Ask Norman Kelly Bennett Ask Norman Kelly Bennett

Fin Pals ask Norman: What Do You Want to be When You Grow UP?

Norman T. Goldfish answers letters from readers. Click on the link to read his reply.

 

Say Kids: Do you think Norman imagines what he’ll be when he grows up the way we humans do? Do you think he ever imagines what it would be like to be a human? Do you ever wonder what it would be like to be a fish?

Ready to read Norman’s answer? Scroll down past this fintastic drawing one of our finpals sent . . .

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Glug

Glug

Glug . . .


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Dolphins are super swimmers! To learn more about them click over to the Dolphin Rescue Center website. It’s Norman approved!

And Big Fat Zombie Goldfish is a really finny book. Check it out!

FINPALS Wanted!

Do you have a question for Norman the Goldfish—about friends, school, pets, family, life in and outside the fishbowl? Send him a letter or email!

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7-Minute Poetry Challenge Kelly Bennett 7-Minute Poetry Challenge Kelly Bennett

Poetry Challenge #210-Engines Off!

Hide those car keys! Engines Off! Today is World Car Free Day.

Ever wonder why cars are also called “autos”? I’m thinking it’s to bless or blame one guy, Nicolaus Otto, who in 1876 “invented an effective gas motor engine.” Daimler and Benz may have built cars before him, but Otto’s 4-stroke internal combustion engine called the “Otto Cycle Engine” is what made the wheels go around…and around and around and around…

January 29, 1886 Benz was granted the first automobile patent.

January 29, 1886 Benz was granted the first automobile patent.

…Which seemed to make everyone, especially the oil & gas industry, very happy. Until sometime in the 50s, when some folks poked their heads out of the exhaust fumes and realized that cars were changing our cities, neighborhoods, lives. According to the National Day Calendar website, “from 1956 to 1957, the Netherlands and Belgium held car-free Sundays.”  On September 22, 2000, the European Car Free Day was held. It has since been an annual event for 46 countries and 2,000 cities all over the world—and now, here!

Poetry Challenge #210

Engines Off!

Take a moment to silence those noisy engines—if only in your mind—and imagine a day without cars. Any cars on the road, or buses, motorcycles, lawnmowers, too. What would you do? What sounds could you hear that you don’t usually? Where might you go and how would you get there?

If you can agree that the world—for this one car-free day—would be a quieter and probably slower place, challenge yourself to use quieter and slower sounding words.

“Quieter” words are those without hard-sounding endings: the hard K,G,T consonants.

“Slower words often have repeated vowel sounds and repeated soft consonants: double s, double m or n sounds.

Set Your Timer for 7 Minutes

Start Writing!

Don’t Think About it, just do it!

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Awwway weeeeee goooooooo!

Cindy Faughnan and I began this 7-Minute Poetry Challenge 1990+ days ago. Now we take turns creating prompts to share with you. Our hope is that creatives—children & adults—will use our prompts as springboards to word play time. If you join us in the Challenge, let us know by posting the title, a note, or if you want, the whole poem in the comments.

Click on Fishbowl link and sign up to receive email notifications from Kelly's blog (aka The Fishbowl):

All who subscribe, comment or share a poem will be entered in . . .

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Ask Norman Kelly Bennett Ask Norman Kelly Bennett

Fin Pals ask Norman: What If You Can't Sleep?

Norman T. Goldfish answers letters from readers. Click on the link to read his reply.

 

Say Kids: When you get tired, do your eyelids ever feel heavy? Do you rub your eyes when you’re sleepy?

Norman gets tired, too. But he doesn’t rub his eyes because he can’t. His fins are not long enough to reach his eyes.

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Norman can’t close his eyes when he’s tired, either, because goldfish don’t have eyelids.

If you were a tired goldfish what would you do when you were tired? Hmmmmm….

Ready to read Norman’s answer? Scroll down . . .

Glug

Glug

Glug . . .


tired response.jpg

Do you have a question for Norman the Goldfish—about friends, school, pets, family, life in and outside the fishbowl? Send him a letter!

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7-Minute Poetry Challenge Kelly Bennett 7-Minute Poetry Challenge Kelly Bennett

Poetry Challenge #209-Earth First

Think: Green

Think: Peace

Today, because it’s National Green Peace Day. But not just today. Think Earth First because it’s time. It’s long past time!

We can change and make changes to help our world.

We can change and make changes to help our world.

AND because, if we consciously think “Earth” before we do whatever it is we have to do: before we go; before we toss; before we buy; before. . . before we ignore, we can change and make changes to help our world.

Poetry Challenge #209

Green Peace

There’s nothing quite like the color green, and everyone wants peace. For this poem, Today, think of as many words that can rhyme with green or peace and use them in a poem.

For an extra challenge, do not let the last words in lines rhyme.

Set Your Timer for 7 Minutes

Start Writing!

Don’t Think About it, just do it!

Think Green Peace

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Cindy Faughnan and I began this 7-Minute Poetry Challenge 1990+ days ago. Now we take turns creating prompts to share with you. Our hope is that creatives—children & adults—will use our prompts as springboards to word play time. If you join us in the Challenge, let us know by posting the title, a note, or if you want, the whole poem in the comments.

Click on Fishbowl link and sign up to receive email notifications from Kelly's blog (aka The Fishbowl):

All who subscribe, comment or share a poem will be entered in . . .

Read More
7-Minute Poetry Challenge Kelly Bennett 7-Minute Poetry Challenge Kelly Bennett

Poetry Challenge #208-Amp It Up!

The instant I learned there was such a thing as National Ampersand Day, Joni Mitchell’s song “Twisted” popped into my head:

& he thought I was nuts/No more ifs or & or buts, oh no!/They say as a child I appeared a little bit wild with all my crazy ideas/but I knew what was a jean-yuus . . .

But then I thought, why not? After all doesn’t it seem right & fitting to set aside time to celebrate a symbol that dates back more than 2,000 years; & was once the last letter of the English alphabet (before Z took its place);& stands for the latin word et, “and” in English as in the word etcetera; &is derived from an alteration of “and per se and,” meaning  (i.e. ‘&’); & is arguably the most used lologram* in the English language? & so, without further ado:

Poetry Challenge #208

AMP IT UP

Let’s use these “how to celebrate ampersand day” suggestions to revise a poem.

#1 Select a poem to revise

Now: AMPersand IT UP…rather in the spirit of the day…& IT UP!

#2 Substitute an ampersand “& “ for every “and” in the poem.

#3 Throughout the poem, replace the “and” sound with an ampersand. For example: change Andrea to &rea; Alexander to Alex&er, Grandma to Gr&ma; etc. & so forth.

#4 If your poem doesn’t have enough ampersands to make it interesting—or &y at all—change & add words until it looks more interesting.

#5 If you dare, send your revised poem to a friend for decoding.

Set Your Timer for 7 Minutes

Start Writing!

Don’t Think About it, just do it! & Have Fun!

*A logogram is a character that represents a word or phrase commonly used in shorthand. Other lolograms include  @, #, $, %… & numbers such as 4 . . . LOL (yep LOL is a lologram too, lol!)

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& BTW: Amersand Day was declared “in 2015 by Chaz DeSimone, an author, designer, typographer & founder of  AmperArt an initiative which considers the ampersand to be an art form.”

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Cindy Faughnan and I began this 7-Minute Poetry Challenge more than 1900 days ago. Now we take turns creating prompts to share with you. Our hope is that creatives—children & adults—will use our prompts as springboards to word play time. If you join us in the Challenge, let us know by posting the title, a note, or if you want, the whole poem in the comments.

Click on Fishbowl link and sign up to receive email notifications from Kelly's blog (aka The Fishbowl):

All who subscribe, comment or share a poem will be entered in . . .

Read More
Winner's Choice Giveaway Kelly Bennett Winner's Choice Giveaway Kelly Bennett

WINNER OF THE 1ST "WINNER-WINNER CHICKEN DINNER" QUARTERLY GIVEAWAY IS . . .

THE GRAND PRIZE WINNER of the 1st Quarterly Giveaway is . . . Fanfare please!

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Wait! Before we announce the winner, huge thanks and fishbowl love to all of you who entered this quarter’s Winner’s Choice Giveaway by subscribing to my blog, “Kelly’s Fishbowl,” sending letters & drawing to Norman the Goldfish’s advice column “Ask Norman,” or sharing snapshots of “Activitieson social media. The good news is you made our fishy hearts flutter with joy. The better news is, there weren’t as many entries as their could have been—did you forget you could enter more than one time each quarter?—so all of you who did enter have a 1-53 chances of winning. Talk about great odds!

In the interest of fairness, we wanted choosing the winner to be completely random random drawing. To that end, first we asked this guy to pick a winner:

But he wouldn’t take the bait. So . . . We asked This Guy . . .

But he wouldn’t take the bait. So . . . We asked This Guy . . .

Oso was thrilled to help. And with complete impartial plucking—and a bit of potato chip juice, OSO selected the winner.

And the winner is: Maria Campbell!

Lucky Maria will win dinner with a chicken or her choice of any one of these fabulous prizes:

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To all of you, There’s still next time! Enter now, enter often, even better—have your kids, students, second-cousin on your goldfish’s side enter. There is no limit to how many times you enter—or WIN the Quarterly Winner-Choice Giveaway!

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Ask Norman Kelly Bennett Ask Norman Kelly Bennett

Fin Pals ask Norman: What's Your Favorite Color?

Norman T. Goldfish answers letters from readers. Click on the link to read his reply.

 

Hey Kids!

Do you have a favorite color? Does Norman? Do goldfish even see colors? Hmmmmm….Ready to read Norman’s answer? Scroll down . . .

Glug

Glug

Glug . . .


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As it turns out goldfish can see colors! Even more colors than humans. Most human eyes see shades of the 3 primary colors: red, blue and yellow (Norman’s favorite food colors).

Goldfish see those and 2 more! They can see infra-red, which is a color beyond red that we humans can’t “see” but we “feel” as heat. This helps goldfish detect other fish.

The other color goldfish see is ultraviolet, a shade beyond purple. It’s those bright color shades humans can only see if we use an ultra-violet light.

For more about how and what goldfish see, click over to It’s a Fish Thing website!

Do you have a question for Norman the Goldfish—about friends, school, pets, family, life in and outside the fishbowl? Send him a letter!

Learn more
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7-Minute Poetry Challenge Kelly Bennett 7-Minute Poetry Challenge Kelly Bennett

Poetry Challenge #207-Who Gives a Cluck?

Back when Buz and Tod were getting their kicks cruising Route 66, if their tummies growled all they had to do was look up in the sky, not at a bird or a plane, but west to the 22-foot-high Chicken Boy!

For more than 20 years, 1960-1984, Chicken Boy, a huge fiberglass statue a burly mannish “boy” with a chicken head clutching a bucket of fried chicken, “affectionately known as ‘the Statue of Liberty of Los Angeles’”, perched atop LA’s Chicken Boy restaurant. The restaurant closed after the owner died but Chicken Boy lived on—although buried deep in storage until 2007 when thanks to fundraising effort he was resurrected and re-erected in front of owner Amy Inouye’s design firm in Highland Park, CA.

Wondering if cruising to LA to see the Chicken Boy is still a thing? Bet your tail feathers it is! In 2010, then Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger awarded it the Governor's Historic Preservation Award.

And today, September 1st, National Chicken Boy Day, commemorates that day. Who gives a cluck? We do!

Poetry Challenge #207

What the Cluck!?

Write a Chicken Boy poem. Whether it features that 22-foot-high statue, or a boy and a chicken, or the Chicken Boys band (out of Austin, of course.)

Bwalk-blwak-blawk, just as chickens don’t all look the same—

There are hundreds of different breeds of chicken distinguished by: size, plumage color, comb type, skin color, number of toes, amount of feathering, egg color, and place of origin.[1]. . . also roughly divided by primary use, whether for eggs, meat, or ornamental purposes, and with some considered to be dual-purpose.[1]

—Chickens don’t all talk the same talk. But,  no matter how its written: bwalk, cluck, peekok-peekok or some other spelling from far far away, when it comes to chicken verbalization the one universal is that hard K sound at the end.

Sooooooooo…(or should I say “sawk”). . . Think “Hard K” as you craft your poem.

And then, after you have a draft, go back over through your poem and change words, change sounds, invent words with the sole purpose of making your Chicken Boy poem sound as clucky as possible. 

Set Your Timer for 7 Minutes

Start Writing!

Don’t Think About it, just do it!

And for inspiration a Chicken Boy Playlist:

Cindy Faughnan and I began this 7-Minute Poetry Challenge more than 1900 days ago. Now we take turns creating prompts to share with you. Our hope is that creatives—children & adults—will use our prompts as springboards to word play time. If you join us in the Challenge, let us know by posting the title, a note, or if you want, the whole poem in the comments.

Click on Fishbowl link and sign up to receive email notifications from Kelly's blog (aka The Fishbowl):

All who subscribe, comment or share a poem will be entered in . . .

Read More