Monday, July 30, 2012

A Slippery Slope

The hot button issues seem to spring from everywhere in this political season. Now the President of the Atlanta-based fast food chain Chick-fil-A has brought about the latest storm over same sex marriage with his opposition to it.  These views were probably never a secret.  Don Cathy's outspokenness left his company's public relations department scrambling to play it down, but it was too late. While he has a right to his opinions, increasing numbers of potential customers who do not share his views are not comfortable patronizing a business that funds anti-gay causes. The mayors of Chicago and Boston have said Chick-fil-A would not be welcome in their cities. New York's mayor cautions against government officials attempting to ban this company's expansion plans, and he is so right. Government could intercede if the company clearly practiced discrimnination against the LGBT community, but that doesn't appear to be the case.  Is a private citizens' boycott any better? That would be more appropriate, with several cautions. First, the irresponsible rhetoric by people like Roseanne Barr hoping everyone who eats at Chick-fil-A gets cancer just brings out more out-of-control reactions on the other side. Also, where do the boycotts stop? Do I stop drinking Coors Beer or using Brawny paper towels because their parent companies gave money to candidates or causes I oppose?   Where does it end?

Conservatives have taken up the defense of Chick-fil-A's right to freedom of speech and religion. Fox News and Cumulus Media* commentator/host Mike Huckabee has inserted himself right into the thick of the debate, and the right wing could not have found a more inappropriate leader on this issue. He recently agreed with a caller who characterized gay men as child molesters, giving that false assumption as a good reason why the Boy Scouts are right in not allowing gay scoutmasters. Huckabee's record of homophobic statements is outrageous. An individual's views are one thing, but Chick-fil-A has also put their corporate money where their mouth is. That could cost them a lot of goodwill in what has been an impressive American success story based on some otherwise solid values. It is sad to find them on the wrong side of history this time.

*The above opinions are my own and should not be construed as the opinions of management of Cumulus Media Inc. or its affiliates.

Monday, July 23, 2012

A Common Thread

Aurora, Colorado Shooting Scene
We are at a loss to explain what would prompt someone to carry out a senseless act of violence like the Aurora, Colorado movie theatre massacre.   As time goes by, the background of a disturbed shooter, accounts of survivors and stories of exceptional people will fade from the headlines.  The impact of this tragedy will not go away, given the possibility of a similar incident happening again.   The conversation about violence in America never seems to get far.   Nobody is remotely suggesting responsible gun owners should be totally deprived of a Second Amendment right to bear arms, yet a well-funded effort by the NRA has both political parties afraid to even bring up the topic of a nationwide assault weapons ban.   Mayor Bloomberg is a billionaire and an independent, so he can afford to speak up.   Then there's the issue of increasing levels of violence in movies.   The latest Batman movie was touted as more shocking than ever with an even more dastardly villain than Heath Ledger's Joker.   Of course, the only resolution is total annihilation.   This increasingly dark narrative now runs through all the superhero movies along with other action features designed to top their predecessors.   Does this desensitize a mostly young audience?   Are we to accept this as the new norm because a Hollywood movie raked in $160,000,000 in an opening weekend?    Will we have to pass through metal detectors just to take in movie?   

Look at another sad news headline. The Penn State football sexual assault scandal resulted in  harsh fines on the school along with the disgraced legacy of coach Joe Paterno.   People in power turned a blind eye to protect a multi-million dollar sports franchise instead of doing the right thing.   For all the severity of the penalty,  I can't believe Penn State could still take the field this season.   2012 will stand out as the year we saw the effect of big money having its way like never before.   The Citizens United Supreme Court decision now enables Super PACs to drown out voices who are not as well funded.   When we can't even have the beginnings of a real discourse in the political arena, we are in big trouble.   And how's that drug war going? 


Thursday, July 19, 2012

You Didn't Build That

From NY Daily News
Why are Republicans pouncing on a portion of this speech made by President Obama last week in Roanoke, Virginia?   Because they took it out of context to attack it as a slap against private business initiative.   Here's the unedited relevant portion of his speech, most of which never aired on Fox News.   You decide:
   
There are a lot of wealthy, successful Americans who agree with me -- because they want to give something back.  They know they didn’t -- look, if you’ve been successful, you didn’t get there on your own.  You didn’t get there on your own.  I’m always struck by people who think, well, it must be because I was just so smart.  There are a lot of smart people out there.  It must be because I worked harder than everybody else.  Let me tell you something -- there are a whole bunch of hardworking people out there. 
   
If you were successful, somebody along the line gave you some help.  There was a great teacher somewhere in your life.  Somebody helped to create this unbelievable American system that we have that allowed you to thrive.  Somebody invested in roads and bridges.  If you’ve got a business -- you didn’t build that.  Somebody else made that happen.  The Internet didn’t get invented on its own.  Government research created the Internet so that all the companies could make money off the Internet.

The point is, is that when we succeed, we succeed because of our individual initiative, but also because we do things together.  There are some things, just like fighting fires, we don’t do on our own.  I mean, imagine if everybody had their own fire service.  That would be a hard way to organize fighting fires.

So we say to ourselves, ever since the founding of this country, you know what, there are some things we do better together.  That’s how we funded the GI Bill.  That’s how we created the middle class.  That’s how we built the Golden Gate Bridge or the Hoover Dam.  That’s how we invented the Internet.  That’s how we sent a man to the moon.  We rise or fall together as one nation and as one people, and that’s the reason I’m running for President -- because I still believe in that idea.  You’re not on your own, we’re in this together.

So all these issues go back to that first campaign that I talked about, because everything has to do with how do we help middle-class families, working people, strivers, doers -- how do we help them succeed?  How do we make sure that their hard work pays off?  

Monday, July 16, 2012

Rolling Stones: 50 and Counting

July 12th marked 50 years of the Rolling Stones playing together as a band. Say what you want about the Beatles, Led Zeppelin and all the other supergroups through rock history. When it comes to longevity and consistency, nobody has ever come close to these "Bad Boys of Rock n' Roll". Recently, Keith Richards was asked his secret to such a remarkable track record. His advice was basically "not to work for others." That is not totally practical for many in rock or other lines of work, but I took it as something close to what Rick Nelson sang in his comeback hit "Garden Party" from 1972: "You can't please everyone, so you got to please yourself." The Stones have lived their passion for over five decades. Fans knew that and felt they had joined them on that journey whenever they bought their albums, heard them on the radio or saw them in concert. Given the list of their contemporaries who left us much too soon and the Stones' own wild story, it's not a matter of how they survived as a band. It's more amazing how they even stayed alive.


Friday, July 6, 2012

Getting Ready for Sailfest

New London will once again play host to 300,000 people over the next three days - the largest annual gathering in Connecticut.    If you've been listening to any of the four Cumulus New London radio stations, you know that we are a sponsor of Sailfest and OpSail 2012 and are set to broadcast the soundtrack to the Mashantucket Pequot Fireworks Extravaganza.   With all the severe weather watches and possible warnings for late Saturday, it's even more important to listen to Q105, 102.3 The Wolf, 104.7 WELJ or News Talk 980 WXLM to find out whether or not this massive fireworks show will go on as scheduled at 9:25 PM.    One thing is clear for anyone going on Saturday: the heat and humidity will combine to make it a day of extreme heat stress.   That's nothing to mess with.   Sunday should be more comfortable.   I've been following the forecast very closely, since I'll be broadcasting live from Custom House Pier on 102.3 The Wolf and on WXLM between noon and five Saturday.   It's been a long time since I've done any radio remote, not to mention one on two stations, so I'm looking forward to it.   Besides being prepared for Saturday's heat and possible storms, I have one other word of warning.   True to my Irish heritage, I don't tan well and my pasty white legs will be on full display!   More info on Sailfest and OpSail 2012 is available at http://sailfest.org/.   I hope to see you there.

Friday, June 29, 2012

Obamacare is Constitutional

U.S. Supreme Court
The Affordable Health Care Act has been ruled constitutional by a 5-4 majority of the Supreme Court.    The Republicans, dominated by freshman Tea Party congressmen, unlimited Super PAC money, Fox News, right wing radio and lobbyists for big insurance and pharmaceuticals, are predictably screaming bloody murder.     I do agree with many in the Republican rank and file who think our representatives should be entitled to no more benefits than the rest of us receive.   Let's see how they'd like the reality of our patchwork health care system.     I hear a lot of fears being spread that don't necessarily hold up under the weight of the facts.   Republican Presidential candidate Mitt Romney, who sponsored the Massachusetts health care reform that became the forerunner for Obamacare, is in no position to want it all thrown out.   Some conservative lawmakers had been the original champions of the individual health coverage mandate.   When I think of the way they labeled John Kerry a flip-flopper in 2004 and piled on in favor of the unfunded George W. Bush senior drug benefit that cost billions we didn't have, their collective record on getting government out of health care has been inconsistent at best.    Under President Obama, any reform is deemed socialist and compromise is a lost art.   Medicare is an example of government involvement in health care working successfully with private enterprise.   The Veterans Administration is a noble idea but arguably too much government in light of some scandalous conditions at VA hospitals.   The conservative or libertarian models of just letting the market take care of itself tend to super serve wants more than needs, leading to a wider variety of erectile dysfunction medications while antibiotic research and access to family physicians get less attention.   We already pay twice as much per patient as other developed nations.   The status quo cannot stand    Obamacare is not the last word in health care costs and coverage, but it's a start.   Where's the Republican plan? 

Monday, June 25, 2012

Social Networks Need Social Filters

Someone on my Facebook recently posted about how much they were looking forward to getting out of town for a certain period of time.   They returned from their vacation to find their home robbed, and they think it was done by someone they know.    We're glad you could get away, but please wait to share this information with Facebook friends (or Twitter followers) after you get back home.   How well do you know every one of what may be hundreds of online friends?   I see this inside information posted all the time now that summer has arrived.    There are other forms of posting that may be less dangerous but just as unnecessary.   Now that I can control the Facebook settings, I can't say I miss seeing everyone's progress playing Farmville.  The pictures of the kids, pets, friends and co-workers are fine.   I don't even mind a few opinion pieces, but the relentless angry rants trashing people who may disagree comes across as an assault on my Facebook page.   So you can't stand Obama - I picked that up fifteen posts ago.   At least on this blog you have the option of ignoring my rants; I'm not splashing them all over someone else's personal page.   And please, just because I ignore your request to repost something "if you care" doesn't mean I don't care.   I just don't care to make my Facebook into a chain letter.   Many people lack a face-to-face social filter.   We can't always expect their social network filter to be any better, but I can hope so for my sake and sometimes for theirs.

Friday, June 22, 2012

Day Trip!

The Breakers, Newport
Newport, Rhode Island is an easy day trip from here in eastern Connecticut.  Before you even arrive in town, the trip over the Jamestown and Newport bridges provides an overwhelming view of Narragansett Bay.   Rhode Island really should have been called the Bay State for this reason alone.   Last weekend's trip was no different than previous ones in that you can find yourself in a sea of people as you enter by the Welcome Center or past the shoppes along Thames Street.   Once you get past that, the city itself is quite walkable and drivable.   There are other novel ways of taking in the sights, too.   Trace the shoreline out along Ocean Drive, then take in the Bellevue Avenue mansions as you head back toward the center of town.  My favorite mansion is The Breakers, but the history of most of these properties is perhaps most impressive.   Museums are everywhere.   The Cliff Walk is also nearby.   There are countless places to shop, eat or drink.   O'Brien's Pub is a special place to me - there's something in a name.   Back in the eighties, I managed to catch the Newport Folk Festival at Fort Adams Park featuring Bonnie Raitt among others.   Coming from Foxwoods and Mohegan Sun territory, the Newport Grand Casino fails to impress, but there's plenty in Newport that does.

Monday, June 11, 2012

You're Not Special?

In an age when news organizations often tell us what we want to hear instead of what we need to hear, this speech was a bombshell.   The trophy business may not like what Wellesley, Massachusetts High School teacher David McCullough had to say at the school's graduation ceremony.  News flash: We're not special just because we were put on this planet.   His candid comments have caused quite a stir, mostly because they so richly deserved to be said.    Just ask a school administrator or a police officer when parents say, "My Johnny wouldn't do that", "Why are you picking on my child?" or "Give my kid a break."   Children have learned from their parents and millions of marketing messages to ask "what's in it for me?"    This sense of entitlement isn't a rich versus poor, white versus black, American versus foreigner or even conservative versus liberal issue.   We need to reward character and achievement.   Enough with all the excessive awards and trophies.   Everyone's not a winner - certainly not all the time, and that's as it should be.  If everyone's special, nobody is.  Here is the full text of Mr. McCullough's speech.     It's worth reading!

Wednesday, June 6, 2012

Walker Prevails


Wisconsin's red-blue recall contest

45 per cent of Wisconsin's voters had their hopes dashed in tonight's recall election.   Republican Governor Scott Walker fended off a challenge from Milwaukee's Democratic Mayor Tom Barrett.   These results are tragic for anyone who believes unions should still have a voice in the workforce or decries the limitless use of funds by mostly out of state Republican organizations.  While disappointing, Walker's win should not be shocking to anyone except MSNBC's Ed Schultz.   A Washington Post article runs down the reasons for the failure to recall Walker.   In addition to their lopsided 10-1 spending advantage, Walker and company have been campaigning with a laser-like focus way ahead of this judgment day he saw coming since last year.   The serious Democratic split in their own recent primary left many labor supporters less than enthusiastic about supporting Barrett, who then had only weeks to campaign.    Voters outside Milwaukee tend to see the Badger State's largest city as its problem child.   That Milwaukee connection did not help Mayor Tom Barrett in the hinterlands, and Walker capitalized on that.   There was also the Washington Democratic connection, or lack thereof.   National Dems never were as enthusiastic about a recall.    Recent polls do not tie President Obama's Wisconsin fate in November to this recall, thus explaining Obama's tepid endorsement of Tom Barrett.   

Democrats in Wisconsin and nationwide would be ill-served by handwringing and finger pointing.    The attack on labor's dwindling political clout had been central to Governor Walker's agenda all along, even after wage concessions by state unions.   If the tide is to be reversed, labor unions (especially state and municipal ones) have to make their case everywhere, since state workers often unfairly get a bum rap as privileged while others suffer to make ends meet.   This unfair broad brush perception played right into the hands of Governor Walker and his "divide and conquer" strategy.  Let's face it; even many who weren't Walker fans were tired of the unending uproar.  Inevitably, Walker's antics will be his own undoing unless he moderates his tone and stops looking like an operative for the Koch Brothers.   It's time for Democrats to use this time to unite, focusing on November nationwide and revisiting the Wisconsin gubernatorial race in 2014.

Sunday, June 3, 2012

Downsize Me

New York Mayor Michael Bloomberg has proposed a ban on soda servings larger than 16 ounces.   The soft drink industry together with conservative pundits have decried this "nanny state" threat to individual freedom.   As with gun control opponents,  this regulatory attempt does beg the question, "what's next?"   You know, they may have a point in their selective outrage, and I'd be willing to make a deal. Let's toss this Bloomberg mandate aside if the soda industry can conclusively prove that there are no significant individual health risks and public health costs to a steady intake of fast food drinks that dwarf the standard sizes of a generation ago.   All that talk about the rise of childhood obesity and type 2 diabetes is just alarmist too, right?       Oh, wait, we do know the facts.   Why is it more important to protect subsidies of companies who make high fructose corn syrup than to stave off an epidemic caused by consuming sugar at toxic levels?      

Tuesday, May 22, 2012

One Year Later

Today would have been my mother's 88th birthday, but she died exactly one year ago on her 87th.        Unlike my father, my mom lived to what most people would consider a ripe old age.   Even so, the passage of a year hasn't diminished that sense of loss.   A year doesn't seem that long ago, but somehow it makes memories of my own childhood seem much more remote.   I try to keep busy, but often feel less focused not having her around.   It's also one of those times in my life when many friends seem more distant, and I miss them.   Through some sadness and period of adjustment, I am always mindful of the lucky breaks that have come along in the past twelve months.   This one year anniversary serves as a reminder to move on, but it has already been an ongoing process that I know she would want for me and my brother.    Just because we move on doesn't mean we forget.    I couldn't do that; nor would I want to.

Tuesday, May 15, 2012

Radio Flashback: WCNX - My WKRP

In December 1976 I was just wrapping up college in Keene, New Hampshire and needed a job back in Connecticut.  David Parnigoni, the owner of the station where I'd been working part-time - WKVT in Brattleboro, VT - had just bought 1150 AM WCNX in Middletown, CT.   I landed the music director and midday host position.  Since I grew up 20 miles from WCNX, I already knew it wasn't a big-time sounding flamethrower even though its signal blanketed a good chunk of Connecticut.    What I walked into reminded me of the sleepy, complacent atmosphere that greeted Andy Travis, the new program director (and my hero) on WKRP in Cincinnati.   WCNX had been underperforming on so many levels.   Before Tom McCormack was hired as news director, local news was just read straight out of the Middletown Press.   The music format varied depending on who was on the air.   The most exciting part of the presentation was the Ed Henry Sunday Polka Show, which continues to this day.   The scene was set for some excitement to hit central Connecticut that wasn't emanating from Hartford or New Haven.  After putting a consistently upbeat adult contemporary music format together, they added program director to my duties.   We added jingles.   Billboards with a big "X" popped up around town.   The audio got cleaned up.   We pushed the phone lines and they lit up.   Ad rates had to be raised as we sold out.   General manager Ken Smith summed it up as a "regional sound with local information."    Eager staffers like this young program director often cringed at what junk passed for local, and I eventually let my idealism get the best of me.   All in all, WCNX in 1977 was a worthy effort, and I met some terrific people.   I was now headed for a big-time FM!

Thursday, May 10, 2012

Minority Rights vs. Majority Votes

President Obama has become the first U.S. President to openly support gay marriage.   Like any issue in an election year, you can claim political motivation all you want.  I think it was a risky move on his part.   For all the surveys that show increasing acceptance of same sex marriage, there is enough of a fired up electorate who are so intolerant that they can vote to use state law to deny basic rights to a lesbian/gay/bisexual/transgender minority.  The North Carolina vote to ban gay marriage officially relegates one group of American citizens to second class status.   If we left civil rights issues in the sixties up to a popular vote, we know what would have happened: little or nothing.   Ironically, racial and ethnic minorities affected by the civil rights movement tend to be even less tolerant of same sex marriage.   Defenders of the status quo shrewdly and cynically seized upon this divide to keep traditional Democratic voters away from the polls in urban areas of Ohio, a key state in the 2004 Presidential election.   There is every evidence we can expect more of the same this time around.   As I pointed out before, we've made progress in race relations but have a considerable way to go despite all the laws, political correctness and good intentions.   The same can be said about gay rights..   Mayor Corey Booker of Newark, a man who impresses me more each day, said it's not a gay rights issue - it's about human rights.   You are entitled to your convictions about whom somebody else wants to love, but we can't make them any less of a citizen because of it.

Tuesday, May 8, 2012

Rock Evolution

The Beastie Boys
When founding member Adam Yauch from the Beastie Boys died the other day, I can't say I could come up with the titles of more than one or two of their songs, yet they were huge to alt rock and hip hop audiences in recent decades.   Being in radio, I try to keep up with new music (and pop culture in general) but it's easier for Baby Boomers like yours truly to recall entire albums released back when we were 18 or 21. That was when we had more time to take in a change in music that contrasted so sharply with that of our parents.   This Baby Boomer is reluctant to give up the music and memories of my youth even as it gradually fades from mainstream commercial media, but I refuse to believe that nothing of any quality or significance has come out since 1974.  To me, that would be a big surrender to the aging process.   Back in the day, most of the music our parents didn't understand fell under the general category of "rock".    Rock has evolved to become more of a niche as opposed to that all-encompassing genre I grew up with and remember so well.   For all the attempts to categorize - "ghettoize" if you will - rock n' roll and rhythm n' blues have been intertwined from the start and so much since then has been variations on a theme.   I may not latch onto as many new songs now, it still bugs parents and to quote Billy Joel, "It's Still Rock n' Roll to Me." 

Thursday, May 3, 2012

Another Inconvenient Truth

Al Mayo (New London Patch)
Al Mayo had been a regular listener to Glenn & Rebecca on WBMW and I had a chance to meet and talk with him just two or three years ago.   He struck me as a nice guy and hardly a lightning rod for controversy.  Mayo's reinstatement into the New London Fire Department complete with back pay and attorneys' fees signals some closure to a less than stellar chapter in the city's recent turbulent history.   Mayo was the first African American hired by the department since 1978.   Given the racial makeup of New London and the shaky ground on which the firing had been based, allegations of racial discrimination still seemed to come as a surprise to callers on this morning's Stu Bryer Show on WICH AM 1310.   Even the show's host couldn't shake the feeling that the story "had something more to it."   The callers I heard were indeed intelligent and thoughtful, but you could sense the real frustration that we were still discussing race after all the social changes some of these people had lived through since the fifties and sixties.   Have we made strides in civil rights and race relations over the decades?   Of course, as attitudes evolve with new generations.   Despite the reforms and good intentions, we still have a considerable way to go and we have to be willing to acknowledge that.   Being open about our problems is a major source of what has made America great.   Nobody should feel uncomfortable about discussing this "work in progress" we all live in.      

Wednesday, April 25, 2012

The Most Pain

They say it's the worst pain you can experience unless you're a woman going through childbirth.  I'll take their word for it about giving birth, but I can personally vouch for the extreme pain experienced with kidney stones.   When the pain suddenly hit me after 8:00 Sunday night and I drove to the Marlborough Clinic through driving rain, I figured it out.   That was due to the fact that I had an earlier episode of kidney stones in 1998 when I was finishing up at work.  That time, I thought it was appendicitis and barely managed to drive myself through rush hour traffic to Hartford Hospital.   I could barely stay conscious, doubled over in agony when I got there.  They diagnosed the stones, heavily medicated me and eventually sent me out into the late night only to have to call 9-1-1 from where I'd been housesitting.   Hours and much morphine later from Bay State Medical in Springfield, I got a cab back to the house along with a pain prescription.   While the worst pain was behind me, the discomfort lasted days until I passed the stone.   That part was easy.   A kidney stone is most excruciating when it is stuck in the ureter tude between the kidney and bladder.   I can say this week's episode was somewhat less intense than 14 years ago, but on a pain scale of one to ten it's easily an eight.   The new stone has already moved south, so that in itself is a welcome relief!  

How Petty

Axl Rose
We're talking about one of rock's greatest singers, Axl Rose.   He and his onetime band mates in Guns n' Roses were inducted into the Rock n' Roll Hall of Fame over the weekend.   Rose was conspicuously if not surprisingly absent from the ceremony.   He had written a lengthy and rambling letter to the Rock Hall saying he'd be passing up the induction event.   He took it a step further by requesting they withdraw his nomination.   Other band members did attend, accept and perform.   It is clear that Axl Rose had a major falling out with the band.   We get that.  That doesn't make him unique in the drama that has plagued countless rock bands over the years.   His attitude toward this well-deserved high honor is a slap not only at his band, his music contemporaries and the Rock Hall.   It is above all a snub to his fans.   When I think of how long musicians like Donovan have waited for this overdue recognition and performers such as Chubby Checker continue to be shunned, my advice to Axl Rose is simple: GET OVER IT!

Tuesday, April 10, 2012

Voter Fraud?

From Oped.com
Mitch McConnell, the U.S. Senate GOP leader, called liberal and Democratic charges of a "War On Women" a "manufactured issue".   He and his party are engaging in wishful thinking, as evidenced by the widening lead of President Obama over GOP challengers among many female voters.   While McConnell can deny these concerns, right wing politicians worried about a replay of 2008 are manufacturing a remedy of their own to something that has not been a problem: voter fraud. Violations have been practically nonexistent by any standard.   The urgency of the move in state legislatures to mandate voter ID cards serves one purpose, and that is to hold down turnout of likely Democratic voters.   Studies show that approximately 11 percent of Americans -- about 21 million people -- lack a current government photo ID, disproportionately racial minorities, senior citizens, young voters, the working poor and people with disabilities.   Oddly enough, some laws would permit National Rifle Association membership cards as valid ID while not accepting student ID cards.   I have nothing against protecting the will of the people against fraud, but the real motivation for the new voter ID laws is as obvious as that of the old poll tax.   The net effect is the disenfranchising of what is still a sizable portion of our population.   Fraud should be punished, but 11 percent of us should not be held hostage based on a largely unfounded fear of what could go wrong.   Voting is a U.S. citizen's right.

Thursday, April 5, 2012

Connecticut Justice

Connecticut State Senate Debates Death Penalty

Connecticut now joins much of the world in getting rid of the death penalty.   Capital punishment has never been shown to be a deterrent to crime.   A life sentence without parole may give years for someone to deal with what they've done.   In the Michael Ross case, the actual death sentence may take decades to be carried out even when a convicted murderer wants to die.   When there is a wrongful conviction, the ultimate penalty cannot be undone once it's carried out.   Of course, whatever the justice system does will not bring a murder victim back.   Unlike Texas, Connecticut's history of carrying out death sentences has been very infrequent over the past fifty years.    While I support the State Senate's move, there's one case where most of us would like to see an exception.   The especially heinous Cheshire home invasion murders lead me to believe the world would be better off without these two monsters around, and the one survivor of that horrible crime agrees.    

When we think of justice, we usually think of the victims and their families, but what about the neighborhood?    Montville already greets passersby on I-395 with a warning not to stop in the area of a maximum security prison.    Hasn't this town already shouldered enough of the burden of hosting violent criminals without having to be home to a treatment center for sex offenders?   According to NBC Connecticut, opponents of the facility such as Councilor Dana McFee feel they were lied to by the commissioner for the state Department of Correction when they were promised that the “worst of the worst” wouldn’t live here.   The record of successful treatment for sexual offenders is very low.    I know these offenders have to go somewhere, but Montville has shouldered enough of the burden. 

Sunday, March 25, 2012

What's Changed?


Trayvon Martin
Have racial tensions eased one bit since the Rodney King incident over twenty years ago?   The fatal shooting of 17-year-old Trayvon Martin by George Zimmerman and the handling of the case by Sanford, Florida police have made for a national outcry. The story gathers momentum while the polarizing statements of Geraldo Rivera, Al Sharpton and other talk show hosts add fuel to the fire.   The senseless killing of a youngster wearing a hoodie armed with nothing but iced tea and candy hit a nerve in the African American community. Think about it. Would you suspect possible trouble from a young black man in a hoodie more than a white guy wearing one?   Would most people be less likely to help a black man than somebody who is white?   Would you get better service in a store being white? Would an African American have a harder time hailing a cab?   When the answer to these and many related questions is a resounding "no", then we can point to real progress.   When anyone who asks these questions isn't accused of "playing the race card" or "being guilty of reverse racism", then a real dialogue on racial harmony can happen.

Tuesday, March 20, 2012

Unreal Weather

Daffodil
As we say goodbye to Old Man Winter, it feels as if we hardly got to know him this time around. Last winter the opposite was true. There was no need for those roof rakes just purchased last year as this final full winter's day had the thermometer shooting to 78 degrees in central Connecticut, easily smashing the old record high. People are breaking out the lawn care products and patio furniture as the daffodils pop up well ahead of schedule. One of the biggest harbingers of Spring was last week's unprecedented early opening of Harry's Place hot dog and hamburger stand here in Colchester. While Harry's has never been known for health food, there are plenty of opportunities to walk it off with weather forecasts looking more like California than New England.   Can anyone remember a mild March like this?   I can't. This is usually my least favorite month, but at this rate I'll have to rethink the whole "beware the Ides of March" thing.   It does make me wonder what this summer's heat will bring before I stop myself from being a Gloomy Gus and figure we've somehow earned this.   Don't stop now.

Friday, March 9, 2012

It's In Our Interest

Talk about a social media experience.   My Facebook page yesterday was full of posts about a 29-minute video by director Jason Russell on YouTube called Kony 12.   It was a gripping story of how children in Uganda and other parts of central Africa have been abducted to serve in the army of warlord Joseph Kony.   The video aims to put Kony behind bars by mobilizing international awareness.   It was watched over two million times within its first 48 hours online and has gotten the attention of Hollywood celebrities and Washington policymakers alike, with many spreading the word via Twitter.   Most of Africa has seldom been in the forefront of American foreign policy.   In eastern Africa, our 1992 Somalia intervention under the first President Bush was a noble effort that turned out badly.   President Clinton's biggest stated regret was America's lack of action in the 1990s Rwanda genocide, but there was little domestic price to pay on either side of the political spectrum.   In modern history, the United States has been criticized for acting largely based on our own economic interests.   That often means oil.   Some of that criticism may come from allies who agree to disagree or from the world's most tyrannical dictators.   Perhaps our legitimate overseas interests can play to a more receptive worldwide audience when the American people - not just U.S. politicians - step up and take the initiative.   Yes, we have our own challenges at home, but most humanitarian investments come at a small cost when the world's biggest economy and military power can mobilize international goodwill.   It costs us most dearly when we ignore a region or end up supporting a dictator based purely on strategic interests.   Check out the Kony 12 video and get inspired at www.kony2012.com.

Saturday, March 3, 2012

Facing Talk Radio Reality

Boy, did I pick a heck of a time to try my hand at talk radio. This week's Rush Limbaugh controversy underscores how a series of provocative comments on birth control can reverberate from a Florida studio to the halls of Congress to the Presidential race itself. Once again, the real issues of our nation's economic growth and huge deficit take a back seat as outraged opponents respond and Republican leaders feel very uncomfortable. This contentious story shows no signs of heading anywhere positive. Rush is very powerful as an entertainer who has meant big ratings and revenue to hundreds of radio stations. His influence over some 20 million listeners nationwide is also felt by many politicians looking to court this unabashedly conservative audience. You have to acknowledge Rush as the man who has been most instrumental in setting the blueprint for today's politically charged talk radio. It's a different world from the seventies and eighties when mostly local hosts could do a "potpourri" of topics and showcase contrasting points of view in the same forum. Hosting a local morning show on a station with mostly national conservative programming provides a unique set of challenges, especially in my case where I can't genuinely speak to enough of the same right-wing ideology. Most importantly, I concluded that the WXLM morning show needs someone who can spend more time on it; show prep is difficult when I'm also busy with a job in direct mail advertising. While I get set to hand the show over to someone new in a few days, I've appreciated the opportunity, direction and support afforded me by the people at Cumulus New London. I'll be glad to fill in once in awhile at WXLM. That's what I do. I don't have to be the morning star, just a team player who comes through when needed.

Saturday, February 25, 2012

Talk Radio - Plunging Right In

It was only a week and a half ago when Kevin O'Connor, our program director here at 102.3 The Wolf, asked me if I could step in at least temporarily to host the 6-9 a.m. morning show on our sister station WXLM, a news/talker at 980 AM. Within days, I was filling the time slot just vacated by Lee Elci. A new FM news talker in the market had given Lee an offer he felt he couldn't pass up. Thanks to Lee and WXLM management, the departure was on good terms. That being said, some decisions have to be made about the long term direction of the WXLM morning show. I've always been proud to be a "go to guy" who can be counted on to come through in a pinch, and I've indicated an interest in staying with the show beyond the status of temporary guest host. That is management's call, and I can respect whatever they decide. Whether it lasts long term or a couple of weeks, I am not trying to fill Lee's shoes. As he said, his show took years to evolve. It's the person who makes the position, not the other way around. The fans who want to follow Lee down the dial will do that. We hope listeners will continue to turn to WXLM as a leading choice for news and talk, and I'll do what I can to insure that. I know there's a lot of on the job training involved and three hours is a lot of time for me to talk, but news guy Nick Giuliano is great at chiming in as an important part of the show. I look forward to adding a few guests in studio and hope more folks will pick up the phone and interact. For now, we take it day by day as I continue to find new horizons in this hobby of mine gone haywire called radio. Listen online at www.wxlm.fm.

Tuesday, February 14, 2012

She Could Have Had It All

The music industry grieved at the loss of one icon while recognizing its newest superstar at Sunday's Grammy Awards. While not a big awards show fan, I found myself riveted to it for at least an hour. Whitney Houston's career peaked some twenty years before her death last weekend at a still young 48, but her volume of work in the eighties and early nineties was enough to make her music's most honored female performer. She was all over the radio back then. Bad press seemed to dominate her life since she began her tumultuous and drug-filled relationship with Bobby Brown, but she did take responsibility for her bad choices. Few of her hits seem to get airplay these days. That may change for awhile as people remember her meteoric rise and protracted fall. No one can forget her rendition of the Star Spangled Banner at the 1991 Super Bowl. I can't help but think of her hit "Didn't We Almost Have It All" when reflecting on her talent and beauty combined with a dysfunctional personal life. The rise was not worth this tragic fall. At the same time, Adele swept the Grammys. The first time I heard "Underneath the Deep" I knew it would be the top song of the year. It was another song about almost having it all. Her "60 Minutes" interview gave us a chance to know something about the woman behind the voice. The interview left me with the impression that Adele would be fine even if her throat condition had left her without that gift of a voice. Let's hope so.

Monday, February 6, 2012

She Nailed It

Madonna at Super Bowl Halftime show
Super Bowl 46 in Indianapolis proved to be a spectacle with the New York Giants defeating the New England Patriots 21-17. For all the attention garnered by Eli Manning, Tom Brady and company, the blogosphere was abuzz with everyone's opinion of Madonna's performance at Halftime. There are people out there, mostly guys, who will never understand the hype surrounding the Material Girl.   They charged her with lip synching as if nobody else has ever done that at a Super Bowl.   I think she actually sang, but how can a little technical enhancement be avoided in a production that big?   Madonna does everything in a big way, and that's just the point.   Music purists may cringe, but the dancing and scale of the show were exactly what you also expect from Madonna and her entourage.    Give a 54-year-old icon credit for doing cartwheels.   I'm not much older, but I have enough problems touching my toes.

Sunday, January 29, 2012

Accepting The Unacceptable

The sad chapter at the end of Coach Joe Paterno's remarkable life and career was totally avoidable.   Even the paragons of virtue can enable terrible things to happen by not speaking up or acting decisively when power is used wrongly.   I am fortunate to be removed from that situation now, but recent events serve to remind me that it can happen to the best of us.   We can't control everything around us, but there may come a time when we are associated with people whose words or actions are simply unacceptable.   Whether you call it illegal, immoral or grossly unfair, you know when the line has been crossed to the point where you want no part of it.   To openly support the injustice with the promise of short term gain wins nobody's respect.   The idea that resistance is futile can be the height of cynicism.    History is full of principled and honorable people who questioned authority and produced sweeping changes for the better.   It also has its share of good people who looked the other way and found themselves on the hotseat next.   Sometimes it helps to say, "It is what it is" and "just roll with it"... but not always.

Monday, January 23, 2012

A Week to Remember

Dr. Mel - WTNH
A lot has happened since the last time I updated my blog. The Patriots and Giants face off in the Super Bowl, with Connecticut right in the middle. Newt Gingrich continues to get attention with an impressive South Carolina primary win. We lost a football legend whose career came to a sad close just months earlier as Joe Paterno died of lung cancer. On a regional level, the loss of meteorologist Doctor Mel Goldstein was felt by many who have watched him over the years. I had the pleasure of knowing Mel going back to when he gave the forecast on WWYZ in the late seventies. The station's program director said all air personalities could take a lesson from Dr. Mel because he "interprets the weather." He presented it in a way that was relevant to the audience. Dr. Mel got his early start on TV at WATR Channel 20 before his long run at WTNH News 8 in the eighties. I got to work more directly with Mel as program director at WLAD in Danbury, the station where he started. Whenever we needed someone who could fill in on the local talk show, Mel was there and callers loved him. Danbury is the same town where his weather center at Western Connecticut State University was based. So many aspiring meteorologists can point to Dr. Mel as their mentor. He beat the odds against multiple myeloma cancer for many years. We never actually get to know the real deal about many media personalities.   With Dr. Mel, I can gladly say we did.

Monday, January 9, 2012

Is It Safe?

Amston Lake
Can I use my tap water or not?   Talk about mishandled details.   Last Friday I received a text on my smartphone from one of the local TV stations informing me that residents in the Amston Lake area should not drink their tap water.   The area included Hebron, Lebanon and my town Colchester, but didn't say how widespread it was.   I live barely a couple of miles from Amston Lake.   Should I be concerned?   Tuning in the six o'clock TV news revealed little.   By ten o'clock, it had been made clear that 181 homes were affected, and boiling water with four times the safe rate of copper only made it worse.   I took that to mean the densely populated area immediately around the lake, but it was still unclear how much of Colchester had been included in this warning.   The next night only muddied the waters, as one unnamed local station showed a map of all three towns with no numbers given, making it sound like everyone in the three towns were being warned.   I will give credit to WTNH Channel 8 for being specific at eleven.   How many households in Colchester were under the water emergency?   Two!   I hope all the folks who live around this beautiful lake get back to normal conditions soon, but it wasn't a shining moment for local media - some of them, anyway.      

Friday, December 30, 2011

Stupid Corporate Tricks

Congress hasn't been alone this past year in drawing unprecedented levels of disgust among ordinary citizens. Corporate America has committed some incredibly stupid blunders that leave their own customers wondering whether these well paid decision makers even remotely cared about the consequences. The latest self-induced corporate public relations nightmare comes from my cell phone service carrier Verizon. They want to attach a so-called "convenience fee" just for paying your Verizon bill through their website. Yes, you would pay two bucks a month for the priviledge of paying what you owe! Last time I checked, this company was not on the road to financial ruin and has access to consumer research like focus groups who undoubtedly would have told them this was a slap in the face to many loyal customers at a time when many are struggling to pay for basic needs. Of course, I could pay my cell bill online through my Bank of America bill payment website, but they haven't been without issues either. Bank of America had to reverse its decision to put five dollar fees to use their ATM debit cards after a public outcry. They must have thought we'd forget about the whole mortgage bailout mess that almost threw us into another Depression. Let's not forget Netflix, a highly successful company that began hemorrhaging subscribers after some genius decided to raise rates by sixty per cent! And who can forget the CL&P disasters right here in Connecticut that led to the departure of its CEO? Mitt Romney is right when he says "corporations are people too" to the extent that regular folks like you and I are also capable of shooting ourselves in the foot without assistance from anyone else. For 2012, I pledge to take a hard look at any self sabotage.   Corporate America would be well served in doing the same.   Happy New Year!

Monday, December 19, 2011

The Tebow Phenomenon


Tim Tebow
As I was doing my Patriots-shortened rock show yesterday on 102.3 The Wolf, I mentioned a group of high school boys in Riverhead, Long Island.  They got in trouble with school officials for striking the prayerful pose of Denver Broncos quarterback Tim Tebow.   The school drew criticism from Christians who saw this as an overreaction.   The officials contended that the students were blocking the hallways.   The notoriety of this relatively minor incident exemplifies how polarizing the issue of religious faith can be.  While you may be uncomfortable with someone flaunting their faith, Tim Tebow is clearly a decent, inspired and motivated person who has caught attention for reasons far beyond his short tenure as a Denver quarterback.   That was obvious during the Patriots pre-game show Sunday, when Tebow was clearly topic number one.    One commentator pointed out that while many roll their eyes over Tebow's trademark pose, the conduct of many other NFL players is much more "in your face" offensive.   If some kids are inspired by this faith-based example of a nice guy, then I'm not going to lose sleep over it.    I'll also rest easy knowing Tom Brady and the Pats got past the Broncos to clinch the AFC East title.   I'm not uncomfortable with the fuss about Tim Tebow;  but let's hope the obsession over his faith was just last weekend's thing. 

Monday, December 12, 2011

A "Manufactured" People

Watching ABC's World News Tonight, you'd think former House Speaker and latest Republican frontrunner Newt Gingrich had come away with a big win from the latest GOP Presidential debate the night before. Gingrich recently characterized the Palestinians as "a manufactured people" as the GOP contenders jockey for position in who can appear strongest in their support of Israel. Former Massachusetts Governor Mitt Romney tried to dial back the harsh tone set by Gingrich's comments, instead criticizing President Obama's public declaration of restarting Israeli-Palestinian territorial negotiations to be based on the 1967 borders.  Romney may have a point, since these parameters should be presented in meetings between negotiators. Obama's very public statement only served to anger Israeli Prime Minister Netanyahu.  At the same time, the GOP characterization of President Obama as "un-Presidential" in dealing with Israel has a hollow ring compared to the Gingrich comments at the debate. He not only restated his "manufactured people" comment in stronger terms.  This time Gingrich also labeled Palestinians as a group of terrorists.  This may serve as "red meat" for hardline conservatives, but any President who spoke like this would be a danger on an already volatile world scene.  By his supposedly historical perspective, Israelis, Iraqis, South Africans, Swiss and even Americans could be considered "manufactured people."  The premise is as outrageous as his blanket assertions about all Occupy Wall Street protesters.  It is sad how this divisive person is gaining traction.       

Saturday, December 3, 2011

Radio Flashback: Lite 100.5 WRCH

By April 1988, I had just been through a couple of operations and programming positions at New England radio stations that left me with my fill of middle management in radio. That was when WRCH/WRCQ program director Warren Schroeger called me about doing some part-time work. At the same time, I was getting involved in media sales through Shore Line Newspapers, a division of ABC/Cap Cities. I figured a big signal up the road would be a good place to keep my hand in radio. Like numerous other radio experiences, it grew into much more than originally intended.   Radio Park in Farmington was one of Connecticut's nicer radio properties, with the FM in its last days as instrumental-based easy listening WRCH and the AM nearing the end of its road as adult standards WRCQ.    I did the first full live airshift on the new "Lite 100.5" and expected a torrent of calls protesting the change, but that was thankfully not the case.   When my future as an ad salesman was in doubt, I accepted a full-time offer to host the afternoon drive slot on WRCH only to get downsized 13 months later.    I spent time during my layoff down the dial filling in at the new Mix 93.7 WZMX.   During that time, a new GM was hired to turn things around at WRCH.   I got rehired in 1992 as the host of the evening show "Pillow Talk".    Talk about some lovelorn callers! I still remember the night a rat decided to keep me company and when lightning tore through the studio, knocking the AM off the air.   After getting moved back to afternoons and becoming music director, the axe would eventually fall again in September 1993.   I attribute it to the new GM not liking me (hard to imagine!) even though he never knew me well.   Maybe I should have "played the game" more, but I'm a crappy suckup.   For WRCH, the new format eventually became a ratings and revenue monster, reaching new heights after a direct format competitor decided to go after someone else.   Under CBS ownership, it remains a major force in Hartford. 

Tuesday, November 22, 2011

A Good Run For A Local Business

Tina Chapman of Pachaug Aquarium & Reptiles Too
Something - and someone - was conspicuously absent in the November edition of The Extra.   This month marked the first time in almost ten years that Tina Chapman has not advertised her shop in our monthly direct mailer.   The doors closed on October 31st.   Pachaug Aquarium & Reptiles Too had been open less than one hour  in the summer of 2002 when I first called on Tina Chapman about advertising.    Since then, she has been a model advertiser.    She was so dependable that I would always start each month by calling on her aquarium on Route 138 in Griswold.   In 2003 when Tina wanted to renew her lease, her landlord was surprised because no other business had ever lasted there longer than a year.     The small store outlasted many of the startup businesses around her, but Tina finally decided it was time to pack it in.   While the recession had impacted her business this year, I got the impression that being the sole proprietor was becoming a bit of a grind.   She just wanted a break.   Anyone who knows Tina can say that she is one of the most down to earth people you could meet.   She spends much of her time close to home along the Route 138 corridor with a life full of friends and family.   A big fan of the great outdoors, Tina has also been active in promoting the Griswold Fish & Game Club.    As I hear the commercials about "shopping small" for November 26th on Small Business Saturday, I wish there were more people like Tina in business.     

Friday, November 18, 2011

This Departure Means A Lot

Regis Philbin hosted his last "Live" show this morning.   With all the commotion surrounding his departure after 28 years, I think Regis knew it was time to move on as executives didn't exactly bend over backwards to keep him on board.   We may never know the real story of what appeared to be a hasty decision on his part, but daytime TV is evolving.   This loss of an icon in many morning routines marked a milestone in that change the same way ABC's cancellation of two long-running soaps reflected a simple fact: the audience is aging and fragmenting.   The age of the average "Live with Regis & Kelly" viewer is 60.   "All My Children" and "One Life to Live" haven't exactly been courting the youth movement either.   True, a huge chunk of the available daytime viewership is older, but corporate decision makers would rather risk shaking loose some of the 55+ crowd and have a greater percentage of younger women 25-54 (or 25-49) even if it means a smaller overall rating.   Radio has done the same thing, which explains why Frank Sinatra disappeared from the airwaves by the 1990s, fifties music soon followed and sixties songs are now few and far between.

Regis still leaves on a high note, much like Oprah and Seinfeld.   On a local level, Regis was a role model to me in co-hosting a morning radio show.    So many people would tell me how WBMW's Wakeup Club with Glenn & Rebecca had good chemistry.   Even our consultant admitted that, but in the last year of Glenn & Rebecca the only positive comment I ever got from him was about my Regis impression.   I sensed something was up, but Rebecca and I knew that we were a team and it wouldn't be the same as a one-person show or one where two people didn't have fun interacting with each other.   Regis was the master of that genre.   He was a huge inspiration for some of the best radio I ever did.          

Wednesday, November 9, 2011

An "Off" Year Election


The race for the newly created mayoral position in New London was one of the few noteworthy local contests that were decided last night. Democrat Daryl Justin Finizio successfully challenged his party's establishment. With that exception, there was a lack of cliffhangers as turnout was light.   Did you vote? I cast my ballot, but I had to shake my head as I reviewed few choices here in Colchester. There was only one candidate for first selectman. I was asked to pick three selectmen out of three listed and there were no challengers for several other town positions. I am told Montville choices were equally slim, and incumbents faced few serious challenges across the region. It struck me as similar to what voters must have faced in the former Soviet Union, where elections were exercises in rubberstamping choices of the one party system. Are civic minded citizens discouraged by today's politics? Is the lack of voter participation in off year local elections an unhealthy sign for our democracy? On a national level, attempts to discourage voter eligibility and radical agendas received a serious pushback. The latest union busting move by Ohio Governor John Kasich was a stinging defeat for him - and rightfully so. Even many conservative Republicans had trouble getting behind an all encompassing anti-abortion bill in Mississippi, and the measure failed in a big way. People need to get fired up, since it is clear that the public is fed up with politics as usual. With so much at stake, voter apathy in any election will send the wrong message to our lawmakers.

Thursday, November 3, 2011

Infrastructure Failure

Southeastern Connecticut was spared the worst of this October Nor'easter that knocked out power to over 800,000 Connecticut Light & Power customers.   In Colchester, it was a close call with major tree damage and power outages to the immediate north and west.   My lights stayed on this time.   That good fortune was not lost on me, thanks to the recent memories of the six day outage caused by Tropical Storm Irene two months earlier.   For CL&P and other area utilities, these two events made for a one-two punch.   Connecticut's biggest power provider has taken a lot of criticism over its speed at restoring service, but officials in Massachusetts and New Jersey are also calling for investigations into restoration delays.   For CL&P, issues over payments to out-of-state repair crews were not resolved before the storm, apparently adding to the delays.   Since Connecticut has more forests and less utility workers than several decades ago, planners had no reason to be surprised when the last two storms brought record power outages.   Are we really saving money cutting back on line maintenance when overgrown trees crash down on wires and disrupt millions of lives already in the middle of a troubled economy?     This is as much of a wakeup call as a bridge collapse.   It speaks volumes about the state of our infrastructure.   We can pay for prevention now or disaster relief later.