By Francis Moran
It might seem odd for this tech-focused blog to be writing about ringette, Canada’s other very cool game played on ice. Believe it or not, however, Ringette Canada was an original inmedia PR client, one for which I had been working for a few years when I founded the agency in 1998.
Another inmedia original was Alayne Martell, who was employee number 3, joining us scant days after we legally incorporated the company. Alayne swiftly assumed responsibility for the ringette account and, when she and inmedia parted ways a few years back, we agreed it made most sense that she take that account along with her.
Alayne being the phenomenal media relations practitioner she is, she has built up the account and continues to provide incredible service to the Canadian — and, periodically, even the international — ringette community notwithstanding that she lives on tiny Brier Island off the very tip of Digby Neck in her native Nova Scotia.
Alayne told me a few days ago about a terrific media hit for the sport and I promised her I would blog about it here. The CBC’s resident funny man and political satirist Rick Mercer suited up last month with the Cambridge Turbos of the National Ringette League and the piece will run on The Rick Mercer Report tonight at 8 p.m., repeating on Friday at 7:30 p.m.
Maybe the only thing in Canada faster than Mercer’s mouth when he’s doing one of his famous rants is a ringette player closing in on the net. Tune in; it should be a hoot.



/// COMMENTS
No Comments »Eric Hollebone
March 03, 2009 1:09 pmFrancis,
You will make the women in my household very happy for any and all press that ringette can garner. It is a fantastic but under publicized sport where the girls and women can out skate just about any boy or man of the same age. As my daughter shirt sees: “If hockey was hard it would be called Ringette”. 🙂
Eric Hollebone
March 03, 2009 1:10 pmI forgot to add a link http://www.ottawaringette.on.ca
alayne
March 04, 2009 10:58 pmThanks for the kind words and the plug for ringette. The show was a success all around with 1.1 million viewers clocked. Hopefully that exposure will translate into bigger and better things all around. Take care Francis.