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Oct 14 2008

HighBall Intro: Walker Evans

posted by Dawn

Zombie WalkerWalker Evans is one of our city’s biggest fans so it’s no surprise to find him front and center on our HighBall planning committee. Besides serving on the North Market Development Authority Board of Trustees, the Create Columbus Commission, the Columbus Chamber of Commerce and the Columbus Metropolitan Club, Walker is the founder of Columbus Underground, the virtual community of the movers and shakers in Columbus. Walker is wearing several HighBall hats: Marketing Committee, Online Promotions and Volunteer Recruitment.

What’s your favorite kind of Halloween candy?

Anything sweet.

Least favorite Halloween candy?

Those unidentifiable chewy things wrapped in orange or black wax paper.

What was your best ever Halloween costume?

I loved going as Mario when I was a kid.

Are there any celebrity costumes you don’t want to see?

Sexy Sarah Palin Outfit

What part of the HighBall are you most excited about and why?

I’m looking forward to the party-in-the-street ambiance that you can’t find at any other Columbus Festival

Oct 13 2008

HighBall Intro: Charly Bauer

posted by Dawn

Charly and familyHighBall Halloween is the brain child of Charly Bauer, co-owner of the delectable, delightful Jeni’s Splendid Ice Creams where you can get your taste of fall with their seasonal Apple Cider 5-Spice Sorbet. Who better than Charly to start out the intros?

Charly is in charge of the Costume Contest Committee and helped come up with the categories. We’ve got prizes for Best Tag Team (for teams of 2 or more people),  Best King and Queen (Drag, that is), Best Celebrity Look-a-like and Most Artistically creative. Want details? Check out our Costume Contest page here.

What’s your favorite kind of Halloween candy?
White Wine.

Least favorite Halloween candy?
Circus Peanuts
What was your best ever Halloween costume?
Rubik’s Cube

What part of the HighBall are you most excited about and why?

The Costume Couture Fashion Show, because I’ve never seen anything like it.

Oct 05 2008

The birth of an event continues…

posted by shortnorth

HighBall keeps taking more strides toward becoming Columbus’ newest signature event. And though it never ceases to amaze me how much effort it takes to create a high-quality event, it also never ceases to amaze me how fun it can be when all the pieces begin to interconnect.

HighBall earned its stripes with the city this week when the department of transportation signed off on closing High Street from Buttles to Hubbard for the night. Though we had crossed our fingers for 6:00PM, we’re quite happy with the 6:30PM close time we were granted. This is a big deal. Closing High Street on a regular work day right after rush hour isn’t something that happens all that often. In fact, High Street event closings of the last five years have really been limited to holiday timings, such as Doo Dah’s 25th anniversary on the 4th of July. Everyone from the city to COTA to the Convention Center have now weighed in on HighBall. The question: “What is the balance of community experience versus the temporary traffic flow inconvenience?” The answer: “Extremely positive!”

Earlier this week, Charly Bauer and I shared the HighBall story with our friends at Experience Columbus. Paul Astleford, Pete McGinty, Xenia Palus, Beth Ervin, Kari Kaughman and the rest of the team (nearly 40 in all) were thrilled about the potential the event represents. In fact, we reconvened a few days later and discussed a regional push that involves sharing the story with upwards of 2,000 writers! Stay tuned on that front. Maybe we can get the entire state talking about it.

The key is the vision for the event and the role it plays in Columbus’ offerings. The development committee has been working extremely hard to make sure HighBall IS an artistic, experiential, wow-factor event… and that it IS NOT a mindless beerfest. This is a question looming for many folks watching the evolution of HighBall. This weekend I ran in to Haley Boehning at the Gallery Hop. She wasn’t shy about expressing her concern that an OU Halloween-bash-clone was in the works. I can understand her trepidations, but I have faith in the creative class of Columbus. If we start this event by taking the artistry dimension to the max, we’ll set the tone for years to come. The eye-candy we create this year will set the bar for the event next year. It’s our competitive spirit. The costumes will become even more elaborate. The staging more magical. The event more experiential.

If we inspire, challenge and reward… it will happen.

Now, I’m not saying that every person who comes to HighBall has to create a 9′ tall, flowing fabric, Priscilla Queen of the Dessert, screaming drag queen ensemble. A few would be cool! Expectation: maybe 10% of the attendees will really take it over the top and invest the energy to make a real statement. The other 90%? They will be there to see what the 10% do! And that’s just fine. That’s all it takes to make the difference.

So here’s to HighBall: the launch, the experience, the evolution. Let’s make it our experience. Columbus’ experience. And let’s make the region buzz with envy that we can pull it off!

Next up… convincing the mayor he would look great in a Venetian Carnivale mask.

Ciao, for now.

ja

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