Journalist @baltimoresun writer artist runner #amwriting Chaplain PIO #partylikeajournalist

Journalist @baltimoresun writer artist runner #amwriting Chaplain PIO #partylikeajournalist
Journalist @baltimoresun writer artist runner #amwriting Md Troopers Assoc #20 & Westminster Md Fire Dept Chaplain PIO #partylikeajournalist
Showing posts with label Art Library Writers Writing. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Art Library Writers Writing. Show all posts

Thursday, January 17, 2008

20080116 Carroll County Times columnist will be missed


Carroll County Times columnist will be missed

Letters to the Editor for Wednesday, January 16, 2008

Carroll County Times

Wednesday, January 16, 2008

Editor:

I was sad to read in the Neighbors of Central Carroll section of the paper on January 11 that Ruth Seitler has discontinued her column for health reasons.

Seitler has delighted readers, historians and fellow writers for almost 20 years with her column, "Of Times Past."

Charles Caleb Colton wrote in 1825: "Our admiration of fine writing will always be in proportion to its real difficulty and its apparent ease."

Seitler always made fine writing look easy and many readers were delighted with her insights and experiences.

Her column was comforting, and comfortable, and best read curled up on the couch with a warm cup of tea and honey. She always gave her readers a break from the hecticness of today as she took us on a journey back to times past.

Her son, Jim Seitler wrote the last column in which he noted that his mom "loved writing (the) column every week. She would often read it to me and tell me about the letters or calls she had received from 'her readers.'"

He wrote poignantly: "As children we think that time stands still and as adults we realize that it moves faster than we want."

Ruth Seitler wrote for so many years that many of us took it for granted that she would write forever. Obviously, time moves faster than we want.

It was apparent that she loved writing, and as one of her many dedicated readers I loved reading her writing. Her column will be missed. Our hearts and prayers go out to her and her family. Thank you for sharing the last 20 years.

Kevin Dayhoff

Westminster

http://www.carrollcountytimes.com/articles/2008/01/16/news/opinion/letters/letters762.txt


Wednesday, December 12, 2007

20071212 This week in The Tentacle

This week in The Tentacle

Wednesday, December 12, 2007

The Writers Strike and Christmas

Kevin E. Dayhoff

For those who are fans of early television, especially old Christmas movies and holiday specials, the strike by The Writers Guild of America, which began November 5, may have a temporary silver lining.

[…]

Meanwhile, for those who are writers comes the ultimate conundrum as posed best by Kim Masters, an entertainment correspondent for National Public Radio: “I don't understand how a WGA writer can turn off the writing part of his brain…”

Tennessee Williams summed it up when he said: “When I stop working the rest of the day is posthumous. I'm only really alive when I'm writing.”

[…]

I mentioned a silver lining. It will be short-lived, but at least for the Christmas season, network TV will fill in programming with the ghosts of Christmas past and show us as many of the old Christmas classics as possible.

And this is a good thing. From Christmas past, there are always re-runs of some of the great movies of the season, such as Frank Capra’s 1946 “It's a Wonderful Life,” with Jimmy Stewart, Donna Reed, and Lionel Barrymore.

Also on my list are: “The Miracle of the Bells,” from 1948, directed by Irving Pichel and starring Fred MacMurray, Alida Valli, Frank Sinatra, and Lee J. Cobb; and “Babes in Toyland,” from 1961, featuring Ray Bolger, Tommy Sands, Annette Funicello, and Tommy Kirk.

But my all-time favorite Christmas movie is the 1954 classic “White Christmas,” directed by Michael Curtiz and starring Bing Crosby, Danny Kaye and Rosemary Clooney.

For the writer and the artist in me, there is no better season for the many animated TV classics from the past. My top five would include “Frosty the Snowman,” from 1969, with the voice of Jimmy Durante; the 1964 classic “Rudolph the Red-Nosed Reindeer,” with Burl Ives; and Boris Karloff as the voice of the Grinch in the 1966 “How the Grinch Stole Christmas.”

My top pick is almost a tie, but “A Charlie Brown Christmas,” from 1965, gets edged out by “Mr. Magoo's Christmas Carol,” which first aired on December 18, 1962.

Read the entire column here: The Writers Strike and Christmas


Tuesday, December 11, 2007

Democrats Divide Again

Roy Meachum

Comedian and cowboy Will Rodgers coined one of my favorite sayings: "I belong to no organized political party: I'm a Democrat."


The Delegation’s Workload – Part 2

Richard B. Weldon Jr.

We’ve already looked at the county commissioners’ bill proposals that the county’s legislative delegation will wrestle with, now we’ll consider the bills that affect the whole state, not just our county. These face a much more difficult, if not impossible, path to passage. We’ll also take a gander at the policy statements of the Board of County Commissioners.


10 Dumb Questions I Get – Part 3

Nick Diaz

Readers may be glad to know that this is the last segment of the series on the 10 dumb questions asked of a motorcyclist; the first six of these questions appeared in the first two parts. Today we’ll round the set with the last four.


Monday, December 10, 2007

The Delegation’s Workload – Part 1

Richard B. Weldon Jr.

It hardly seems possible, but we’re less than a month away from the start of the 2008 General Assembly session. Last week, I included a highlight of the Board of County Commissioners legislative package. If you’re anything like the dozens of people who approached me this past week, you’re looking for more information, so here goes.


Jingoist Bells, Jingoist Bells…

Steven R. Berryman

…Jingo all the way. When did patriotism become a negative attribute of Americans, and why isn’t Pat Buchanan running for president in 2008? The advanced press for his new book, Day Of Reckoning, reads more like a campaign platform than it does a plot; his compilation of issues and proposed solutions leaves one feeling a patriotic sense of hope for us all again, so long as his warnings are positively received.

WE GET LETTERS!

WE GET LETTERS!!! A Walkersville resident takes issue with Steve Berryman's treatise on the Supreme Court's decision to hear the matter of the gun ownership law in Washington, DC. CLICK HERE!!! CLICK HERE!


Friday, December 7, 2007

Old, Destructive Politics

Roy Meachum

Over the past 150 years this nation's two-party system has been an unpleasant reality for politicians. Left to their own devices, they would decapitate and castrate organized opposition of any kind.


Operation Christmas Tree

Kevin E. Dayhoff

How do you ship 5,000 two-foot live Christmas trees to a war zone? Early last Saturday morning over 300 volunteers figured it out as they braved the wind and cold and turned out for “Operation Christmas Tree” at the Carroll County Agriculture Center.


Thursday, December 6, 2007

Questions and Answers

Chris Cavey

This week a friend referred to me as a glass half-full kind of guy. Jokingly I told him anyone who is an officer of the Maryland Republican Party is required to be an optimist, because if you don’t see a future for our party, you have no reason to be in leadership.


Wednesday, December 5, 2007

The President and Community Initiatives

Kevin E. Dayhoff

To commemorate World AIDS Day last Friday, President George W. Bush and his wife Laura met with representatives of faith-based groups in a roundtable discussion at Calvary United Methodist Church in Mount Airy.


Just Watching and Waiting

Tom McLaughlin

Things here in Ocean City are quieting down and there is very little traffic along beach highway. The hardware stores are empty compared to a year ago as the vacation housing boom has been reduced to a fizzle.


Tuesday, December 4, 2007

Partisanship or Prejudice

Roy Meachum

During the years spent hanging around the White House, I found it funny when a friend received a birthday book: "Republicans I Have Known and Loved." Inside were blank pages as might be expected among that Democratic crowd.


Editor's Note:

Farrell Keough

(Editor's Note: Farrell Keough's column, which would normally appear in this space today, is delayed by a fractious nuisance called illness. It will appear later this week.)


Raquel, Where are you?

Norman M. Covert

Nostalgia has a way of striking down the old folks when they least expect it. I saw an interview with Edward Powell, chief executive officer of the United Service Organization (USO), and was taken aback by his excuses why no big-name stars would entertain the troops in Iraq or Afghanistan this Christmas.


Monday, December 3, 2007

Christmas Cash & A Potpourri

Richard B. Weldon Jr.

Once again, the powers-to-be at Clear Channel Radio’s WFMD held their annual radiothon for Frederick County’s children. Christmas Cash for Kids consumed large chunks of air normally reserved for political, social, and financial chit-chat.


Side-Arms Showdown in DC

Steven R. Berryman

By upholding a lower court ruling, the District of Columbia gun ban could well be overturned with finality by the U.S. Supreme Court next spring. You might ask why this bothers both the NRA and The Brady Campaign.

Sunday, November 11, 2007

20071110 AP: Newsday - Writer Norman Mailer has died at age 84


AP: Newsday - Writer Norman Mailer has died at age 84



Nov 10, 2007



http://www.newsday.com/



Notable deaths


http://www.newsday.com/news/nationworld/sns-2007-deaths-pix,0,5859368.photogallery?coll=ny_wire_promo


(AP/Kathy Willens)



Norman Mailer, the pugnacious prince of American letters who for decades reigned as the country's literary conscience and provocateur with such books as "The Naked and the Dead" and "The Executioner's Song," died of acute renal failure on Nov. 10. He was 84.



Mailer built and nurtured an image over the years as bellicose, street-wise and high-living. He drank, fought, smoked pot, married six times and stabbed his second wife, almost fatally, during a drunken party.



He had nine children, made a quixotic bid to become mayor of New York City on a "left conservative" platform, produced five forgettable films, dabbled in journalism, flew gliders, challenged professional boxers, was banned from a Manhattan YWHA for reciting obscene poetry, feuded publicly with writer Gore Vidal and crusaded against women's liberation. (AP/Kathy Willens)


_____

Also see: CNN: Literary lion Norman Mailer dies By Todd Leopold CNN updated 9:24 p.m. EST, Sat November 10, 2007

Story Highlights:

Renowned author died of renal failure early Saturday

Influential novelist, essayist Mailer died at Mount Sinai Hospital at 84

Burst on scene with "The Naked and the Dead"

Wrote "The Armies of the Night," two-time Pulitzer Prize winner

more photos »

_____

19480000 to November 10 2007 Works by Norman Mailer

"The Naked and the Dead" 1948
"The Barbary Shore" 1951
"The Deer Park" 1955
"Advertisements for Myself" 1959
"The Presidential Papers" 1963
"An American Dream" 1965
"Why Are We in Vietnam?" 1967
"The Armies of the Night" (National Book Award, Pulitzer Prize) 1968
"Miami and the Siege of Chicago" 1968
"Of A Fire On the Moon" 1971
"The Prisoner of Sex," essay, 1971
"Existential Errands" 1972
"St. George and the Godfather," 1972
"Marilyn" 1973
"The Fight" 1975
"Some Honorable Men" 1975
"Genius and Lust" 1976
"A Transit to Narcissus" 1978
"The Executioner's Song" (Pulitzer Prize for Fiction) 1979
"Of Women and Their Elegance, Pieces and Pontifications,"
essay, 1982
"Ancient Evenings" 1983
"Tough Guys Don't Dance" 1984
"Harlot's Ghost" 1991
"The Gospel According to the Son" 1997

Monday, October 29, 2007

20071028 NPR: Backlash Against Slot Machines in W.Va. and other news from Appalachia

NPR: Backlash Against Slot Machines in W.Va. – and other news items from Appalachia

http://www.npr.org/search.php?text=slots

Oct-28-2007, All Things Considered

...at race tracks and other locations. Tomorrow, Maryland state legislature takes up the governor's proposal to legalize slots. It's also a big issue in the current governor's race in Kentucky....

Backlash Against Slot Machines in W.Va.

by Scott Finn

All Things Considered, October 28, 2007

West Virginia is one of a handful of states that allows slot machines and other forms of video gambling in neighborhood bars, as well as at racetracks. But while other states, such as Maryland and Kentucky, are considering expanding their gambling options, many West Virginians are now having second thoughts. Some find themselves torn between their socially conservative beliefs and the state's need for jobs.

Finn reports for West Virginia Public Broadcasting.

Inside Appalachia Listen hear.

Host: Beth Vorhees

Saturdays at 6 am - Sundays at 6 pm on radio

This hour-long weekly radio news magazine is devoted to topics of interest in the southern Appalachian region - shared issues, shared culture and shared history - with a new perspective.

_____

WV: Table Games by Keri Brown

In West Virginia, gamblers at three of the state's four racetracks will be able to play poker 24 hours a day. The state Lottery Commission approved all day gambling this week. Also, this week, the tracks that can offer casino style table games were given the go-ahead to open their poker rooms after a test of dealers and the regulatory processes. Players used play money and played for charity.


KY NewsBeshear Profile by Tony McVeigh, KPR

The governor’s race pits a republican incumbent against a democrat with a long political history.

Gov. Debate by Stu Johnson, WEKU

The two candidates for governor got their first shot before a statewide television audience this week on KY Educational Television.

Casino Gambling by Charles Compton, WEKU

Both the governor and the state horse industry say next week's election is a referendum of expanded gaming.


PA: Wind Farms

By Lisa Ann Pinkerton, Allegheny Front

By the end of 2008, PA will have 10 wind farms generating electricity. These farms are built without any state regulations. Instead, wind companies and the state work together to find what they consider to be appropriate sites. PA officials say this voluntary agreement, as it’s called, is a flexible set of rules that can change as the state's knowledge of wind farms grows. But critics say the agreement does more to protect companies than the environment.


WV: Bridge Day By Anna Sale

This weekend in October means its Bridge Day in Fayette County, WV. It’s the day each year when for six hours, it’s legal to parachute off the New River Gorge Bridge. As many as 200,000 spectators will watch. And organizers say despite a jumper fatality last year, participation this year was expected to be about the same.


WV: Banned Books By Scott Finn

Two critically-acclaimed novels by southern writer Pat Conroy were suspended from a Nitro High School Advanced Placement Literature Class. The parents of two students complained about graphic scenes of sex and violence in the novels "Beach Music" and "The Prince of Tides." The Kanawha Co. school board is trying to decide whether to ban the books, or allow them to remain as part of the curriculum.


WV: The Confederate Battle Flag By Beth Vorhees

Historic tradition or an emblem of racism? John Coski says the confederate flag means different things to different people. This week, Dr. Coski presented a lecture in WV on his book “The Confederate Battle Flag: America’s Most Embattled Emblem" as part of the 2007 Civil War Scholars Lecture Series at WV State University. We spoke to Dr. Coski earlier this week about his book and the controversial symbol of the American south.


PLUS: KY: Stereotypes ... WV: Mine safety & apple crop ... NPR news ... more

Thursday, September 27, 2007

20070925 Ben Franklin on writing

Ben Franklin on writing

I received this in an e-mail on Tuesday, September 25, 2007

“Either write something worth reading or do something worth writing.”

Attributed to Ben Franklin

Hat Tip: Grammy

Monday, September 24, 2007

20070924 Today is National Punctuation Day




Today is National Punctuation Day

September 24th, 2007

Please join me in a celebration of the semicolon.

Hat Tip: About.com – Grammar & Composition: http://grammar.about.com/b/a/000153.htm

There is even an official “Meat Loaf of National Punctuation Day.” I kid you NOT!

So please tell me; did you celebrate National Punctuation Day? If so how?

How do you feel about punctuation?”

As I keyboard - festivities are in the works over at WTTR.

Cook the Official Meat Loaf of National Punctuation Day! (see PDF recipe)

Celebrate National Punctuation Day®

September 24


National Punctuation Day founder becomes caped crusader to promote literacy in schools

PINOLE, CA — National Punctuation Day, the holiday that reminds America that a “semicolon is not a surgical procedure,” celebrates its fourth anniversary September 24. But what started as a clever idea to remind corporations and professional people of the importance of proper punctuation has turned into an everyday mission to help school children learn the punctuation skills they need to be successful in life.

Founded in 2004 by former newspaperman Jeff Rubin, NPD is listed in Chase’s Calendar of Events and The Teacher’s Calendar, two directories published by McGraw-Hill.

The annual event is widely recognized. Bank of America in Tampa, FL, for example, commemorates NPD with a week-long array of celebrations and trivia contests. Last year, Rubin was a guest on dozens of radio shows, NPD received significant newspaper coverage, and the Dayton Business Journal in Ohio baked cookies and pastries in the shape of punctuation marks.

More: Celebrate National Punctuation Day

In the Spotlight | More Topics |

from Jen Hubley

Formal instruction in grammar and punctuation was out of style when I went to school. If you were a big reader, which I was, it was sort of assumed you'd pick up the mechanics on your own.

National Punctuation Day

Fortunately, my Mom was a former English teacher with a horror of sloppy usage. I was the only kid I knew who diagrammed sentences at the dinner table - and not because it was homework.

- Grammar & Composition Guide Richard Nordquist

Basic Rules of Punctuation

As Richard points out, the problem with rules of punctuation is "like many of the so-called 'laws' of grammar, [they] ... would never hold up in court." One of my favorites to abuse: the "law" of "quote." (See how annoying that was?)

- Grammar & Composition Guide Richard Nordquist

The Campaign to Abolish the Apostrophe

It totally fries me to see possessives spelled without apostrophes. As it's happening more and more - "Pike's Peak" into "Pikes Peak," etc. - I guess I'll either have to lighten up or get myself a pair of fireproof pants.

Grammar & Composition Guide Richard Nordquist

####

Friday, August 24, 2007

20071110 AP: Newsday - Writer Norman Mailer has died at age 84


Poet and short story writer Grace Paley passes away



Aug. 22, 2007



http://www.newsday.com/



Notable deaths


http://www.newsday.com/news/nationworld/sns-2007-deaths-pix,0,5859368.photogallery?coll=ny_wire_promo


(AP/Toby Talbot)



Poet and short story writer Grace Paley, a literary eminence and old-fashioned rebel who described herself as a "combative pacifist," died on Aug. 22.



She was 84. Paley, who had battled breast cancer, died at her home in Thetford Hill, Vt.

Among her story collections were "Enormous Changes at the Last Minute," 1974, and "Later the Same Day,"


1985. (AP/Toby Talbot)

Saturday, June 02, 2007

20070529 “Duly Noted” by Martin Marty in “The Christian Century Magazine”

“Duly Noted” by Martin Marty in “The Christian Century Magazine”

June 1st, 2007

Fairly hilarious commentary on the use of footnotes in contemporary writing. I like footnotes, however the over-use of footnotes is a challenge, and I have come to not like footnotes that are aggregated in the back of the book or the very end of the article. I like footnotes at the bottom of the page.

Nevertheless. Prepare to smile:

“Duly Noted” by Martin Marty in “The Christian Century Magazine”

May 29, 2007

M.E.M.O.: Duly noted

by Martin E. Marty

article printed from:

The Christian Century Magazine

http://www.christiancentury.org/article.lasso?id=3403

Herewith,1 an2 essay3 on4 footnotes.5 Quote6: "Lomborg's7 book,8 The Skeptical Environmentalist,9 is10 carefully11 researched12 (2,93013 footnotes14!15)." So reads a line in a letter to the editor that criticized author Bill McKibben for basing his environmental concerns on "bad science which results in equally bad theology" (Century, May 1). The "good science," to this letter-writer, is exhibited in Bjørn Lomborg's "carefully researched" (2,930 footnotes!) book. The right theology, writes this reader, is "one of abundance, not scarcity." Nature has a "resilient capacity to replenish itself. We ought not be anxious, but rather consider how nature arrays (and cares for) itself."16

Now read the entire commentary here: “Duly Noted” by Martin Marty in “The Christian Century Magazine”


Tuesday, May 29, 2007

20070529 Famous Writers reveal what font they compose in and why (Slate)

Famous Writers reveal what font they compose in and why (Slate)

May 29th, 2007

Famous Writers on Fonts (Slate)

Hat Tip: The Morning Newsfeed: 05.29.07

A number of prominent writers reveal what font they compose in and why. Courier was the clear favorite among our unscientific sample, but Times New Roman, Palatino, and something called Hoefler Text had their champions as well. It seems to come down to whether a writer's formative experience came on an Olivetti or an Apple.

Slate: The cult of Helvetica.

_____

I found this fascinating… Especially the previous post… 20070525 The Helvetica Hegemony and Click here to read a slide-show essay about Helvetica and the art of the font.

I’m just a regular kinda writer who just likes to write… My favorite font is Bookman Old Style. After that I like Georgia, Baskerville Old Face or Century Schoolbook.

Although I am not aware as to why I like Bookman Old Style…

What is your favorite font?

####

20070525 The Helvetica Hegemony


Art: The big picture.

The Helvetica Hegemony

How an unassuming font took over the world.

By Mia Fineman

Friday, May 25, 2007

Click here to read a slide-show essay about Helvetica and the art of the font.

.Mia Fineman is a writer and curator in New York.

####

Thursday, January 04, 2007

20070104 Lake Superior St U Seeks to Banish Certain Words

Lake Superior St U Seeks to Banish Certain Words

January 4, 2007

Every year - - for quite a number of years, I have looked forward to this annual pronouncement of the latest in mangled words in the English language.

Oh, to be sure, I am a firm believer that English is very organic, but some its new permutations are simply malignant mutations.

This year I found the annual linguistic analysis in an Associated Press article on the Fox News web site.

In the following article, my “Dr. Pepper” moment was "the chewable vitamin morphine of marketing."

You’ll find it below in describing: “Take ‘ask your doctor,’ the mantra of pharmaceutical commercials. The university called it ‘the chewable vitamin morphine of marketing.’ ”

Portions of the article follows.

http://www.foxnews.com/story/0,2933,240484,00.html

Bye-Bye 'Brangelina:' Lake Superior State University Seeks to Banish Certain Words

Monday, January 01, 2007 Associated Press

DETROIT — […]

Lake Superior State University on Sunday released its annual "List of Words and Phrases Banished from the Queen's English for Mis-Use, Over-Use and General Uselessness."

The Sault Ste. Marie school in the Upper Peninsula has been compiling the list since 1976 to attract publicity. A total of 16 words or phrases were selected by a university committee from more than 4,500 nominations.

The list reads like a lexicon of popular culture.

Take "ask your doctor," the mantra of pharmaceutical commercials. The university called it "the chewable vitamin morphine of marketing."

Critics piled on the media's practice of combined celebrity names such as "TomKat" or "Brangelina." One said, "It's so annoying, idiotic and so lame and pathetic that it's 'lamethetic.'"

Real estate listings were targeted for overuse of "boast." As in "master bedroom boasts his-and-her fireplaces — never 'bathroom apologizes for cracked linoleum,'" quipped Morris Conklin of Portugal.

[…]

The university's word watchers had no use for "truthiness," the word popularized by Comedy Central satirist Stephen Colbert. It was selected as the word that best summed up 2006 in an online survey by dictionary publisher Merriam-Webster.

[…]

Read the entire article, as it appeared on the Fox News web site, here.

####

Wednesday, January 04, 2006

20060104 Mike Schuh WJZ Channel 13


Mike Schuh WJZ Channel 13

January 4th, 2006

Schuh Mike

Reporter

http://wjz.com/bios/local_bio_053095449

Mike Schuh joined WJZ Eyewitness News as a general assignment reporter in April, 1993. In 2002 Mike won a Regional Edward R. Murrow award for feature reporting.

During his career at Eyewitness News he has also earned 6 Emmy Awards for Hard News Investigations, General News Reporting and Features Reporting. Mike came to WJZ after reporting for other television stations in Indianapolis, Louisville, Missouri and Illinois.

In 1983 he received his B.S. Degree in News Reporting from Southern Illinois University at Carbondale. Mike lives near Towson with his wife and one very, very energetic daughter.

Just the Facts

Position: Reporter

Year Hired: 1993

First TV Appearance: 1981

Favorite Story: 1998 Nagano Winter Olympics

Memorable Interview: John Travolta

Dream Interview: anyone who connect with the audience

Dream Job: being a better storyteller

First Story: Carbondale, IL city council meeting

Role Model: former NPPA Photographer of the Year Mark Anderson

Why I'm A Journalist: I love telling stories

Hidden Talent: pretty good carpenter/painter

Alma Mater: Souther Illinois Unversity at Carbondale

Hometown: Waukegan, IL

Kids: 1

Siblings: 5

Hobbies: restoring my home in an historic neighborhood

Favorite Food: Spicy Veggie Ho Fun with Tofu

Favorite Sports Team: Baltimore Ravens, Chicago Cubs

Favorite Destination: The Outer Banks Avon, NC

_____

Mike Schuh

January 4th, 2006

Television NewsVideo Workshop

http://www.nppa.org/professional_development/workshops_and_seminars/TV_NewsVideo_workshop/2006/faculty/mschuh.html

Before joining the CBS O&O in Baltimore in 1993, Mike told stories in Cape Girardeau, MO, Louisville, and Indianapolis. Mike has worked for about a dozen general managers and news directors, all who have very different thoughts about what news should look and sound like. He has successfully adapted what he's learned here to keep his bosses happy while at the same time producing stories which keep him excited about his job. He is happy to discuss survival techniques.

A Bakers Dozen of Sensible Schuh's:

Be a good employee.

Don't whine.

Pretend you are a freelancer -- like you must impress the bosses every day or you won't be able to afford food.

Surprise the producers. Give them more than they asked for in less time.

Work hard on the little story and the boss will give you the big ones.

Keep your mind on the story, not on the station gossip. Spend at least 5-10 minutes exchanging ideas about the story on the way to the story. Good ideas snowball.

Communicate expectations, communicate needs, communicate wants.

What do I have? What do I need?

On the ride home, go through the sequences about what will work where.

Offer solutions, not just problems.

Stand up straight.

Eat your vegetables.

Wear glasses if you need them.

####

20060104