Dick Van Dyke, I Love Lucy, Taxi, Cheers, Bob's Burgers, Community, Seinfeld, Rick and Morty, The X-Files

Quality Films: Parasite, Palm Springs, I Am Greta, RBG, Hunt For the Wilderpeople, Austin Powers, Boogie Nights, Eve's Bayou, The Princess Bride

Brands: FX, Freeform

Hulu has a deep library of television content and is now the streaming home of FX's library of quality programming. It also produces some very good series and movies of its own. Its film library is not particularly deep, however. There's still a lot of good stuff on Hulu and it's an essential streamer, just not as essential as the top two on this list.

There's also the issue of Hulu being Disney's #2 priority behind Disney Plus. So far Hulu does not seem to be suffering as a result of its corporate overlords being indifferent to its success but we'll see how things play out as the streaming wars continue. As of now Hulu is pretty essential and contains a lot of great content.

4. Amazon

Cost: $8.99/month

Originals: Marvelous Mrs. Maisel, Small Axe, One Mississippi, The Man in the High Castle, Mozart in the Jungle, Transparent

Quality Series: Fleabag, Andy Griffith Show, The Americans, Downton Abbey, 30 Rock, Community, Mr. Robot, The Office (U.K.), Buffy

Quality Films: Rushmore, Amelie, The Squid and the Whale, Small Axe, Dr. Strangelove, It's a Wonderful Life, Tangerine, Eighth Grade, Stop Making Sense, Knives Out, Buffalo '66, Broadcast News, The Departed, Inception, Raging Bull, Zodiac, Almost Famous, The Virgin Suicides, Paterson, Sound of Metal, Borat 2

I do not consider Amazon essential, but it does have a deep library of films to explore. The Marvelous Mrs. Maisel has been a hit, but most of its original series has been pretty meh. Amazon Prime Video is fine, and it's a decent value, but it isn't essential as the top three services are.

5. Criterion Channel

Cost: $10.99/month

Quality Films: Harold and Maude, The Night of the Hunter, The 400 Blows, Berlin Alexanderplatz, Bicycle Thieves, Chungking Express, Claire's Knee, Days of Heaven, The Daytrippers, Dead Man, Elevator to the Gallows, Exotica, Fanny and Alexander, The Last Wave, Pandora's Box, Paris, Texas, The Passion of Joan of Arc, The Red Shoes, The Rules of the Game, Secrets and Lies, Tanner '88, The Thin Blue Line, Three Colors: Blue, Red, White

My Power Rankings reflect my preferences and I love the Criterion Channel because it has the best collection of international, classic, and independent films there is. I love these films. Every month Criterion has new spotlights on directors and themes and the collection is constantly adding new films. This service is not essential to everyone but it is essential to me and I hope that the Criterion Channel and the Criterion Collection of physical media continues to thrive.

6. Disney Plus

Cost: $6.99/month

Film Library: Pinocchio, Snow White, Bambi, Peter Pan, Mary Poppins, The Little Mermaid, Freaky Friday, TRON, Muppet Movie, Bend it Like Beckham, Star Wars, The Avengers, Black Panther, Hidden Figures, Hamilton, Toy Story, Up, The Incredibles, WALL-E

Quality Series: The Simpsons, Phinneas and Ferb, Gravity Falls, The Mandalorian

Brands: Disney, Pixar, Marvel, Star Wars, National Geographic

Most humans would rank Disney Plus above the Criterion Channel, but my rankings reflect my interests and I prefer the Criterion films to the Disney, Marvel, and Star Wars films. I do think Disney Plus is a great deal, though I expect the price to creep up over the years. There are things I would enjoy watching here, but I just don't care about The Mandalorian or the Marvel stuff. I do think WandaVision sounds interesting, however, so who knows, I may actually eventually subscribe myself some time. That being said, the kid-centric nature of Disney Plus just doesn't appeal to me when there is so much other stuff available.

7. CBS All-Access

Cost: $9.99/month

Quality Series: Twin Peaks, Star Trek, The Twilight Zone, The Good Wife, Nathan For You, SpongeBob SquarePants, Cheers, I Love Lucy, Review, Daria

Quality Films: Fargo, Amelie, Trainspotting, Sunset Boulevard, Moneyball, Superbad, Zodiac, The Conversation, Harold and Maude, Days of Heaven, Paper Moon, Searching For Bobby Fischer, The Virgin Suicides, Election, The Bad News Bears, The Friends of Eddie Coyle, Wonder Boys, A New Leaf

Brands: CBS, Paramount Pictures, Comedy Central, TV Land, MTV, VH-1

This is going to become Paramount Plus some time this year. Paramount has a big library and the various Viacom cable properties have created some interesting things, but there's not really anything compelling enough here to make this an essential service. 

8. Peacock

Cost: $9.99/month

Quality Series: Cheers, Frasier, Friday Night Lights, The Office, Parks and Recreation, Downton Abbey, A.P. Bio, Superstore, Brooklyn Nine-Nine

Quality Films: Moonrise Kingdom, In Bruges, The Goonies, The Man Who Wasn't There, James Bond, Lost in Translation, Vertigo, Monsoon Wedding, Knocked Up, Charade

Brands: NBC, Universal Pictures, Focus Features, USA Network, Syfy, Bravo

Peacock has spent big money to return The Office to its corporate home, but there's not a whole lot here at the moment. And the people who love The Office have already seen each episode eight times.

9. AMC Plus

Cost: $8.99/month

Quality Series: Mad Men, Orphan Black, Doctor Who, The A Word, Deutschland 83

Quality Films: Frances Ha, Boyhood, Y tu mama tambien, Two Days, One Night, Blue is the Warmest Color

Brands: AMC, IFC, Sundance TV, Shudder

This is the home of Mad Men and assorted odds and ends. Not enough here to sustain a Major League streaming service, in my opinion, particularly if you've already seen Mad Men. I hear the horror fans do like Shudder, though, and there are a lot of horror fans.

10. Showtime

Cost: $8.99/month

Quality Series: Homeland, Dexter, Billions, The Good Lord Bird, The Chi, Twin Peaks: The Return

Quality Films: 1917, First Cow, Barton Fink, Reservoir Dogs, Frances Ha, First Reformed, Schindler's List, Ex Machina, Being John Malkovich, Under the Skin, The Lobster, No Country For Old Men

For some reason I don't entirely understand, ViacomCBS is not planning on including Showtime with Paramount Plus, and seems intent on keeping it as a stand-alone entity. I've just never felt Showtime's offerings were on par with HBO's, or even FX's. We'll see if Showtime can survive on its own; I don't think it can, but we'll see.

11. Starz

Cost: $8.99/month

Quality Series: Party Down, P-Valley, Miami Vice

Quality Films: Pulp Fiction, L.A. Confidential, No Country For Old Men, Call Me By Your Name, Chinatown, Office Space, Gattaca, Jackie Brown, Miller's Crossing, What's Eating Gilbert Grape, Traffic, Sideways, The King of Kong, Only Lovers Left Alive, Fast Times at Ridgemont High, Bull Durham

Brands: Lionsgate

Starz has even less cachet than Showtime. I would think one of the bigger players would make a play for the Lionsgate library sooner rather than later. I don't think Starz as a standalone brand will survive too long in the streaming wars.

12. Britbox

Cost: $6.99/month

Quality Series: The Office (U.K.), The Thick of It, Fawlty Towers, Father Ted, Gavin and Stacey, Doctor Who, Prime Suspect, Absolutely Fabulous, Blackadder, Wallander

Brands: BBC and ITV

I like Britbox and British television generally. This fills a definite niche, and it offers a lot more than does Acorn. If you want to watch a lot of British TV, this is a good deal.

13. Apple

Cost: $4.99/month

Original Series: Ted Lasso, The Morning Show, Dickinson

Original Films: Boys State, Wolfwalkers, On the Rocks

Apple decided to enter the streaming wars with a brand but very little actual content. They have no library at all. They did make Ted Lasso, which is a fun show, and then they have a few other offerings that are of mild interest. However, there is no compelling reason to subscribe to this service once you have seen Ted Lasso. One would think Apple would try and buy Lionsgate or MGM and make a real play in the streaming wars. As it stands, it's not entirely clear why Apple has a streaming service in the first place.

Also, the product placement of Apple products in Apple shows is very annoying.

14. Acorn

Cost: $5.99/month

Quality Series: Detectorists, Father Ted, Peep Show, Prime Suspect, Foyle's War

Acorn is now owned by AMC. I don't understand why these offerings aren't folded into AMC Plus. In my opinion Britbox has a better catalogue than Acorn. Unless there's something specific you absolutely must watch which is available on Acorn and nowhere else, I would not recommend subscribing.

15. Epix

Cost: $5.99/month

Quality Films: Raging Bull, His Girl Friday, Grizzly Man, Small Change, Broadcast News, The Hurt Locker, James Bond

Brands: MGM

This is MGM's cable channel, which is now also a streaming service. Epix has developed some original series, but nothing I've ever cared to watch. The hedge fund dudes who own MGM want to sell MGM. It's just a matter of time before Epix and MGM are subsumed by another conglomerate. The same fate befell 20th Century Fox, after all. That once great studio is now a complete afterthought in the the Disney empire. MGM is likewise a shadow of its former self. It now owns the rights to James Bond and a few other assorted knickknacks; it doesn't even hold the rights to most of MGM's great musicals and other cinematic triumphs of the past. No one is going to go out of there way to buy a streaming subscription to Epix.

16. Discovery Plus

Cost: $6.99/month

Brands: Discovery, HGTV, Food Network, TLC, OWN, Animal Planet, BBC Planet Earth, A&E, Lifetime, History Channel, Travel Channel, Science Channel, Magnolia Network

Nature documentaries and lifestyle programming. This is going to have a lot of content, but I don't watch any of these cable channels so I have no interest in these offerings. A lot of people do watch these shows, though, so I think this service will do just fine.

17. ESPN Plus

Cost: $5.99/month

ESPN Plus has a lot of sports content such as cricket, European soccer, and a lot of college sports. It also has a lot of sports documentaries, including the complete 30 For 30 series. This is not something I need to subscribe to, but I suppose it does fulfil the niche for those who need this content.

18. Magnolia Selects

Cost: $4.99/month

Magnolia releases independent films such as Lars von Trier's Melancholia and documentaries such as Jiro Dreams of Sushi. Magnolia does not need its own streaming service, however.


There are even more streaming services available. I didn't include the streaming services with ads, such as Philo, Fubo, Tubi, and Pluto. These services aim to mimic traditional cable and broadcast networks.

And yet there are still films and series unavailable to stream. Freaks and Geeks, for example, is only available on Blu-ray from Shout Factory. So there is still a place in this world for physical media.

Hope you enjoyed these 2021 Streaming Service Power Rankings!

Sunday, November 22, 2020

Winter Trimester Quizzes

Required Quizzes for Winter Trimester:

#4: Western Europe Countries

#5: Northern Europe Countries

#6: Eastern Europe Countries


New Expert Level Quizzes:

#9e: Western Europe Capitals

#10e: Northern Europe Capitals

#11e: Eastern Europe Capitals

 #12e: Southern Europe Countries 

#13e: Southern Europe Capitals

#14e: Europe Bodies of Water


Previous Expert Level Quizzes:

#1e: Swing States + Capitals

#2eWestern States + Capitals

#3e: Eastern States + Capitals

#4e: Swing States + Cities

#5eWestern States + Cities

#6e: Eastern States + Cities (Part I & Part II)

#7e: U.S. Rivers

#8e: North America Physical Features

Expert Level Geo Quiz Standings

 +21 Peyton

+20 Elliott

+11 Gracie

+8 Mao

+8 Kiel

+ 7 Audrey

+3 Olivia

+3 Hee-Sun

+2 Elena

+1 Ryker

+1 Sigrid

Sunday, September 20, 2020

FANschool Enrichment Medal Standings

Games Finished: 5

Ava πŸ©°: 12 points: πŸ₯‡ πŸ₯ˆ πŸ₯ˆ πŸ₯ˆ πŸ₯ˆ πŸ₯‰

Liam H. 🐦: 9 points: πŸ₯‡ πŸ₯‡ πŸ₯‡ 

Anna ✨: 8 points: πŸ₯‡ πŸ₯‡ πŸ₯ˆ

Mr. Gacek πŸ…: 6 points: πŸ₯‡ πŸ₯‡

Hazel πŸ¬:  6 points: πŸ₯‡ πŸ₯ˆ πŸ₯‰ 

Logan πŸ˜ƒ: 5 points: πŸ₯‡ πŸ₯ˆ

Genevieve ⚡: 5 points: πŸ₯‡ πŸ₯‰ πŸ₯‰ 

Mr. Fuller: 4 points: πŸ₯ˆ πŸ₯ˆ 

Liam T. πŸ‰: 4 points: πŸ₯ˆ πŸ₯ˆ

Elodie πŸ¦”: 4 points πŸ₯ˆ πŸ₯‰ πŸ₯‰

Owen W.: 3 points: πŸ₯‡

Mia: 3 points: πŸ₯‡

Isabella: 2 points πŸ₯ˆ

Adam πŸ¦š: 2 points: πŸ₯‰ πŸ₯‰

Gabe 🐱: 1 point: πŸ₯‰

Sadie πŸ€™: 1 point: πŸ₯‰

Mino: 1 point: πŸ₯‰ 

Ainslie: 1 point: πŸ₯‰ 

Scarlett: 1 point: πŸ₯‰  

Thursday, September 10, 2020

Fall Geo Quizzes

 You will be required to pass three Geo Quizzes this trimester at the Standard Level:

#1: Swing States

#2: Western States

#3: Eastern States

You may elect to take these Quizzes at the Expert Level:

#1e: Swing States + Capitals

#2e: Western States + Capitals

#3e: Eastern States + Capitals

#4e: Swing States + Cities

#5e: Western States + Cities

#6e: Eastern States + Cities (Part I & Part II)

#7e: U.S. Rivers

#8e: North America Physical Features

You are not required to take quizzes at the Expert Level.

Each Expert Level Quiz you pass earns you an Expert Point.

Prizes will be awarded at the end of school year for the students with the most Expert Points! The overall top scorer will win a Geography Now t-shirt!

You may take as many quizzes you want on a Quiz Day. The first Quiz Day will be:

Quiz Day #1: Friday, September 25

The end of the trimester is Friday, November 20.

Capitalization and spelling count on the quizzes. Each error will be a 0.2 point deduction.


Sunday, June 21, 2020

Summer Geo Quiz Leaderboard

+4 Scarlett
+3 Hazel
+2 Genevieve
+2 Zoe

Wednesday, June 3, 2020

Original FANschool League Medal Standings

Games Finished: 17

Mr. Gacek: 36 points: πŸ₯‡ πŸ₯‡ πŸ₯‡ πŸ₯‡ πŸ₯‡ πŸ₯‡ πŸ₯‡ πŸ₯‡ πŸ₯‡ πŸ₯‡ πŸ₯‡ πŸ₯‡ πŸ₯ˆ πŸ₯ˆ πŸ₯‰

Zoe: 16 points: πŸ₯‡ πŸ₯‡ πŸ₯‡ πŸ₯‡ πŸ₯ˆ πŸ₯‰ πŸ₯‰

Genevieve: 9 points: πŸ₯ˆ πŸ₯ˆ πŸ₯ˆ πŸ₯ˆ πŸ₯‰

Hazel: 7 points: πŸ₯‡ πŸ₯ˆ πŸ₯‰ πŸ₯‰

Ava: 5 points:  πŸ₯‡ πŸ₯ˆ

Adam: 5 points: πŸ₯ˆ πŸ₯ˆ πŸ₯‰

Mo: 3 points: πŸ₯ˆ πŸ₯‰

Ayla: 3 points: πŸ₯‰ πŸ₯‰ πŸ₯‰

Mr. Fuller: 3 points: πŸ₯ˆ πŸ₯‰

Elodie: 2 points: πŸ₯ˆ

Mia: 2 points:  πŸ₯ˆ

Jeff: 2 points:  πŸ₯ˆ

Troy: 2 points: πŸ₯‰ πŸ₯‰

Scarlett: 1 point: πŸ₯‰


Monday, May 25, 2020

Saturday, May 16, 2020

Lois Lowry shares her thoughts on a prequel to The Giver, and Donald Trump

Featured ImageLois Lowry recently wrote an opinion piece on how the society in The Giver came to be the way it was. She also answers the question as to whether she will ever write a prequel to The Giver. You can read her piece here.

Tuesday, April 28, 2020

Writing A Mystery

Keep it simple! The mystery you create does not need to be as elaborate as The Westing Game. Think of something simple. Set your story in a location which is familiar to you, such as school or the neighborhood. Work on developing your detective as a character and demonstrating his or her detective skills.

Here are the elements you need to consider as you are creating your mystery:

Solution: You need to work backwards when creating your mystery. As the author, you need to know what happened and then fill in the story around that solution. Keep this simple. If your solution is too complicated it will make the task of writing the mystery very difficult.

Suspects: Agatha Christie sometimes had 10 or more suspects in her classic mystery novels. Keep your number of characters much smaller! Also, it's okay if the criminal is very obvious. Often a mystery about how a crime was committed is just as interesting as a whodunit.

Motive: Every criminal needs a motive. Why did they commit the crime? Discovering the motive can often help the detective figure out who committed the crime and how they did it.

Deduction: Sherlock Holmes is the master of deduction. He can see what others can't and then base logical deductions or inferences from the observations he makes. In the stories, Holmes often makes deductions that have nothing to do with the actual mystery; he just likes to show off! Having your detective make deductions is a way to demonstrate his or her skill as a detective to your audience.

Client: The client is the character who brings the mystery to the detective. They often explain the mystery to the detective and then offer a reward. Having a client seek the services of a detective is a great way to set your mystery in motion.

Investigation: This is the middle of a mystery story. The detective looks for clues and gathers evidence. This often entails interviewing the suspects.

Develop these ideas this week while you're planning your mystery. The more effort you put into planning, the easier it will be to write the actual mystery. Good luck!


Science Fiction Sub-Genres

No matter what type of Science Fiction story you decide to tell, I want you to concentrate on the world-building possibilities writing SF can offer. You are literally creating a brand new world in your story. Be creative. Things will and should be different. Use neologisms--these are words for things which haven't been invented yet in our world. Describe the environment in the world you create. Describe the society in which the people live. Describe your characters so the reader really gets to know them.

Don't worry about creating the perfect plot in your story. Focus on creating a rich and textured world for your characters to inhabit. That said, here are some basic sub-genres in Science Fiction. If you're not sure what type of SF story to write, consider these sub-genres within the genre of Science Fiction.

Techno-Thriller: These stories are set in the near-future; technology is similar to what we have today but just a little more advanced. The protagonists of these stories often learn that a sinister corporation is using technology in nefarious ways. It is then up to the protagonist to thwart the plans of the corporation.

Dystopian: The protagonist in a dystopian SF story is usually a commoner whose people are being oppressed by an authoritarian government. The protagonist must lead a rebellion of some sort against the authoritarian government. The reason for society existing in a dystopia is often left unexplained.

Post-Apocalyptic: These are usually survival stories. Some great catastrophe has turned Earth into a wasteland. The protagonist must scavenge to eke out a living. There is often competition for resources and it is often discovered that the villain has been hoarding them. The protagonist must thus acquire resources and deliver them to his or her tribe.

Space Travel: Many SF stories are set aboard ships. These ships are often scouting for hospitable planets or friendly signs of life. There is often a lot of suspense about whether the ship will reach its destination. There is often conflict with the beings aboard other ships.

Other Worlds: Many SF stories take place on distant planets and feature other races and societies. These planets are often in conflict with each other, often over resources. These stories often feature humanoids, as well as androids.

Remember that the Science Fiction story that you create must represent your best writing. You may not make your story silly or nonsensical. It must feel like a serious work of science fiction.

Sunday, April 26, 2020

Kids Q & A with Elizabeth Warren!

In this video, Elizabeth explains what the coronavirus is and how the government can help.



If you'd like to send Elizabeth a question, you could be featured in a future video. Please see ElizabethWarren.com/KidsAsk for more details!

Wednesday, March 25, 2020

Q: What should you do if you run out of books?

A: Acquire more books of course!

Events Calendar | Timberland Regional LibraryHere are some resources:

Timberland Regional Library. You can check out e-books and digital audiobooks and even stream movies. If you don't have a library card, you can get one here.



Support a local independent bookstore! We are lucky to have two great bookstores in Olympia, Browsers Bookshop and Orca Books. You can order books directly from their websites and they will mail them to you. It is important that we support our independent bookstores during the pandemic. If they are forced to close, they might never be able to re-open. Please support our local bookstores if you can!

 Image may contain: outdoor

Download books legally for free: Project Gutenberg has over 60,000 books available to download. These are all books which are old enough to be in the public domain, which means their copyrights have expired. Here are just some of the offerings available:

The Secret Garden, by Frances Hodgson Burnett
The Wonderful Wizard of Oz, by L. Frank Baum
Alice's Adventures in Wonderland, by Lewis Carroll
White Fang, by Jack London
Anne of Green Gables, by L.M. Montgomery
The Adventures of Tom Sawyer, by Mark Twain
Peter Pan, by J.M. Barrie
Little Women, by Louisa May Alcott
The Call of the Wild, by Jack London
Treasure Island, by Robert Louis Stevenson
The Wind in the Willows, by Kenneth Grahame
Robinson Crusoe, by Daniel Defoe
Adventures of Huckleberry Finn, by Mark Twain
The Strange Case of Dr. Jeckyll and Mr. Hyde, Robert Louis Stevenson
Frankenstein, by Mary Wollstonecraft Shelley
Dracula, by Bram Stoker
The War of the Worlds, by H.G. Wells
The Time Machine, by H.G. Wells
Around the World in Eighty Days, by Jules Verne
The Jungle Book, by Rudyard Kipling
and many, many more!

You can download every Sherlock Holmes story here.

You can download Cory Doctorow's YA science fiction novel Little Brother here.

The Open Library is also a terrific source for checking out books. You can browse its virtual shelves here.

I will update this as I find new stuff available for you to read. Enjoy and happy reading!

Tuesday, March 24, 2020

Non-fiction Slideshows

Nathan: The Disappearing Spoon, by Sam Kean
Genevieve: Becoming, by Michelle Obama
Gurdit: What Unites Us, by Dan Rather
Zoe: I Will Always Write Back, by Caitlin Alifirenka
Ethan: The Race to Save the Lord God Bird, by Philip Hoose
Lucy: Born to Fly, by Steve Sheinkin
Hazel: The Killer Whale That Changed the World, by Mark Leiren-Young
Belle: It's Trevor Noah, by Trevor Noah
Max: 1919: The Year That Changed America, by Martin Sandler
Ayla: Wild, by Cheryl Strayed
Mia: The Distance Between Us, by Reyna Grande
Liam F.: Wesley the Owl, by Stacey O'Brien
Bella: Chew on This, by Eric Schlosser
Clara: Shortest Way Home, by Pete Buttigieg
Luke: World Without Fish, by Mark Kurlansky
Dylan: Born A Crime, by Trevor Noah
Liam H.: Kingbird Highway, by Kenn Kaufman
Grant: The North Pole Was Here, by Andrew Revkin
Brooke: Child of the Dream, by Sharon Robinson
Zellaby: Hidden Figures, by Margot Lee Shetterly
Michael: Bomb, by Steve Sheinkin
Joni: Diary of a Young Girl, by Anne Frank
Reed: Big Chicken, by Marilyn McKenna
Emma: Guts, by Gary Paulsen
Adam: Unpresidented, by Martha Brackenbrough
Anna: Marching For Freedom, by Elizabeth Partridge
Owen: Hitler Youth, by Susan Campbell Bartoletti
Grace: The Omnivore's Dilemma, by Michael Pollan
Alan: The Boys Who Challenged Hitler, by Philip Hoose
Jessica: Dewey, by Vicki Myron

Tuesday, March 3, 2020

Super Tuesday!!

Super Tuesday Links:

FiveThirtyEight.com: Our Final Forecast For Super Tuesday Shows Biden's Surge--And Lots of Uncertainty

New York Times: The Latino Vote: The Sleeping Giant Awakens

New York Times: Elizabeth Warren: A Populist for the Professional Class

New York Times: Sanders Campaign Was Caught Off-Guard by Quick Massing of Opposition

Politico: How to Watch Super Tuesday Like a Pro

All UpFront articles are eligible (must be 2 or more pages in length).

Any article related to Super Tuesday is eligible.

Must read at least 2 articles.

Record title, author, and source for each article.

Record at least 3 bullet point notes of interesting facts for each article.

Due Thursday, March 5.

Tuesday, February 4, 2020

Sixth Grade Primary Results

Elizabeth Warren 14  43.7%  (4 delegates)
Pete Buttigieg 7   21.8%   (2 delegates)
Tom Steyer 2   6.2%
Bernie Sanders 2   6.2%
Bill Weld 2   6.2%
Andrew Yang 1   3.1%
Mike Bloomberg 1  3.1%
Uncommitted 3  9.3%

Thursday, January 23, 2020

Elizabeth Warren's Campaign HQ Letter Wall

Today Elizabeth Warren's Massachusetts state director tweeted a photo of the Letter Wall at the national campaign headquarters in Cambridge, Massachusetts. You can see several NOVA letters in the photo. They are on the left side of the photo and feature the NOVA logo. You can see Zellaby's drawing of Elizabeth on the far left. You can also see Genevieve's rainbow-colored envelope. Good thing Mr. Gacek made everyone hand-write their letters and hand-draw the NOVA logos!

Cavalcade of Authors

Here is a link to the authors who will be featured at Cavalcade of Authors.

The event will take place May 9.
The deadline for submitting a short story is February 26.
The deadline for turning in permission slips is January 31.

Saturday, January 18, 2020

CNN Town Hall Schedule

CNN will be airing town halls for the leading Democratic candidates the week before the New Hampshire Primary. Here is the schedule for the town halls:

Wednesday, Feb. 5 : 5:00 p.m. Joe Biden
                             6:00 p.m. Elizabeth Warren
                             7:00 p.m. Andrew Yang
                             8:00 p.m. Tom Steyer

Thursday, Feb. 6: 5:00 p.m. Bernie Sanders
                           6:00 p.m. Pete Buttigieg
                           7:00 p.m. Amy Klobuchar
                           8:00 p.m. Deval Patrick

Read the CNN article about the town halls here.

Tuesday, January 14, 2020