- Dear Margo: When Dad/Gramps Just Ain't Interested
- Could Mammograms Fall Victim to Obamacare? by Liz Peek
- Liz Smith: Sharon Stone, Steve Tyrell, Sarah (You Know Who), Glamour, Lesley Gore – and More!
- LIZ SMITH FLASH! The Kennedy Conspiracy and the Mafia
- Remember shopping pre-Internet? What era/memory in the evolution of shopping do you think of most fondly?
- The Love Goddess: In Sickness and in Health ... But Hold the Sickness
- Let Down and Felt Up? by E.D. Hill
- Mr. wOw: Falling in Love Again With 'Marlene'
- The World in Vogue (Photos)
- Caption This!
- LIZ SMITH FLASH! The Kennedy Conspiracy and the Mafia
- Dear Margo: When Dad/Gramps Just Ain't Interested
- Liz Smith: Sharon Stone, Steve Tyrell, Sarah (You Know Who), Glamour, Lesley Gore – and More!
- Could Mammograms Fall Victim to Obamacare? by Liz Peek
- Remember shopping pre-Internet? What era/memory in the evolution of shopping do you think of most fondly?
- Mr. wOw: Falling in Love Again With 'Marlene'
- The Love Goddess: In Sickness and in Health ... But Hold the Sickness
- Caption This!
- Lily Tomlin Is Coming to NYC!
- Joan Ganz Cooney Still Shops the Way She Always Has
- Could Mammograms Fall Victim to Obamacare? by Liz Peek
- Dear Margo: When Dad/Gramps Just Ain't Interested
- Let Down and Felt Up? by E.D. Hill
- Caption This!
- Remember shopping pre-Internet? What era/memory in the evolution of shopping do you think of most fondly?
- LIZ SMITH FLASH! The Kennedy Conspiracy and the Mafia
- Mr. wOw: Falling in Love Again With 'Marlene'
- The Love Goddess: In Sickness and in Health ... But Hold the Sickness
- Liz Smith: Sharon Stone, Steve Tyrell, Sarah (You Know Who), Glamour, Lesley Gore – and More!
- The World in Vogue (Photos)































My Comments (4091 so far…)
wOw Reports: What News Matters to You – And Why?
Frankly, my dear…I do give a darn. Yep…they cranked it out loud and hard. Just an awesome, professionally done show.
Have fun at the Peanut Fest!
wOw Reports: What News Matters to You – And Why?
wOw Reports: What News Matters to You – And Why?
I don’t know where to start, there are and have been so many amazing things going on in Grand Rapids. Last night (9-12), I saw an awesome concert at Rosa Parks Circle outdoor amphitheatre in downtown Grand Rapids. The Concussions opened up for The Edgar Winter Band. Both bands were scintillating on an ideal-weather night. There were a few thousand outside for the show.
Grand Rapids launches an amazing international art contest next Wednesday called ArtPrize, with the winner getting $250,000. I’ll post a link below to an AP article about it. One guy I interviewed live on WJRW radio, Rob Bliss, plans to have 100,000 multi-colored paper planes dropped from a series of skyscrapers downtown at the same time, to form a kaleidoscope of colors. A huge throng of musicians will be on the street below playing a theme song.
Another guy was standing on top of an "International Peace Bomb" for 24 hours that was hoisted up 45 feet by a crane. He stood on that reconceptualization-themed art bomb sketching two paintings among 84 that he will piece together into a giant painting called, I Do Have a Dream, with Dr. M.L.K. JR and other stuff on it. Each set of paintings will be crafted while the artist is performing a different stunt, such as while skydiving.
Another lad needed two huge cranes to help install a giant artwork at a bridge over the Grand River. This week, a renowned New York artist will have her artwork installed on Calder Plaza, the huge outdoor epicenter downtown. The Calder, itself, is an artwork that was installed in 1969 and has been part of the city logo ever since. You can read more here: http://today.msnbc.msn.com/id/30371090/#storyContinued
http://today.msnbc.msn.com/id/32631146 (The Man in the Van)
Then, another event that will bring national publicity to my hometown of Grand Rapids begins Sept. 14-15. It’s called the Velocity program, run by a group titled, CEO’s for Change. A group of heavy-hitters in business, etc., will launch it Monday and Tuesday in G.R. Please check it out: How can cities deliver a new and much-sought after American good life that is both sustainable and delightful to citizens? That question will be at the center of a two-day creative salon of 40 select experts from a variety of fields held in Grand Rapids on Sept. 14-15, which will launch VELOCITY, a movement to imagine and cultivate the best future for our cities and city living. To jumpstart the thinking on VELOCITY, our team developed a brief framing piece that demonstrates how cities are the best and most logical place for a new American dream to be realized. Read it here. And if you haven’t read it, check out Carol Coletta’s blog post on GOOD that sets…
http://sustainablog.org/2009/08/24/ceos-for-cities%E2%80%99-velocity-american-dream-20/
Trader Vic's, Horn & Hardart, Schrafft's … What now-extinct food establishment still tugs at your memory?
That’s amazing! Yep, 760 WJR- Detroit, the legendary "Great Voice of the Great Lakes." It was so sad when it came out last week that Ernie Harwell, the radio/TV voice of the Tigers for decades, has incurable bile-duct cancer. I don’t know if there is one person in the United States who is more beloved. I mean, I have never heard one bad word about Harwell, but everyone - and I mean everyone! - just RAVES about him. He is so very beloved. A great Christian, gentle, a baseball historian, and to many people’s ears, the greats baseball voice ever.
But giving him a run for the money is his long-time sidekick, Paul Carey. Paul has the deepest voice on the planet. He makes the so-called "Voice of God" on NFL films sound like a little girl. Paul is a magnificent character, too, and like Ernie, extremely humble.
Being on the new WJRW (Citadel owns both stations) in Grand Rapids has been phenomenally exhausting, but exciting at the same time. Today, I went to that all-faith service, as you may’ve heard live on our stream at wjrwam.com . Then, there was a nutcase (alleged) who gunned down 2 people in Owosso, Mich., today (Friday).
But your work at WJR impresses me! I’d love to know what years, and if you did it live in the JR studios. I assume your were in the Fisher Building, where WJR still sits "high atop the golden dome". I’m a huge fan of old-time radio. Once upon a time, it was king. It’s slowly been whittled away into a pile of commercialized crap over the decades. But I think a comeback could be in store, as smart-thinking corporations like Citadel are realizing that radio must return to its local roots to survive. Rather than playing ‘Stairway to Heaven’ 87 times a week, they’ll have to do something creative, because people can play their own tunes anytime they want on iPOD, YouTube, whatever. Satellite radio has become a falling meteorite in a very short time, for that very reason. Same with the music biz.
The epiphany? That the pioneers of radio and music did it right!
Trader Vic's, Horn & Hardart, Schrafft's … What now-extinct food establishment still tugs at your memory?
On the anniversary of 9/11, what do you carry in your heart about this day?
Announcing the Winner of Our 'Caption This' Contest
Caption This!
Trader Vic's, Horn & Hardart, Schrafft's … What now-extinct food establishment still tugs at your memory?
Trader Vic's, Horn & Hardart, Schrafft's … What now-extinct food establishment still tugs at your memory?
Trader Vic's, Horn & Hardart, Schrafft's … What now-extinct food establishment still tugs at your memory?
wOw's Had a Face-Lift (Well, Only Some Botox)
Are you free to disclose which site that is?
I think the value of audio is that it is much more interactive and personal than the mere written word. You can have a better back-and-forth with a ton more information condensed into a couple minutes of easy listening. Also, multiple people can converse at once, if it’s a conference or party call on the phone. Written and visual elements have their strengths, too, obviously. It’s just good to have the audio option available for when it’s desirable.
Diminished Labor Unions Have a Friend in Obama, by Liz Peek
wOw's Had a Face-Lift (Well, Only Some Botox)
Absolutely. You can use that software to play/download mP3 audio clips, too. For example, you can point the cursor at a clip, right-click the mouse, then click the Save Target As. Once the file is saved somewhere in your computer (such as the Audio envelope), you can then import it into the Audacity software (for editing, playback, whatever). To do that, on the Audacity window click File, then Open. Click Export File As (whatever type of file you prefer, such as .WAV or mP3).
Once you have the audio in the Audacity window, the audio appears as a wavy pattern, obviously. You can click and drag certain portions that you want to highlight or delete. To save, say, a certain part of the interview, just click and drag the mouse to highlight the portion you want to save. Then, click Edit, then Copy or Cut. Next, click File, then New to create a "new" window. With the cursor arrow inside the audio box, simply click Edit then Paste to drop it into that new window. Now you have just the exact portion of audio you want. Now you can save it, if you want. Click File, then Save As. Give the audio file a name.
It sounds complicated, but is extremely simple. If you know how to cut and paste, you’re already 99% home free.
wOw's Had a Face-Lift (Well, Only Some Botox)