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Radio talk show host's anti-bullying campaign
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Cued_Up
February 27, 2008, 6:24pm Report to Moderator
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Radio talk show host's anti-bullying
campaign strikes chord in community

  
Doug Ward
Vancouver Sun
Wednesday, February 27, 2008




CKNW radio personality Christy Clark, her son Hamish, 6,
and friends (from left) Andrew, 5, Erik, 6, and Adriana, 4,
in pink T-shirts for her anti-bullying campaign.
CREDIT: Ian Lindsay, Vancouver Sun

CKNW talk show host Christy Clark says she never imagined so many people would sign on to her anti-bullying campaign and pledge to wear pink today.

"I'm astonished," said Clark on Tuesday. "It's something that speaks to an experience that most of us have had."

The former provincial cabinet minister said more than 100,000 people have signed on to her wear pink Facebook event page.

The host of the Christy Clark Show said her anti-bullying campaign has touched a nerve.

"I can tell you that from the phone calls and e-mails we've received, I wouldn't be surprised if 80 per cent of people have been bullied, or watched someone be bullied, or been a bully," Clark said.

"I just think it speaks to a universal human experience."

Premier Gordon Campbell, at Clark's request, urged British Columbians to wear pink to work and school today to mark what has now been proclaimed provincial anti-bullying day. The day is being marked in schools with discussions and other forms of awareness raising.

Several Lower Mainland municipalities, including the City of Vancouver, have also declared today to be anti-bullying day. Many unions are also supporting the campaign.

Clark said the roots of the wear-pink protest go back to a call from a listener last year who confessed to having been a bully when she was young.

The woman, now in her 40s, talked about breaking a young boy's clavicle and about taking a young girl, placing her in an abandoned car and threatening to drive her away from her family.

"This woman felt so much shame and guilt and so she came on our show and talked about it. She told us that we had to do something about bullying."

Then Clark heard about how two students in Nova Scotia organized a school protest last year to wear pink in solidarity with a classmate who had been bullied for wearing pink to school.

The Nova Scotia protest inspired the CKNW talk show host to begin urging British Columbians about six weeks ago to join her wear pink anti-bullying campaign.

"It's so incredible the power that one small seemingly insignificant act can achieve."

Clark, mother of a Grade 1 student, said every parent is "dead scared" their child will be bullied or become a bully.

She added that bullying is a habit that can extend through life.

"If we don't deal with bullies when they are kids, they will still be bullies when they are older and go into workplaces."

dward@png.canwest.com

CKNW GOES PINK

It's Pink Day. CKNW's Christy Clark Show broadcasts live from Dorothy Lynas elementary in North Vancouver. Learn about the school's anti-bullying programs, and hear from the students as they present a radio play, personal poems and songs about bullying. For more on the campaign, go to http://www.cknw.com or http://www.christyclark.ca.

http://www.canada.com/vancouversun/news/story.html?id=c8937411-a3dc-43fc-9b1f-c6f0c47d8255
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wisemonkey
February 27, 2008, 8:37pm Report to Moderator
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This is a noble effort by NW and Clark but I really don't think bullies are going to curtail their actions on the school ground because of Christy Clark.
On the other hand Clark did get a lot of mileage out of this which speaks directly to the demo of her midday audience.
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TV TIMES
February 27, 2008, 9:36pm Report to Moderator
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Why do I keep thinking that this talk show gig will help Christy re-launch her political aspirations down the road.
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donlloyd
February 28, 2008, 3:44am Report to Moderator
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Let's see, photo ops, lottsa people feeling warm and fuzzy, ultimately accomplishing nothing. Yep, Christy's a politician to the core.  
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