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Year: 2014
30 days in the pothole
We’ll do it LIIIIIIIIIVVVVVVVVVVEEEE!
Thanks to the Louisville Fire Department and IAFF Local 345 for raising money for the WHAS Crusade for Children. I broadcast from the #1 tee box on Great Day Live as several firefighters and friends blasted killer drives. Not one golfer succumbed to the pressure of hitting their tee shots on live TV. But that doesn't mean they weren't nervous. Thanks again, firefighters. We couldn't have a successful Crusade for Children without you.
Idaho’s Mt. Rushmore of Cray Cray
Enjoy the GOP gubernatorial debate in Idaho. The fun starts at 4:44
A kick in the golf balls
WAKY/WLRS deejay Lee Masters loves triples: MTV, Vh1, NPR
Former Louisville radio personality and radio programmer Lee Masters, whose real name is Jarl Mohn, has been named as the new president and CEO of NPR. He'd been working closely with Southern California Public Radio where he generated the phrase "No rant, no slant." Masters is also the guy who put Ron Clay and me together for Morning Sickness on WLRS-FM in 1981 and went on to advise us on the direction of the show. National Public Radio has been through several rocky years of turbulent issues related to finances, management, and floundering partner stations. If anyone is capable of growing NPR, it is Lee Masters. In addition to a mastery of radio broadcasting, Lee and his business partner Bob Pittman
Peyton & Adolph: your off-season basketball fix
University of Louisville national champion and current Detroit Piston Peyton Siva returned to his adopted hometown to direct a summer basketball camp for kids. He appeared on WHAS-TV's "Great Day Live" and on WHAS Radio and other Clear Channel stations. And to complete this basketball two-fer: WHAS broadcast legend Cawood Ledford (1926-2001), known for decades as The Voice of the Kentucky Wildcats, compiled this terrific profile of basketball coaching legend Adolph Rupp.
Al Sharpton is no Rush Lumbar
Enjoy this highlights reel of Rev. Al Sharpton mispronouncing words that he cannot properly interpret from his MSNBC Teleprompter. Yore willcomm. Nonetheless, it's better than having to leave the studio and work out among the crazies who inhabit the streets. And Rev. Al, as handsome as he is, will never get a proposition like this TV reporter in Los Angeles.