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NOVEMBER
26, 2025
I like to explore my surroundings. When I used to travel to faraway cities in oder to telecast events, I'd walk out of my hotel and check out the next several blocks of Boston, San Francisco, Santa Monica, Tokyo, Montreal, London, Miami Beach, two Portlands, and so on. Now that I've become less spry, I do my sightseeing in my car instead of on foot. As a child, I used to ride with my parents up and down the roads surrounding our rural village. As an adult, I drive the roads northeast of Pittsburgh, passing fields and pastures and Ekastown and Chicora and Walkchalk and other exotic places you've probably never heard of.
One day I decided on a route through the village in Buffalo Township seen below. But I couldn't remember its name. Was it Shaler? No, that's closer to Pittsburgh. But I felt confident the town's name did began with S and did contain two syllables. I knew I'd eventually come up with it, just as I always do.
Several minutes later, as I turned onto the road that leads to the road that leads up to the town, my brain dug up the answer.
NOVEMBER
23, 2025
After death, will good people go to heaven while others won't? Don't be childish, says the Bible. Everyone dies. All share a common fate the righteous and the wicked, the good and the bad, the clean and the unclean, those who offer sacrifices and those who do not. As it is with the good, so with the sinful; as it is with those who take oaths, so with those who are afraid to take them. The same destiny overtakes all. (Ecclesiastes 9:2-3 NIV) Christian preachers, of course, ignore this part of God's Word. They assure us that a fraction of us are in fact bound for eternal paradise. However, entry into heaven doesn't depend on a scorecard of being naughty or nice. It requires only a profession of faith, accepting what the preachers tell us. If you declare with your mouth, Jesus is Lord, and believe in your heart that God raised him from the dead, you will be saved. (Romans 10:9 NIV)
NOVEMBER
20, 2015 I was a morning radio disk jockey, briefly, when I was a college senior back in 1969. One day a week on campus radio station WOBC near Cleveland, I played Top 40 hits on Sunrise! from 6:00 to 8:00 AM. The station had been silent for several hours when I fired up the transmitter at 5:59, read the sign-on continuity, and played my first record. Almost all of my fellow students were still in bed, upstairs in their various dormitories, and I was theoretically waking them up. I imagined myself as their alarm clock. What was that first record? It varied from week to week, of course. But when Gordon Lightfoot released a certain album the following year, the thought occurred to me: Had this been in the record library when I was a DJ, the first song on it would have been a good opening theme. It begins quietly, without introduction. Gordon Lightfoot breaks the morning silence by proclaiming:
Hes trying to get into things more happy than blue, Lightfoot sings of the minstrel. Then his 12-string guitar picks up the tempo, getting into the happier, more energetic rock tunes I would play on Sunrise! But I worried about the mention, later in the lyrics, of Stepin Fetchit. That shambling black character, portrayed in old movies by Will Rogerss friend Lincoln Perry, pretended to be "The Laziest Man in the World." Should we be celebrating this racist stereotype? It wasn't until recently, more than four decades later, that I did a little research on Stepin Fetchit. By the 1960s, Perry had left that character behind. Now, he said, I do stand-up comedy. No takes from the old movies. That age is gone. (Quotes from Shuffling to Ignominy: The Tragedy of Stepin Fetchit, by Champ Clark.) Once he was performing in Cleveland. My wife and I were just voted the good-neighbor award. We even went out and burned our own cross. My grandfather was one of the first politicians in Mississippi. Yeah, he ran for the borders. Lightfoot was singing in another club across the street and caught Perrys act several times. This information allows us to have a poignant perspective on the lyrics, which Ive rearranged somewhat.
NOVEMBER
17, 2025
Why is the music on some television shows so loud that you can hardly hear the talking? That's the No. 1 most-asked question received by Pittsburgh's Rob Owen during two decades of writing a TV Q&A column. How to fix the situation? Rob doesn't have a one-size-fits-all suggestion. But as for me, I haven't yet developed hearing problems, I don't think.
NOVEMBER
15, 2025
Before I retired, I was a member of TV crews that televised athletic events.
Both championships are big events, prominently reported in the American press except this year, when the United States didn't qualify for the Final 8. However, it's only in odd-numbered years that one of them is contested (I can't remember which one).
NOVEMBER
13, 2025
Yesterday, on a day when two government bodies simultaneously came to their senses when holdout legislators in the Capitols of both the United States and the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania at last gave up and allowed a Federal shutdown to end after 43 days and a state budget to be adopted after a 134-day impasse I pivoted from that news to appreciate a minor feat of television technique. Pittsburgh's WPXI-TV sent a reporter to describe an incident that had taken place in three locations in the borough of Dormont. She began by standing in front of the first building.
Obviously we were seeing three separate takes, but her voice quality matched perfectly: pitch, volume, pace, everything. The edited pauses between sentences sounded completely natural, neither too clipped nor too long. And we never caught sight of the moments when her narration stopped or resumed. If I had not been watching the screen, I would not have noticed the cuts; the piece sounded seamless. Nice trick, WPXI-TV newspeople!
I've recently rediscovered a recording of a memorable episode of a TV panel quiz show which I viewed as a teenager more than six decades ago.
NOVEMBER
8, 2015 As an eighth-grade student in 1960, I followed the unusually close Presidential election campaign. From school I had obtained the map you see below. I added little rectangles for the states of Alaska and Hawaii, which were too new to have outlines of their own. For each state I wrote in its number of electoral votes.
Then on November 8 of that year, 55 years ago tonight, I was glued to the TV as the returns came in. Whenever Walter Cronkite and his colleagues called a state for Republican Richard Nixon, I colored in that state with a red pencil. And when they declared that Democrat John F. Kennedy had won a state, I used a green pencil. (Had I been aware of 21st-century coloring rules, these would have been blue states, not green.) When I had to go to bed we did have school the next day, you know the results of some far western states were still uncertain. Alaska hadnt been called at all, and California and Hawaii had been called incorrectly, as it turned out. What about that area in Mississippi and Alabama that I colored chartreuse? Most people there had sworn never to vote for a hated Yankee from the Republican party, the party of Lincoln. But they didnt like the liberal Democratic nominee either. Their uncommitted electoral votes eventually went to a conservative Democrat, Harry Byrd of Virginia. Nevertheless, Kennedy was elected, in large part because the key state of Illinois narrowly remained green. The liberal Democrats subsequently passed civil rights legislation. That provoked Southern bigots to abandon the party and actually vote Republican. Eight years later, when Nixon ran again, only two states south of West Virginia went to Democrat Hubert Humphrey. Even today the South consists mostly of red states.
NOVEMBER
5, 2025
The details are in my article called Retention.
Construct an empty tube from here to there. Insert a cylinder containing documents, or even people. Use compressed air to push the cylinder from one end to the other. Its a simple concept that powered New York Citys first subway. It also powered New York's pneumatic tube mail, which carried letters from downtown to Harlem in only 20 minutes under the streets. The early subway closed in 1873 and the mail system in 1953, but when I was a boy, an Ohio department store still used pneumatic tubes to whoosh customers money upstairs to the office and return with their change. Many bank branches employ this technology even today. We used to drive up to a bank branch's window and pass things back and forth to the teller using a sliding drawer. Nowadays tubes and intercoms allow us to interact with a teller who can be somewhere else inside the building. This bank in nearby Russellton, PA, needed a drive-through like that, but the only available land was across the river. Excuse me, across Little Deer Creek. Solution: bridge the creek with an 80-foot tube. Mega-pneumatics in action.
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