"Showing Their Scales" and "The Hockey Farmer"

We are pleased to introduce the works of local B.C. authors KP Wee and Farhan Devji to you:

"Showing Their Scales" contains three tales of lies, lust, and deception. These are short novels which deal with betrayal and revenge, with three main male characters and how they end up hurting the women in their lives.
**Catch an episode of BlogTalkRadio
here with KP's interview on his books, recorded Dec 29, 2008.**

"The Hockey Farmer" is a story about Logan Watt, who hails from Cochrane, Alberta, and has to decide whether to rehabilitate the legendary family farm or pursue an unlikely career in professional hockey. The story also shifts to Vancouver and contains numerous Vancouver Canucks references.

Help support a pair of B.C. authors by picking up your own copies today!
-- "The Hockey Farmer" can be purchased
here,
while "Showing Their Scales" can be bought
here. --

The Hockey Farmer / Showing Their Scales

The Hockey Farmer / Showing Their Scales

Saturday, October 18, 2008

Random Thoughts VI

Raycroft wins 2nd straight:

The Dallas Stars faced the Colorado Avalanche on Saturday afternoon, in a game that wasn't televised in my area, but I'd found out Avalanche head coach Tony Granato was starting Andrew Raycroft...for the second straight game!!

For Maple Leaf and Bruins fans, you all know about Raycroft. The guy has been on the decline since his 2004 rookie season... yikes. Yet, when he's in goal for the Avalanche, they can't lose.

Raycroft is now 2-0-0, while Peter Budaj is 0-3-0. Well, it's still early for a goaltending controversy, and for all we know, Raycroft could go 0-10-0 in his next appearances.

I recall in the New York Rangers' 1994 championship season, No. 1 goalie Mike Richter started the year 0-4-0 and backup Glenn Healy was 4-0-0. So what? Richter was the main man during the season and Stanley Cup playoff run.

And we all know about Raycroft's 2-0 start in the 2004 playoffs. Nope, the Bruins didn't win that series.

I admit I was a bit excited when I saw the score on The NHL Network ticker: Colorado 5, Dallas 5, third period. I'd known that the Avalanche had taken a 5-2 lead after two periods, and that meant Raycroft had surrendered three goals in the third. Just like his meltdowns in Toronto last season, when he would allow last-minute or very-late goals to lose games for the Leafs.

But nope... the score reverted to Colorado 5, Dallas 4 later on that ticker, and I couldn't believe it. Nope, The NHL Network didn't have a glitch the way TBS did later in the evening (not showing Game Six of the ALCS for the opening 20 minutes), but it turned out the Stars' tying goal was disallowed.

So, Raycroft hung on, and is perfect this season.

Well, it's early. I'm sure the Raycroft of the last couple seasons will show his true form soon enough.

Wayne Gretzky ad:

That TV commercial showing Wayne Gretzky and Maurice "The Rocket" Richard advertising how the best investment firms working together bring awesome results... just plain dumb. I can't stand that commercial.

There's one poll on Bleacher bio here when every writer can weigh in: Orr or Gretzky? Nope, I've never seen Orr play live, but I've seen enough documentaries and game films, and stories and interviews from the Scotty Bowmans, the Bobby Clarkes, and other Hall of Famers, to determine Orr was greater than The Great One. Sorry, but #4 > #99.

And haha! Checking my own poll question from earlier this week, it appears no one is giving Gretzky any respect either. In my unofficial poll, all five respondents have picked Wayne Gretzky thus far (as "sucking" more as a head coach than the recently fired Denis Savard)...

That's a perfect 100%!! Yes, a small sample size, but you can't argue with 100%! (Yup. I know. Some people will see this and start voting the other way... but for now, 100%!!)

Boston Red Sox vs. Tampa Bay Rays:


HAHA! Going to Game 7! As I said in my article, THAT wasn't supposed to be an obituary... and the Kings of Comebacks!

But truth be told, I was pretty upset about that Aaron Boone thing and was devastated when they let Kevin Brown off the hook in Game 3 in 2004 (and lost 19-8 despite hanging in there early, tied 6-6 at one point)... but honestly this year, I couldn't care less.

Hmm.. maybe I will blame the TBS coverage for this lack of interest. Brutal coverage.

Friday, October 17, 2008

Blackhawks & Quenneville...


I bashed Wayne Gretzky in this one... why would people say Denis Savard deserved to be axed in Chicago and not say the same for #99 in Phoenix?

Oddly enough, this came just hours after I'd mocked the people featured on Rick Jessup's overanything.com link from Thursday. Not that I care about the Blackhawks anymore... but I didn't see the need to laugh at Savard. He was a great player. As a coach? It's really too early to tell.

Here's the link - my thoughts on Joel Quenneville in Chicago.

Seriously though, Quenneville has won NOTHING in the NHL as a head coach. (Yes, he won as an assistant coach before, but that's different). In fact, eight early playoff exits in eleven years (10, if you count the fact he was fired mid-season one year).

That's better than Savard, eh?

And ooohh... .Rick or Trout will love this one: I bashed Wayne Gretzky.... so are the Coyotes going to win the Cup this year?

Wednesday, October 15, 2008

Red Sox Thoughts

The Boston Red Sox that I'd rooted for in my youth was a completely different team.

They had one superstar pitcher (until he became a traitor) and some decent hitters. They had guys like Joe Hesketh, Greg Harris, Danny Darwin making up the rest of the rotation, and Jeff Reardon --once baseball's all-time saves king--closing things out. I rooted for Tom Brunansky, Jody Reed, Ellis Burks and Mike Greenwell. Reed and Wade Boggs would double off the Green Monster to set the table for the Brunanskys, Burkses, and Greenwells.

Well, so in a sense, the Red Sox had one great pitcher, "and a bunch of other guys."

The Red Sox, however, fell short every year, but still, they were my team. Even when they grew into the habit of picking up former league and playoff MVPs (Canseco, Mitchell, Avery, Eckersley), ex- 18-game winners (Portugal, Schourek), and one-time no-hit pitchers (Ramon Martinez, Mercker), I still cheered them on. (Oddly enough, Tim Wakefield was almost a playoff MVP with the Pirates in 1992, but his Bucs fell to the Braves in that famous Francisco Cabrera game, depriving the knuckleballer of the hardware.)

Eventually though, the Red Sox became the little Evil Empire. Red Sox management might deny this, but come on. The Sox were at their best in the mid-2000s, battling the Yankees to try and get the biggest names. Getting Schilling. Getting A-Rod, until the players' association got involved and vetoed the deal. Winning the bidding war for Dice-K. Giving J.D. Drew a $70 million contract. And on and on.

The Red Sox were no longer the "underdog", the team that I grew to love. They were starting to be the big spenders like the Yankees. Sure, Boston had overpaid for guys like Darwin and Matt Young and Jack Clark, et al, in the 1990s, and later Steve Avery and so on, but at least--in my view--the team was loveable. Of course, others didn't view the BoSox as loveable losers like the Cubs, but as choke artists. But still, they were my team.

Before this year's league championship series started, I was on my friend's website, OA.com, making my predictions. I picked the Phillies to win in five, and the Rays to triumph in the same number of games. There was no way I wanted to see the soap opera of this "Manny goes back to Fenway in the World Series" nonsense. That's what the media would want. It's all about storylines and such that everyone wanted. But come on, do people seriously want to see villains like No. 99 come out victorious?

Nope, I'd rather see the underdogs win. (Philadelphia is kind of a dog because it seems Ramirez's Dodgers had been getting much more attention.) The Red Sox? Been there, done that. When the same team keeps winning, it gets old. Of course, with both the Dodgers and Red Sox down three games to one, I could very well be perfect in my picks.

Or, to steal a line from Yogi Berra: "It ain't over till it's over," and one or both L.A. and Boston could very well rally. But unlikely. I could see one team make it, but not both. (On a side note, in my my baseball novel "Replacement Pitcher", which comes out June 2009, I'd written--the manuscript was completed in August 2008--the Red Sox and Dodgers would square off in the Fall Classic... it's just not the matchup I want to see, though, in real life.)

So both L.A. and Boston could see their seasons potentially end in Game Five of their respective LCS. If I had to pick one of those two that would be most likely to pull off a miracle, I'd have to give the nod to the Red Sox. So nope, this article isn't meant to be an obituary. After all, the Red Sox have proven themselves with their 2004 and 2007 ALCS comebacks, and sure, you could argue, have gotten the Rays where they want them this year. Sorry to say though, for Dodgers fans, there's no way the Phillies will choke their 3-1 series lead. Not this year.

Last year, I told people I wasn't worried the Red Sox were down 3-1 against Cleveland, especially when Josh Beckett would pitch Game Five and then they'd go back home for the last two. Just as in 2004, after they beat the Yankees in Game Four, they had Pedro and Schilling going in the next two, and if they could pull it out, anything could happen in a seventh game.

Last year, I wasn't worried.

This year, I couldn't care less.

But nope. This year, wouldn't count the BoSox out. After all, they are the Kings of Comebacks. Yes, the 2004 ALCS when they overcame that 3-0 series deficit. Last year, when they blew out the Indians 30-5 in the final three games.

Indeed, the Red Sox have become the Kings of Comebacks in the last 20-plus years. Before 2004 though, no one really cared because they didn't have a World Series... while upstarts like the Mets (2), Blue Jays (2), Marlins (2), D-Backs (1), and Royals (1) had won it before. In Florida's case, TWO championships in its first 11 years of existence? Holy smokes. (That makes the Marlins' accomplishment much more impressive than the Braves' lone title in 14 consecutive trips to the postsesaon.)

Still, you couldn't deny the Red Sox and their propensity to come back when you least expected it. 1986, when they were rescued by Dave Henderson's homer while down to their last strike and trailing 3-1 in the ALCS against California. 1988, when they rode new manager Joe Morgan and a long winning streak at Fenway to win the division. 1991, when they trailed the Blue Jays by 11 1/2 games before being down just just a half-game with two weeks left in the season (before ultimately slumping at the end). 1993, when both Roger Clemens and Frank Viola were struggling, they rode the arms of Darwin and Aaron Seleto a first-place tie in July (but again ultimately fading). 1995, when they won the AL East over the Yankees, Orioles, and Blue Jays, all of whom were expected to be far superior. Yes, all those were great, but then the real comebacks began.

1999, down 0-2 to the mighty Indians in the Division Series, rallying to win three straight, including Game Five at Jacobs Field thanks to Pedro in relief and Troy O'Leary's home runs. 2003, down 0-2 to the Athletics in the ALDS (and having lost 10 straight to them in postseason play) before ultimately winning Game Five in Oakland.

Then 2004 and 2007. So, sure, perhaps another comeback is in the cards.

Even if they don't, that's fine. I think most Red Sox fans said before 2004, they'd want to see Boston win a World Series in their lifetimes. One. Fait accompli. But of course, people are naturally greedy. So I would guess they want that second one, and then a dynasty.

I'd much rather see a true underdog win this year than the new, second version of the Yankees.

Monday, October 13, 2008

Random Thoughts V

So, I'm trailing House and Rick big time in the Sports Net Hockey Pool... but I'm on par in both LCS picks!!

I'd said on OA.com that the Phillies would win in five, and the Rays too in five. I do not want a Dodgers-Red Sox World Series... and after Monday's action (in which the Rays pounded the Sox 9-1 and the Phils rallied past the Dodgers 7-5) both series could finish 4-1!!!

(There's been a lot of negative feedback about Chip Caray and the TBS coverage of the ALCS... I can't remember who it was, whether it was Caray or Joe Buck way back in 1996, but I'm going to steal a line from whoever said this during that year's division series against the Braves... Let's "wave bye-bye to the Dodgers." HAHA!!)

By the way, Philadelphia's big four-run eighth was capped by (ex-Jay) Matt Stairs' two-run, game-winning, pinch homer. Welcome back to the spotlight, Stairs!

Speaking of ex-Jays... welcome back to the Majors.... (see link below)

Today (and this past week)'s KP Links:
Canucks' magic #: 10
Penguins outshot 49-15
Dodgers NLCS thoughts

Today's Random Links
New jerseys with retired players' names: Good or bad idea?
John Gibbons is back in the bigs!

Tuesday, October 7, 2008

New Facebook Group

I created a new Facebook group today hoping to get people on my bandwagon. The group is called "Support a new Canadian author":

http://www.facebook.com/group.php?gid=30542102735&ref=ts

KP Wee is a new Canadian author with his first novel, "Showing Their Scales", which is available on Amazon.ca. If you're Canadian or live in the Pacific Northwest, help support this local author by requesting your local library to pick up a copy so that his work may be available to the public!

**And when I say "request your library to pick up a copy", I mean you can do this online on your library's homepage. You just need to leave your name & library card number. It will take you just five minutes. You don't need to go there in person!

**KEY WORDS: "LOCAL" author, "CANADIAN" author

Well, libraries are always, I think, looking to support local talent and writers, so perhaps if many people request they carry "Showing Their Scales", then maybe they would!

So, show your support by contacting your library today!

Sunday, October 5, 2008

Who cares...?


Okay, I was wrong about Joe Torre. Wrong about the Cubs. You could argue that Lou Piniella should have gotten his Mariners past the Yankees in 2000 and definitely in 2001.

Torre's Yankees won both.

Now in 2008, there is no excuse for Piniella's Cubs losing. Torre's Dodgers would have been fifth in the NL Central with that mediocre record, for crying out loud...


Today's KP Links:

http://bleacherreport.com/articles/65317-did-the-nhl-season-really-start-today

http://bleacherreport.com/articles/65306-joe-torres-october-magic-continues

Saturday, October 4, 2008

Curse the Internet!

Curses! The Internet is causing people to lose their jobs! Perhaps some occupations will become obsolete much like typewriters, encyclopedias, VCRs to an extent, and so on.

It's funny too, one of the companies I work for recently started using new software to help make our lives easier. The thing is, people will still be needed to interpret the data gathered by the software, so the staff will be safe... :-) Being the team leader, I had to personally reassure one of the staff not to worry. Haha!


Today's Random Links
They got fired... thanks to the Internet
More laptops - no surprise
A humbling experience to go through?

Go Cubs go!


Rick and Trout mocked me for not understanding the difference between "like" and "cheer for" in terms of picking teams to win.

Cliff picked the Dodgers to oust the Cubs in four, and that prediction is looking pretty good right now, with L.A. up 2-0.

But I really don't want to see the Dodgers win, especially since they were a mediocre team during the season and because of the Joe Torre/Manny Ramirez/Nomar Garciaparra factor. They're all annoying. Hope to see the Cubs pull it out... Go Lou Piniella and the Cubbies!

I mean, you just don't forget how to win suddenly, right? The Cubs were the best in the NL the entire regular season, after all... (ahem, the 2008 L.A. Angels, the Ottawa Senators of recent years... cough cough...)

Wednesday, October 1, 2008

KP Wee Author Reading - Vancouver


If there is enough interest, perhaps I will schedule a KP Wee author reading.

I believe CK and GG probably will be interested, but we'll see if anyone else is.

Should anybody who views this site would like to partake in this reading and is in the Vancouver area, feel free to shoot me an email at:


Don't you want to know about "Chasing Rainbow Trout"?

Cheers!

Shame on the AL Central


Some of my random thoughts on the White Sox-Twins rivalry... Interesting quote from Jim Thome--which I bashed.

Enjoy!

http://bleacherreport.com/articles/63746-chicago-white-sox-minnesota-twins-random-thoughts

Tuesday, September 30, 2008

"Mission at the J."


After putting it off for a couple weeks and re-writing and editing my manuscript, I've finally decided to submit my title "Mission at the J(essop)." It's a story not unlike "Fess Up, Jessup."

My goal for this is to have both stories put together in one book, since the two of them have strikingly similar titles (because I'd done that on purpose).

Time to keep my fingers crossed!

Saturday, September 27, 2008

Why all the hate for Colesy?


All that debate on OA.com recently by Rick, House, and myself, followed by Jared Smith's Bleacher Report article, has made me post this article.

The gist of it is I just can't understand why people insist on bashing a Canadian icon. A legend.

Friday, September 26, 2008

Hope no postseason for The Kid

People are going to bash me for this but I'll say it anyway.

I don't want to see the White Sox make the postseason for the simple fact I don't like Ken Griffey Jr. At the time when they picked him up, they didn't really need him, and honestly, Griffey is washed up and yet is liked by the media. I say it's better they miss the playoffs.

(Don't remind me of the Ray Bourque-to-Colorado fiasco; I could go on and on about that silly deal.)

Glad to see the White Sox getting swept in Minnesota this week as the Twins have now moved past Chicago in the AL Central race.

Wow - the Red Sox lost 19-8 at Fenway tonight to the Yankees, and Boston's defeat meant Tampa Bay won the AL East. Yes, 19-8. The same score as Game Three of the 2004 ALCS...

Today's Random Sports Links:
Jared Smith's take on the Twins and White Sox
Thigpen 1st HR & Richmond 1st victory as Jays win
Denver + Oakland = Love!

Today's Random Links:
Canada's fertility rate
Grandpa told he's pregnant! LOL
Stop people from spying on your company e-mail!

Just for House: NYY praising


More love for the Bombers, just for resident Zonker (and leader) House; enjoy!




Thursday, September 25, 2008

What does failure mean?

I received correspondence from one of the kids' magazines I'd submitted to, notifying me the 700-word story "Saving Trout" will not be published. (Trout was right!!)

I wasn't at all disappointed about it; after all, if I'm getting my manuscript "Replacement Pitcher" published by a book publisher, why would I fret about a short story not being accepted by a children's magazine?

But what constitutes a failure? Surely the fact the article didn't get accepted doesn't mean that.

I mean, think about it. I've had students before who have gotten perfect scores on one of my weekly tests, and yet at the end of the program hadn't done well enough to receive a diploma. Some have scored very low marks on tests but have gotten that piece of paper.

So, one bad performance doesn't mean anything. One good one doesn't either.

Virgil Trucks threw two 1-0 no-hitters in the same season once, but went 5-19 that year.

Ron Tugnutt once made 70 saves in a single game at Boston Garden, but was 17 games under .500 that year. For his career, the Tugger was 53 games on the negative side.

Brian Boucher made modern-day history with five straight shutouts but faded later in the year.

The Blue Jays' Chris Michalak started the 2001 season 3-0 with two victories against the powerful Yankees, but didn't even finish the season with Toronto.

I wouldn't call Trucks or Tugnutt's careers failures by any stretch of the imagination, despite some struggles along the way. Others made not see it that way. Whatever.

I'd say one could have his or her moment of glory, but it doesn't necessarily mean it would last. On the other hand, one failure doesn't mean that person is doomed for life.

Either way, doesn't matter. I have "Replacement Pitcher"; that's all I care about right now. :-)

Wednesday, September 24, 2008

Vindication!

Trout will no doubt slam me for this, but I say it's vindication time.

Yesterday I came across a link in which the second anonymous poster shared some crummy experience with some well-known bookstores (see Random Thoughts IV).

To me, that story was a classic, only because it shows that someone out there counted his or her chickens before they were hatched.

Reading that just made my day, as last year, I was criticized by many on Bleacher Report because I wrote negative things about people's favourite (and generally overrated/overpaid) athletes or teams. People called me names, wrote offensive comments, and generally called me a failure and a loser/wannabe, and whatever derogatory things you could imagine.

I could look up those articles again and post those dumb comments on here, but I couldn't be bothered to do that.

In the end, I'm not any of those things that I was labelled. I've now, with "Replacement Pitcher", had several books published. How can that be a failure?

You could call the second anon poster one, but certainly not me. :-) It cracks me up every single time I think about that person's plight. I certainly feel vindicated. I purposely chose a small publisher--because I want to get published. Others will feel those big, traditional ones are the true big leagues, in which case, I'll point to that aforementioned link again. HAHA!

I mean, I've come across many many negative people throughout my life, and all I can say is, whatever. I could care less what they think. You don't pay my bills, I don't care what you think.

So, this upcoming NHL season and the current NFL campaign, if I want to write any bashing articles on overpaid athletes, I really could care less about negative feedback from any reader.

The only regret I have? I was not able to find a photo of Dennis Eckersley and his finger-pointing/fist-pumping gestures, and had to settle for the Nelson "HAHA" picture above.

Vindication!

Tuesday, September 23, 2008

Random (Baseball & Book) Thoughts IV

A bad night in baseball...

-Cliff Lee lost, dropping his record to 22-3 as the Indians fell to Boston 5-4, clinching the Red Sox's second straight postseason berth. (Had Lee not lost another ballgame, he would have surpassed Greg Maddux's record for highest winning percentage. Maddux was 19-2 in 1995--for a .905 WPct.)

-The Yankees, who were eliminated thanks to the Red Sox's win, gave Mike Mussina his 19th win of the season. The Moose still has a shot at No. 20... this weekend in Boston.

-The Dodgers won again, 10-1 against San Diego, while Arizona lost to the Cardinals (haha - odd saying that if you're an NFL fan). L.A. is almost guaranteed to win the NL West.

Anyway, just googling tonight for bookstore info, and, HAHA! it looks like I'm not that bad when it comes to my books. Even though I'm not with a big, traditional book publisher, I'm not in that bad of a situation. Read the first link below, in the random links section. HAHA! :-) And actually, a bigger HAHA in the second link too, with one of the posters in the comments section. :-) Some people actually set themselves up for big disappointments!

(And to be honest, and I've said this from day one, when it comes to publishing books, I'm like a home run hitter like Bonds or Ramirez. I want to see--read: admire--my name in print. That's more important than anything else. Just like how those sluggers want to just stand at home plate and admire their moon shots with a big smile on their faces and not run out of the box. That's me when it comes to seeing my name.)

Today's Random Links
It doesn't always pay to publish with traditional companies! :-)
Where's my book? :-)

Today was certainly a good day too. I did get that Costco membership card, bring my class to the warehouse store, and got no hassles (unlike at Superstore two months ago, an experience which I'd posted about before but now too lazy to look it up and link it here). Go Costco!!

Monday, September 22, 2008

Update: "Replacement Pitcher" accepted for publication!


Hooray! "The Replacement Pitcher" has been accepted by Cacoethes Publishing House for publication, scheduled to be released June 2009.


That's a long ways away, but nonetheless, a day of celebration to be sure! Not as big as Sunday night's celebration for the closing of Yankee Stadium, but a great personal achievement for yours truly.


Celebrate!

Today's Random Link:

Sunday, September 21, 2008

Thoughts on Al Leiter?

Well, all this talk of Mike Mussina and 1993, and seeing "Deja Blue" on ESPN Classic (Canada) this weekend (the network re-aired the '93 Fall Classic again), I can't help but talk about Al Leiter again.

Leiter won Game One in relief, a game in which Curt Schilling couldn't hold on to three leads the Phillies had given him.

But I'm curious as to how House, Rick, Cliff, and the Trouts think about Leiter.

After all, the Blue Jays carried him for years while he was battling his blister problems. The lefty earned two World Series rings. And when he became a free agent at the conclusion of the 1995 season, Leiter bolted for the Florida Marlins.

Yes, so did Devon White.

Yes, losing Robbie Alomar to division rival Baltimore was bad, too.

Leiter's case, however, was different.

There was no hard feelings in White's signing with Florida (he wanted to be closer to his father, who lived in Jamaica, and Miami would be a shorter trip), while Alomar left the Blue Jays on bad terms and was unhappy during the latter half of the '95 season.

With the relatively young Leiter (who was finally coming off a good season), the Jays were looking to rebuild, and looked at the lefty as the key in their rotation. They felt Leiter owed them, for not giving up on him throughout his injuries.

Leiter, however, had other ideas, and left.

There was certainly a lot of bitterness from the Blue Jays. Paul Beeston, President and CEO of the Jays, wanted Leiter to lose every game in a Marlins uniform.

Leiter did win another World Series ring with the '97 Marlins, and pitched in the postseason for the Mets in 1999 and 2000.

Leiter, however, would never win a postseason start in his career, and wouldn't win a game in playoff action again (aside from his aforementioned '93 relief win) until his final appearance, in the 2005 ALDS vs. the Angels while a member of the New York Yankees.

So, House, Rick, Cliff, and the others: how does Al Leiter rank in your books? Traitor? Winner? Legend? Please comment.

Stop the Moose

The Blue Jays were mathematically eliminated from postseason contention thanks to Sunday's 3-0 loss to Boston.

(How about that Scott Richmond, now 0-3 in four starts, with the Jays losing all of them?)

Now, the attention turns to stopping Mike Mussina from getting 20 wins. The Moose has 18 so far, and will look for No. 19 on Tuesday at Rogers Centre.


If you remember what happened in the 1993 All-Star Game in Baltimore and how Cito Gaston was booed, you'd probably not want to see Mussina get his first ever 20-win campaign.

Brief Resume Highlights

Writing Experience
- Bleacher Report: contribute articles on the Vancouver Canucks, Boston sports, hockey, and baseball at least three times a week (2007-Present); edit sports-related articles from other posters (2008-Present)
- UCL: developed Career Planning curriculum (2007); consulted on for other curricula issues (2005-Present)
- Consumer Research: submitted unsolicited proposals for improvements on company operations (2005)
- B.U.D. College: developed Grammar curriculum consisting of five levels (2004); edited curricula for other courses (2004)
- KGIC: developed Career Planning curriculum proposal for Surrey campus (2004)
Writing Accomplishments
- Named Bleacher Report Bruins Community Leader (2008)