Open Season
The Hunting Issue
by Paula Routly (11/07/07)...
You're History?
A new chapter at the Vermont Folklife Center brings a different director, a bigger building and a state-of-the-art audio lab
by Paula Routly (11/07/07)...
Gun Shy
Why is Vermont’s hunter population dwindling?
by Ken Picard (11/07/07)...
Of Elk and Men
A Northeast Kingdom “farm” fights for the right to raise fenced game
by Mike Ives (11/07/07)...
Killer Instinct
A Seven Days editor confesses his oft-taboo passion
by Patrick Ripley (11/07/07)...
Southern Discomfort
Theater review: The Miss Firecracker Contest
by Elisabeth Crean (11/07/07)...
Broken, But Still Sociable
Kevin Drew discusses staying in the Scene
by Dan Bolles (11/07/07)...
Big Picture Politics
Vermont’s newest think tank — Public Assets Institute — does the state’s math homework
by Ken Picard (10/31/07)...
Weekly Dose
A Middlebury volunteer clinic quietly cares for the un- and underinsured — including migrant workers
by Mike Ives (10/31/07)...
Digestible Democracy
An über-foodie dishes up people-powered politics
by Mike Ives (10/31/07)...
Head Trip
Book review: The Lamentations of Julius Marantz
by Amy Lilly (10/31/07)...
Going for Baroque
Review: Burlington Chamber Orchestra
by Elisabeth Crean (10/31/07)...
An Arm and A Leg
Short Story
by Nancy Stearns Bercaw (10/24/07)...
Dead Reckoning
A Vermont casket maker thinks inside the plain wood box
by Patrick Timothy Mullikin (10/24/07)...
Branching Out
A Bristol nonprofit talks to the trees
by Mike Ives (10/24/07)...
Reel Authority
A film scholar shows her “secret” movies in the Old North End
by Margot Harrison (10/24/07)...
Holiday Horror
Theater review: Inspecting Carol
by Elisabeth Crean (10/24/07)...
Scrum Chum
Middlebury rugby coach Ward Patterson tackles a college club
by Sarah Tuff (10/24/07)...
Monster Mash Up
A Seven Days guide to this year’s creepiest, crawliest hell-raisin’ Halloween hootenannies
by Dan Bolles (10/24/07)...
Just Say Know
Finally, faith-based sex education that doesn’t leave teens groping in the dark
by Ken Picard (10/17/07)...
Raising the Roof
A Waitsfield design/build school drafts post-carbon plans
by Mike Ives (10/17/07)...
Acting on Hate
Theater preview: The Laramie Project
by Kevin J. Kelley (10/17/07)...
Close Up the Honky-Tonk? Not a Chance
Starline Rhythm Boys make it a two-fer — live recording weekend
by Dan Bolles (10/17/07)...
The Wall Has Two Sides
Two Vermonters – a Palestinian refugee and an American Jewish sailor - remember the early days of Arab/Israeli conflict
by Ken Picard (10/10/07)...
Art Hop Sound Off
The debate rages on over Peter Schumann’s “Independence Paintings” at the 2007 South End Art Hop
Send us your feedback (10/10/07)...
[HUMOR]

And the Loser Is...
Seven Days comics IRV

by Staff (03/01/06).

One hundred seventy-four people voted in the Seven Days Comics Contest. They ranked 10 entries in reverse order of preference -- 1st=worst; 10th=best -- in an electoral exercise with a dual purpose: to demonstrate Burlington’s new system of Instant Run-off Voting, and to single out a winner, er, loser, that we could strip from the paper.

Here’s how it went:

In the initial round of voting, which represents everyone’s “first choice,” “Maakies” took the loser lead, with 50 votes -- a full 19 votes more than “Mr. Grieves,” which garnered 31. In a traditional race, that would be the end of it: “Maakies” would be declared number one, with 28.7 percent of the vote. But Instant Runoff requires the winner to receive more than 50 percent of the vote. So we kept on counting . . .

How? By going to the bottom of the list, where “Troubletown” and “Idiot Box” were tied for last place, with six votes each. Last-place comic “Troubletown” was first to be eliminated; but its ballots, which stay “alive” in the IRV system, were all redistributed to their next-ranked choice. “Maakies,” “Story Minute,” “Mild Abandon,” “Lu Lu Eightball,” “Ogg’s World” and “Idiot Box” all got a small boost from that.

Next to go was “Idiot Box.” Then “Ogg’s World,” “Lu Lu Eightball,” “Ted Rall,” and so on, with the surviving comic candidates picking up percentage points with each subsequent departure.

After eight rounds, only three remained: “Maakies” had picked up 12.7 points, but was still shy of 50 percent, with 41.4 percent. “Mr. Grieves” maintained its second-place position, with 32.5 percent. The third-place comic, “Herb & Rose” now counted for 26 percent of the vote.

The shake-up came in the ninth round, when third-place “Herb & Rose” was eliminated. In redistributing those final 44 ballots, “Mr. Grieves” picked up a great many more votes than “Maakies,” making it the most depised comic in Seven Days with 51.9 percent of the vote. “Maakies” came in with 48.1 percent. A last-minute turn-around! Proof that in the IRV system, every vote -- and every ranking within each vote -- really counts.

Still don’t get it? Go to www.demochoice.org/dcresults.php for the round-by-round explanation, with color visuals.


info

ROUND 1
MAAKIES
by Tony Millionaire 50 (28.7%)

MR. GRIEVES
by Scott Semegran 31 (17.8%)

STORY MINUTE
by Carol Lay 16 (9.2%)

HERB & ROSE
by Herb van der Poll & Rose Montgomery 16 (9.2%)

MILD ABANDON
by E.J. Pettinger 16 (9.2%)

TED RALL
by Ted Rall 12 (6.9%)

LU LU EIGHTBALL
by Emily Flake 12 (6.9%)

OGG's WORLD
by Doug Ogg 9 (5.2%)

IDIOT BOX
by Matt Bors 6 (3.4%)

TROUBLETOWN
by Lloyd Dangle 6 (3.4%)

*****

RESULTS

TROUBLETOWN
by Lloyd Dangle --Defeated

ROUND 8
MAAKIES
by Tony Millionaire 70 (41.4%)

MR. GRIEVES
by Scott Semegran 55 (32.5%)

HERB &; ROSE
by Herb van der Poll & Rose Montgomery 44 (26.0%)

NONE OF THESE 5

*****

RESULTS
HERB & ROSE
by Herb van der Poll & Rose Montgomery --Defeated


ROUND 9
MAAKIES
by Tony Millionaire 78 (48.1%)

MR. GRIEVES
by Scott Semegran 84 (51.9%)

NONE OF THESE 12

*****

RESULTS
MAAKIES
by Tony Millionaire --Defeated

MR. GRIEVES
by Scott Semegran --Elected

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