Weird and wonderful things that happened at BlogHer


Herewith, reader peoples, is my BlogHer opus. Once again, this year I did not do anything particularly crazy (unless you count seven cups of coffee in one day). This time around, Britney Spears didn't even come up once. But still, I had a wonderful and wonderfully weird time.

Wonderful! Along with Julia Roberts from Support for Special Needs, I organized a "Birds of a Feather" luncheon for moms of kids with special needs. (Er, "organized" is a bit of an exaggeration—I got a clipboard, I wrote down the name of the luncheon, I paid back Julia for one of the gift cards we gave away). I thought maybe 15 women would show up; we were twenty-five plus women strong, the biggest Birds of a Feather lunch group of 'em all. We were a veritable FLOCK. I can't even tell you how absolutely amazing it was to have everyone together including Kate from PixieMama, Janis from Sneak Peek At Me, Juliette from Global Citizen, advocate Catherine Calhoun, Kim from Autism Twins, Joanna from My Mom Shops, Shannon from Squidalicious, Jen from Into The Woods, Living Deliberately, Melissa from The Betty and Boo Chronicles, Beth (aka Niksmom) from Maternal Instincts, and Jean from Stimeyland. I wish I'd had time to talk more with everyone, but I bopped around like a headless tofurkey. Please, let me know if you were there, too, so I can feel even more guilty for not chatting with you.

Weird! The e-mail that showed up from Dave at 10:00 p.m. on Saturday, while I was at a party. It said, and I quote, "Love we need a bug guy to come to the house baby ants on the kitchen table." I am not quite sure what he wanted me to do with this piece of information on a Saturday night. I mean, yeah, I am sitting here typing this on the kitchen table and there are baby ants crawling over my elbows. But I wasn't going to call the exterminator from the Hilton ballroom. On a Saturday night. Stay tuned for Clueless Husbands: The Interview. I'm serious. I'm going to find out, once and for all, what he was thinking.

Wonderful! All the giving back going on at BlogHer. They auctioned off Voices of the Year artwork (words and images from various blogger posts, transformed into works of art) to raise money for The Nature Conservancy, which is doing all sorts of good for the Gulf. And then there was Tutus for Tanner.


Everywhere you looked, you saw women in tutus (above, Jenn Korducki and Jill Felska from Pursuing Our Passion)...


..and kids, too. I don't think this baby had a blog, but I can't be sure.

The brilliant and cool Catherine from Her Bad Mother has a nephew, Tanner, who is dying of Duchennes Muscular Dystrophy (DMD). Kristen at TheShredheads came up with the idea of Tutus for Tanner: She asked that anytime people ran a race, they wear a tutu to honor Tanner. At BlogHer on Saturday morning, dozens of women participated in a Tutus for Tanner 5K. I saw Tanner at an event, and he's a sweet, handsome kid. It's heartbreaking. If you want to raise money for DMD research, you can do it here.

Another nice giving-back thing: At the expo hall, where companies had booths, Todd Parr (a children's author who illustrates and writes whimsical, colorful books) was at Stouffer's promoting his new book Let's Fix Dinner, whose proceeds benefit Habitat for Humanity. I talked with him for a little while about doing a book for kids with special needs, and he said it's "high" on his list of books to write. Excitement!

Weird! VERY weird! I met a blogger in the lobby of the Hilton. She asked what kind of blog I write, and I said it was a blog for parents of kids with special needs. "What's special about your son?" she asked. "He has cerebral palsy," I said. "Cool!" she replied, brightly. At least it was better than the "Awwww" response. I think?

Wonderful! The inspiration at the sessions.


The women of the panel Blogging Autism: Shattering Myths, Opening Eyes and Finding Your Tribe. I related to a lot of what was discussed, especially when Jean (far right) said that she assumed life as she knew it would be over when her son was diagnosed with autism. I laughed when Carol from Aspie Advocate, an adult with Asperbergers (third from left) said, "How do parents of unaffected kids do it!? They talk so much!"

I cried at the "Grief, Loss, Tragedy and Community on the Internet" panel; afterward, I got a chance to speak with Anissa Mayhew. Some of you may know that Anissa had a stroke in November. She's come a long way, and still has a ways to go. I told her that Max had a stroke, and we talked a bit about some medical stuff. Anissa is totally funny—she had us laughing on a panel about grief. People flocked to see her throughout the conference. She's a goddess.

I laughed a lot at the "Where's the Line or the Lie: Storytelling, Memoir and Poetic License" session, which featured Jenny from The Bloggess, one of my fave funny blogs. Someone asked about the arguments with her husband, Victor, that she freely posts about. She shared two rules: 1) Never blog when mad; 2) Never blog about real arguments. Also, it's not OK to make up stuff.

I picked up a few good tips at the blog design session, including that any blog design should encompass your vision for the future (I need to get me a vision, but they were not included in the BlogHer swag bag), and that you can create good, time-sucking charts on Graph Jam, like this one:


I think this one took me approximately twenty hours, but I can't be sure.

Weird! There were approximately 2500 bloggers at BlogHer, and I managed to keep bumping into the same three people: The ever-amusing Vodka Mom, Jessica from It's My Life everywhere and Jill from Scary Mommy. I think they thought I was stalking them but, hmm, could it be they were stalking me?

Wonderful! Hanging in the BlogHer Serenity Suite on the 43rd floor.


This is the view that, for fifteen blissfully quiet moments, I had all to myself. Then a few people showed up and, happily, they were fun to hang with, including Stacy from Is There Any Mommy Out There? and her adorable Quinn; Christine from Coffees and Commutes; Corinne from Trains, Tutus and Tea Time; and Heather of The Extraordinary Ordinary.

Wonderful! All the parties and events.


I got to ride a New York City double decker tour bus (something no born-and-bred New Yorker would typically ever do) and snap photos with a Kodak EasyShare M580, courtesy of Kodak, a camera that lets you share photos on social media sites with the click of a button.


I hit the Avery SocialLuxe Lounge (that's The Bloggess at left accepting her "Funniest Blog" award from Megan at Velveteen Mind and Christine from Boston Mamas) and caught up with Kim from Traveling Mom and Barbara Jones, cofounder of Blissdom and head of One2OneNetwork.


I was thrilled to hear David Lauren, Ralph Lauren's son, speak at company headquarters about its history and the Ralph Lauren Childrenswear line. We watched a virtual storybook, The RL Gang—a video with super-adorable kids in super-adorable RL clothes ("merchentainment," as David called it), narrated by Harry Connick Jr. Check out the trailer (it'll be live on Ralph Lauren on Aug 18). There's also a shopable book of the same name; 15 percent of the proceeds will benefit the Ellis Marsalis Center for Music.


These cuties star in the Ralph Lauren print ads. Man, I would love to see a kid with special needs in there; wouldn't Max fit right in?


Yes, the room was a wood-paneled wonder, as you'd expect it to be. If I put a plaid couch in my living room, it would never look this good.

Over the weekend I also had brunch with the lovely Shannon from Sprout TV, I got even more gorgeous (if that is humanly possible) courtesy of Audrey McClelland from Mom Generations and Vera Sweeney of I'm Not Obsessed!, and I got a little buzzed at the Mouthy Housewives party (thanks, Marinka). I went to the BlogHer parties Bloggy State of Mind, Sparklecorn and CheeseburgHer.


CheeseburgHer had, you guessed it, burgers. And beds. I really needed a nap, but nobody would turn down the music or get off the beds.


On Sunday morning, I had a brunch at FAO Schwartz to celebrate Juno Baby, who's making adorable videos for kids (designed by Muppets creators) with original music. And, last, a gourmet breakfast (with sushi and ceviche) at the elegant Loews Hotel, organized by Carol from NY City Mama.


Wonderful and weird! I got to meet The Pillsbury Doughboy. I'm not sure if Dave was more jealous of him or of Mr. March, the abs-flashing fireman.

And we all lived happily ever after. The end.

Note, I received products from events I attended above, but the opinions here are all my own.

Related Posts

Subscribe Our Newsletter