Academy Testing Press Release

June 26th, 2009

I sent this press release to the local newspapers and TV stations in 2009.

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE:

Local Mixed Martial Arts school to hold open house and student testing.

Portland, ME – January 10, 2009 – The Academy will be hosting an open house at its Portland location on 512 Warren Avenue Saturday, January 10 at noon. Students of all experience levels will be testing for belt promotions. The public is invited to enjoy a demonstration of Brazilian Jiu Jitsu and those interested in training are encouraged to come and check out the school.

“We just started testing students at all levels, from white belt right up to black,” said Jay Jack, founder and co-owner of the school. Before now, only new students were tested on the basics of self-defense. “There are going to be a lot of advanced guys who will be just as nervous as the new guys,” laughs Jack. That means the testing will feature demonstrations of the full spectrum of Brazilian Jiu Jitsu, from basic self-defense to advanced sport fighting and mixed martial arts techniques.

The Academy offers self-defense, Brazilian Jiu Jitsu, Muay Thai and Crossfit conditioning and fitness classes for people of all ages, fitness, and experience levels. The school prides itself on its welcoming, family-friendly environment and the world-class experience of its instructors.

Jay Jack, head instructor, holds black belts in Brazilian Jiu Jitsu and Judo, and has fought in dozens of mixed martial arts bouts. Amanda Buckner, co-founder, holds a brown belt in Brazilian Jiu Jitsu, and is among the best female mixed martial artists in the world. Students trained at the Academy have won numerous awards at grappling competitions and mixed martial arts bouts.

The Academy’s Portland school is located at 512 Warren Avenue in Portland (next to Jokers). The Lewiston school is located at 134 Main Street in Lewiston (behind Espo’s Trattoria). For more information, visit http://www.ammaonline.com or call 207-615-0060.

Contact:

Jay Jack

academyofmma@gmail.com

512 Warren Ave

Portland ME 04103

207-615-0060

###

Bronson press releases

Tough Love

June 26th, 2009

I sent this press release to the local newspapers and TV stations in 2008.

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

———————

Of interest to editors and journalists covering: Pets and animals, local philanthropy.

TOUGH LOVE

Local martial arts school saves two abandoned dogs

PORTLAND, ME – Apr. 25 — The students and owners of The Academy, a local martial arts school (http://www.ammaonline.com/) have raised almost $1000 for the veterinary care of two abandoned pit bull puppies in nearby Poland, Maine. Jay Jack and Amanda Buckner, co-owners of the school, started the fundraiser after seeing the dogs while visiting the Poland Animal Hospital with their own dog Ollie, also a pit bull and mascot of the school.

Jack taught a special hour-long Judo class for a suggested donation of $20. Over 30 students attended the class and many donated  more than the suggested amount. The school’s fundraising efforts brought in $950.

“When I saw these dogs I wanted to kill the owner,” Jack said. “It turns out this lady had rescued them.” The veterenarian explained that a local woman had seen the dogs chained by the side of the road from her vehicle. They are suffering from the worst case of mange the vet has ever seen.

The family who rescued the dogs found themselves in over their heads; the estimate for their veterinary care is estimated to be between $760 and $1000. The money raised by the Academy this week ensures they will receive the care they need.

The dogs, named Brandi and Lexus, will undergo treatment this weekend. One will require major eye surgery in addition to the vaccines, heartworm and lyme disease screening both will receive.

The Academy, located at 512 Warren Avenue in Portland, ME offers instruction in Brazillian Jiu Jitsu and Muay Thai Kickboxing for practitioners of all levels. There is also a  satellite school in Lewiston, Maine. School website: http://www.ammaonline.com/

Photo of the dogs: http://theacademy.typepad.com/.shared/image.html?/photos/uncategorized/2008/04/20/gedc0344.jpg

Media Contact:

Jay Jack and Amanda Buckner

207-615-0060

Poland Animal Hospital

207-615-0060

# # #

Bronson press releases

How mixed martial arts changed my life

June 19th, 2009

The Ultimate Fight

How mixed martial arts changed my life

mma_1

I’d envisioned stepping into the cage so many times that when I finally entered the fenced-in, octagonal ring, it felt like déjà vu.

But nothing that followed went as expected.

For example, I’d thought I would feel the sensation one experiences when the roller coaster reaches the top of its first ascent and you gape at the sight of the tracks falling steeply away below — how you realize at that moment there’s no going back, and how that moment stretches on and on. But it wasn’t like that. As happens in other stressful situations — say, driving through a blizzard — time flowed with a maddening normalcy.

With a wave from the referee, my opponent and I approached each other and touched gloves. I remember only a vague anxiety that I would not perform at my best, and then we were punching each other in the face.

I fought my first mixed martial arts (MMA) bout last April at a Holiday Inn in Massachusetts, the closest state where it’s legal to host MMA fights. As of this writing, MMA events are illegal in Maine (and a shrinking number of other states) because, as with my personal experience, there’s still a big gap between people’s expectations or perceptions of MMA and what the sport is really about.

For me, fighting has been a spiritual journey that’s transformed me from a squirmy computer jockey into something resembling a real person.

As my University of Southern Maine undergraduate education drew to a close a few years ago, I was plagued by a vague but growing dissatisfaction with the way my life was unfolding.

Those around me slid smoothly from keg parties to button-down office work — some squeezing out offspring at the earliest opportunity — but I was skeptical. I thought there was supposed to be something more. I had assumed that life, or at least some substantial part of it, was going to feel like a righteous ’80s rock-guitar solo. Instead, it felt more like blown-out stereo speakers playing the saddest Coldplay tune ever, on repeat. I would wake up, put in a day at school and work, and go home feeling no closer to the person or the life I’d gone to USM hoping to find. I was a nebbish geek with bad posture, an expanding gut, and a future in some fluorescent-lit cubicle banging out computer code or sales copy or whatever.

(Read the rest of the story on the Bollard’s website here.)

Bronson feature stories

Supervisor Review Movie (Excerpt)

May 2nd, 2009

This is an exceprt of one of the demonstration movies I produced while working at Casco Development, a small software company located in Portland, Maine. Aside from maintaining the Console Manual, producing these movies was my main responsibility at the company. Customers were overwhelmingly enthusiastic about these movies, and many used them as a central part of their training programs.

Click here to download WMV version (2.1mb)

Bronson demonstration movies

ShopVue Console Manual

May 2nd, 2009

I wrote this 200-page manual in the opening months of my employment at Casco Development, a small software company located in Portland, Maine. Aside from producing demonstration movies, keeping this manual up to date was one of my main responsibilities at this company. In the process of writing the manual, I also developed a stylesheet and style guide from scratch (there were none at the company before I was hired).

Cover and Table of Contents

This is the cover and TOC of the manual. Shown here to convey the scope of the project.

Click here to download PDF

The Language Translation Feature

This is the entire section on the application’s language translation feature, which provided a GUI for administrators and translators.

Click here to download PDF

Bronson technical writing

Dorm attack underscores security limitations

April 16th, 2009

This story won third place for the Society of Professional Journalists’ Mark of Excellence Award for general news writing in region one, which includes New England, New York, New Jersey and Eastern Pennsylvania. It was published in the USM Free Press on September 22, 2003.

Dorm attack underscores security limitations

When the brick smashed into his head, Joe Frechette said, “it was like if someone unplugged me.” Frechette, a senior media studies major, was standing outside Portland Hall on Congress Street when an unidentified assailant threw the large red brick with enough force to knock Frechette to the ground and to break a window that lay beyond.

As Frechette fell, the brick punched through a plate glass window and came to rest on the floor of the building’s main lobby. Lying prone on the sidewalk, Frechette could see someone walking slowly away, still yelling at him.

Frechette regained his feet and entered Portland Hall under his own power. He told the USM Police Officer on duty which way his attacker had gone, but the officer couldn’t pursue the suspect because USM Police have jurisdiction only on property that the university owns or controls. So, even though the brick landed on university property, the officer on duty did not have the authority to do police work outside of Portland Hall. USM Police’s only recourse was to call the Portland Police and wait. By the time they did arrive, though, the suspect was long gone, and there was little left for the Police to investigate.

USM Police Chief Lisa Beecher said that the current jurisdiction laws have been an issue even before the August 1 incident. “It’s an issue we’re working on as we speak,” she said. “It doesn’t make a lot of sense that we can’t respond to students and faculty who are just across the lines.” Beecher has been trying to secure different rules at the State legislature and with the Board of Trustees since before the event at Portland Hall brought the issue to light this summer. She says that USM’s many campuses, as well as the large commuter population, demand more flexible Police coverage. Until new guidelines are put in place, though, USM Police are helpless to do anything for students who need help while off school property, including the sidewalk in front of Portland Hall.

There is very little information available regarding the attack outside Portland Hall. It is not even certain how many people were witnesses. Frechette says that there was a group of students from the Maine College of Arts’ early college program nearby. These are high school students that attend the school for several weeks over the summer, and who have long since gone back to their homes, throughout the country.

Frechette is disappointed with the actions of the Police that night.

“They were asking me for a profile and if I wanted to press charges,” he said. “I was still confused. I didn’t know what the hell was going on. And they didn’t try to get everyone together to take a composite.”

The attack occurred on the night of August 1st and the suspect is still at large.

Frechette says that Portland Hall’s Residence Hall Coordinator, Joy Britting, said she had heard about a suspicious person wielding a brick earlier in the day on August 1st, but he doesn’t know if she has reported this information to the authorities. Britting was reluctant to answer any questions, she said, because the case was still under investigation. USM Police Investigator Ronald Saindon was able to provide a general description of the event, but could say little else. He does have leads and a suspect. He also said that a suspect, if arrested, would face criminal mischief and assault charges. As of press time, no arrests have been made.

Bronson news writing ,

USM soldier’s funeral held on campus

April 16th, 2009

I wrote this story for the USM Free Press on May 3, 2004. Read the original here.

USM soldier’s funeral held on campus

Hundreds gather in Portland’s Sullivan Gym to remember a fallen student

Hushed conversation in Portland’s Sullivan Gym lapsed suddenly into silence as Lavinia Gelineau appeared at the back of the room. She advanced slowly on the arm of a man in a green ceremonial U.S. Army uniform. Her slow progress past the crowded folding chairs tragically evoked a bride’s wedding march – a trip she made two years ago in Romania, her home country. Lavinia’s entrance signalled the beginning of her husband’s funeral. Christopher Gelineau, an Army Specialist in the 133rd Engineer Battalian of the Maine Army National Guard, died in Iraq on Tuesday, April 20 when a roadside bomb exploded under his humvee. The crowd, about 600 in all, including a detachment of identically dressed Army soldiers in the stands, rose spontaneously to its feet.

Lavinia took her seat at the front of the crowd and the silence stretched on. In the gym’s parking lot, six Army soldiers approached the rear of a hearse in lockstep. Not far away, USM Police’s Timothy Farr stood at attention by his cruiser. As the six men stepped haltingly back bearing the coffin, he saluted with the rest of the Police and Army personnel who stood by, a rare and heartbreaking sight on the USM campus.

The men pushed the coffin, which was draped with the U.S. Flag, on a wheeled platform to the front and someone placed a picture of Christopher on it. Lavinia , tall, gaunt and proud, approached and kissed the picture. Christopher’s funeral had started. Everyone sat down again.

USM President Pattenaude opened the ceremony with a short speech. He started by apologizing for the space, which, he said “was chosen more for its size than for its beauty.” He stood at the podium of a large temporary stage, bracketed by a painting of Jesus Christ on one side and by a priest, the priest’s assistant, and an Army chaplain on the other. Under the raised basketball hoops and industrial fans of the gym, he welcomed Christopher’s family and friends, Senators Olympia Snow and Susan Collins and Governer Baldacci, among others.

The Priest sung hymns and swung incense around the coffin and then at the crowd. The ablutions of the incense, he said, “unites us all in faith on this sad, yet honorable occasion.”

“Love and life are stronger than hate and death,” he said. “Chris lives on, and he is in service to the Lord.”

The Army chaplain then gave his own sermon, which was partly a defense of the controversial war that took Gelineau’s life.

“Some of those present may be anti-war,” he said. “But none of you are more anti-war than those of us in here Uniform today.

“The only thing good about war is its end,” he said. “The only thing I can think of that’s worse than war is standing by while evil proliferates.”

He went on to describe Gelineau’s service in glowing terms.

“There are some soldiers who choose to give so much more than the minimum required of them,” he said. “Christopher was such a soldier.”

Brigadeer General John Libby of the Maine National Guard commanded the soldiers present to stand ready for orders and officially awarded the bronze star and purple heart to Christopher, as well as a posthoumous promotion from Specialist to Sergeant. Governer Baldacci then presented the Maine Flag to Lavinia.

The service concluded with eulogies by Lavinia herself, Christopher’s mother, and Christopher’s uncle.

“I haven’t cried for three days. You must be carrying me,” Lavinia said. She sighed heavily into the microphone. The priest drew near and stood behind her. She described how she met Christopher at Portland Hall two summers ago, how they had fallen in love, and how they had chosen their song: Richard Marx’s “Right Here Waiting.” She said she hadn’t liked it at first because it was too sad, but it was the only song Christopher could play on the guitar. The audience laughed in the ceremony’s only moment of levity. Lavinia then accompanied herself on the guitar and sung the song in a surprisingly strong voice.

“I always sing when I’m sad,” she said. “I never got a chance to sing for you because you always made me happy.”

Christopher Gelineau was later buried with full military honors at Portland’s Evergreen Cemetary.

Bronson news writing ,

Sweet rides

April 16th, 2009

Shortly before graduating from USM and becoming a tech writer, I wrote some features for the local alt weekly, the Portland Phoenix. I wrote this story for the July 8, 2005 issue.

Sweet rides

The Bike Cycle caters to Portland’s urban cyclers, one straggler at a time

The Bike Cycle shop in Portland, opened on April Fool’s Day 2004 by Percy Wheeler and Dugan Murphy, has emerged as a haven for many local cyclists who see cycling as a lifestyle rather than a sport. This unassuming little blue shop on the corner of Deering and Congress streets caters to its own niche market — the hip urban cyclist, that horn-rimmed antithesis to the sport rider on his skinny performance bike, head to toe in spandex. The shop has captured a lot of lucrative business — and the imagination — of many in the urban cycling community.

“I knew this was the bike I wanted as soon as I saw it,” one guy in his early twenties told me when I visited the shop recently. He was sanding rust from the handlebars of an ancient green Schwinn. “It just suits my personality. It’s solid and strong, even if it’s a little heavy.”

Kneeling at another bike behind the counter, Percy Wheeler, the shop’s owner, concurred.

“That’s a tough bike,” he said, motioning to the Schwinn. I frowned at the frame’s many rust spots and the grimy, obsolete parts. It was certainly a bike with character but it wasn’t a bike I’d ever ride. Still, only the coldest heart could deny the love between a guy and his old dawg.

(Read the rest of the story on the Phoenix’s website here)

Bronson feature stories , ,

A Romantic Quest

April 16th, 2009

Shortly before graduating from USM and becoming a tech writer, I wrote some features for the local alt weekly, the Portland Phoenix. I wrote this story for the August 26, 2005 issue. The story was part if a student-centered insert that didn’t make it onto the paper’s website, but by way of proof, this letter to the editor did comment on my story the next week (http://www.portlandphoenix.com/features/letters/documents/04938203.asp).

A romantic quest

Local student locates food, misplaces condoms

For reasons I don’t care to explain, I found myself one recent late evening in desperate need of a condom (or three). I hadn’t had the foresight to mass my own stockpile, and there I was, my long cold war suddenly turned hotter than hot. Thus did I strike out into the Old Port to secure the sheaths. This proved difficult, but the search took me through some of Portland’s best late-night establishments that offer something other than alcohol.

I started on Congress Street, where I live, and entered Strange Maine, an eclectic local store that stocks used books, movies, video games, and other dusty curiosities. The shop is open until midnight on the weekends, and often hosts music and art events. It’s a good place for the underaged crowd, who complain so often that “nothing ever happens.” When I arrived around 10:30 pm, a posse of young teenagers went about breaking down a stack of sound gear, swarming like ants around a grasshopper carcass. The night’s band: Modern Syndrome. “They’re all, like, 13,” said Michael Connor, a local illustrator who works at the shop. I glanced at the teenagers — children, really — and leaned in close. “Do you guys sell condoms?” I asked.

“No,” he replied. “We don’t sell condoms.” I beat my hasty retreat, hoping no one else had heard me.

My next stop was the Purple Caterpillar, the hoookah bar located next door to the Movies on Exchange Street. I stepped over young people in various states of repose, including a pretty girl in a China dress draped over a low couch directly in front of the glass doors. Since opening nine months ago, this comfy den of cushions and low tables has done a booming business in the emerging college fad of smoking flavored tobacco from the traditional middle-eastern devices. The tobacco, called Shisha or Argileh, is legal for anyone aged 18 years or older and, I’m told, produces a mild buzz that’s almost as potent as weed. For $10, the den’s proprietors will prepare a hookah with the flavor of tobacco you’ve chosen from a handwritten menu and bring it to your table. A single hookah is good for four or more people.

I inched past grinning and lolling smokers, past the Jack Kerouak quotes scrawled on the walls, and I drew near to Jessica Mislek, who co-owns the shop and is most often seen serving customers. She told me the tobacco comes from Saudi Arabia and Jordan, while the pipes are imported from Egypt. But there were no condoms of any provenance available at the Purple Caterpillar, so I paid my polite farewell to all of those hooded smiles, and I moved on.

Directly across from the Purple Caterpillar on Exchange Street is Java Net Cafe, a coffee shop that provides computers and Internet access to its patrons. They were just closing, as it was 11 pm. I was politely informed that no condoms were available here, either.

While I do prefer to patronize local establishments, Dunkin’ Donuts, on Fore Street, next to Bull Feeney’s, bears the laurels for late-night coffee in the Old Port, closing at midnight on Friday and Saturday. After ordering my coffee, I asked the smartly uniformed young men if they could offer me any condoms. It turns out you can’t buy condoms at Dunkin’ Donuts. They do serve ice cream until closing time, though.

This search, this condom quest, had my knees wobbling and my stomach growling. I found myself in front of Granny’s Burritos on 420 Fore Street. At Granny’s, stylin’ bohemians prepare your burrito or quesadilla behind an unpretentious plywood counter, and you eat at the simple picnic tables that line the walls. Granny’s is open until midnight. The restaurant features a bar and more traditional waitress-driven sit-down eating upstairs, and live music almost every day. As it stands, though, Bill’s Pizza on Commercial Street (open until 2 am) has the post-closing-time niche cornered. I asked Granny’s owner Chris Godin why so few places are open late in the Old Port, considering all the people enthusiastically stomping around full of alcohol and so often hungry. He replied that this is exactly the problem.

“We close at midnight because after that it gets weird,” he said. “We tried late night here and it was a fucking nightmare.” By way of explanation, he told the story of six very loud and drunken men who, very early one morning, darkened his doorway, debating the relative merits of burritos versus pizza. “I used the Jedi mind trick on them,” Godin said. He demonstrated with a wave of his hand. “You don’t want burritos.” The men eventually moved on.

Godin at first celebrated the efficacy of the Light side of the force, but then had an epiphany: “I’m a business owner, and I’m excited I just lost six customers.” Now, despite the milling crowds of hungry and directionless drunks outside, the lock at Granny’s turns at midnight. You can’t blame the man — after myself doing the stumbling, another voracious drunk, out of the bars into Bill’s Pizza a week prior, I witnessed the following encounter outside Bill’s: Two men fell to the pavement together, enthusiastically swinging fists into one other’s heads. Close by, a street performer responded to the crowd’s surprised and amused comments by removing a short club from his guitar case and waving it at us.

“If anyone comes near me, I have this!” He shouted.

Despite this, and contrary to the more hysterical police chiefs among us, the Old Port is not really a dangerous place. You can get into a fight in lots of places, including the Old Port, if you go out looking for one. I wasn’t looking for a fight, I told Godin. I was looking for love.

“You should try the Corner Store [actual name: City Beverage],” said Brandy Botting, who was taking orders and preparing food behind the Granny’s counter. “I think they sell condoms.”

Of course! The Corner Store (actual name: City Beverage)! Located on the corner of Market Street and Fore Street, it occupies the perfect spot for hungry or amorous bar-hoppers. The aptly-named store (if it were actually named the Corner Store) serves the usual assortment of junk food and soft drinks, and yes, my objective: condoms!

“It’s 99 cents for one, and $2.99 for a three-pack,” said Jason King, who has worked nights at the store for seven months. He says the drunks are occasionally a problem, but he hasn’t had any serious encounters. “You gotta be assertive,” he said.

So soothed, fed, and wired, I returned home, bearing forth my amorous cargo to my lady, finding her resolutely asleep for the rest of the night. You might call her my sleeping beauty. Next time I’ll make sure my arsenal is well stocked. But if I ever find myself in the Old Port suffering from any of my most base cravings, I’ll know where to turn.

For those looking to wine and dine a late-night and last-minute paramour, the best option is to have Chinese or Italian cuisine brought directly to your love nest. My favorite restaurants on these fronts are Papa John’s — again, a chain, but open until 3 am on Fridays and Saturdays — and the Wok Inn, delivering fast and sufficient Chinese fodder until 2 am on the same nights.

If you have wheels and you haven’t been drinking, there are places open 24 hours a day to satisfy the pangs of hunger after those waves of lust have subsided. The local Denny’s is located on outer Congress Street, and is a veritable Mecca for bored underage college students looking for a place to hang out in the deep of the night. Lesser known, but equally promising are the Tim Horton’s locations in the Mill Creek Plaza in South Portland and Main Street in Westbrook. The imported Canadian chain is akin to taking a Dunkin’ Donuts and a Subway and smashing them together — and they’ll prepare fresh donuts and sandwiches for you at any hour of the day.

Any later than that, and you’re talking breakfast joints, which is a whole different story. But I’ll offer one name: Marcy’s. They open really early.

Bronson feature stories , ,