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An Animal’s Best Friend

An Animal’s Best Friend

July 31, 2009  
Filed under People and Places

Around Lexington, Missouri they call Tina Bratcher the “Cat Lady.” The name makes her laugh, but she comes by it honestly.

As a child, Tina’s mother refused to let her keep any of the animals she brought home. It wasn’t until she was all grown up with a place of her own, that Tina decided she could finally keep the stray cats she found while delivering mail along her postal route in Independence, MO. She brought home so many, that she and her husband decided to move out from the city to Lexington where they could have plenty of land for the cats to roam free. Read more…

A Patchwork of Hope: Donna Sue Groves, the woman behind barn quilts, faces the challenge of her life

A Patchwork of Hope: Donna Sue Groves, the woman behind barn quilts, faces the challenge of her life

July 24, 2009  
Filed under People and Places

Losing a job and learning you have cancer would devastate just about anybody – except for Donna Sue Groves. She is a survivor. What helps Donna Sue fight is the love and support of family and friends, and the community she has helped create through a simple idea of painting colorful quilt squares on barns. Read more…

The Way It Is

The Way It Is

Growing up a television junkie (I’m talking broadcast, we didn’t get cable until I was in high school), I found that limited programming made for a greater shared experience by us, the viewing audience. There were only so many Saturday morning cartoons to goof about at the cafeteria table; there was only one Fonz.

Even so, television offered us choices. But there was a time when even if you had the choice to change the channel, you still turned on CBS News to watch Walter Cronkite.

I’m young enough (barely) to not actually remember watching Cronkite anchor the nightly news. But as I grew interested in journalism, I found his presence was still felt by those in the business; his viewers still touched by how he covered the major events in their lives. I may have learned about the day President Kennedy was assassinated or when man landed on the moon in history class, but I see those events in my mind as reported by Walter Cronkite. Those images will forever flicker across the television screen as each anniversary passes.

The most trusted man in America is no longer with us, but I would say that 92 years is a darn good run. I think the melancholy I feel is that it truly is the end of an era. I looked up to Walter Cronkite and John Chancellor as what journalism could and should be. I was lucky enough to start my career at a time when those who worked above me had the same vision.

For every name and face you see bringing you the news, there are hundreds of others who help get them into your living room and onto your computer or iPhone. While it was exciting to work the days when Peter Jennings came to Washington, DC to anchor the ABC News broadcast, I got more excited when a producer gave me a phone number to call or handed me video to review.

These were the people who took the time to help a kid in the trenches climb her way upward. Without them and countless others, I believe I would not be the journalist I am today. They are not known to most of you, but you have seen their work – trust me. There are just a few I would like to stop and remember.

Rebecca Lipkin, Leroy Sievers, Leo Meidlinger. My colleagues, mentors and friends. All gone too soon.

Rebecca passed away Sunday after fighting a brave battle against breast cancer. Always honest, always spirited, her poignant video diaries can be seen on YouTube should you want to meet the woman so many of us are lucky to have known.

It’s been almost a year since Leroy Sievers died of colon cancer. I knew Leroy when he worked at “Nightline.” He also bravely shared his experiences battling brain tumors and cancer in the hope that it would inform and bring solace to others who may be touched by something similar. His story was part of a Ted Koppel documentary, and Leroy created a forum on National Public Radio and at NPR.org called “My Cancer.” His work continues: as of January, the forum is now called “Our Cancer.”

And Leo. He didn’t have time to do such things, but there was not one person who walked through the doors of ABC News that did not know Leo. He was old school and we, especially the younger folk, loved him for it. To know Leo, all you have to do is turn on some Otis Redding, set yourself up with a double Cutty Sark, and laugh until there is no more air in your lungs.

Leo reminded me a lot of another one of those nameless, faceless guys found behind the camera. But to me, he loomed larger than life: my Uncle Ed.

Had it not been for Ed Dyas, I would not have known that this love I had for pictures and words could actually be channeled into a career. He worked at NBC News, and when I was no more than eight years old, he took my family on a tour of the studios at 30 Rock in New York City. I never realized before then that behind all those tubes and wires in that box, there were people who put those shows together. I got to sit on the Today Show news set and we bumped into anchorman John Chancellor in one of the control rooms. I was hooked.

Uncle Ed was my first mentor and my champion. We always talked shop – and Eric Clapton. There’s no need to count the years he’s been gone because I still think of him every day.

I would love to hear his sermon about the state of the news biz today, with all these cable and Internet outlets. And I wonder what he would think of this adventure I now find myself on. My Aunt and cousins tell me he would be proud, and I admit that still makes me misty-eyed. I think it’s because I realize how lucky I am that I found something I love to do and that I still believe in.

I am grateful to all those who helped me along the way. They are gone but certainly not forgotten.

And yes, that’s the way it is…

Signs of Change: How a new font called “Clearview” is changing America’s highways

Signs of Change: How a new font called “Clearview” is changing America’s highways

July 17, 2009  
Filed under Detours

From time to time we take a break from economic stories to show you some of the other interesting things we see along the way. We call them “Detours,” and this is one of them.

Something was definitely up with the L’s.

In the first weeks of our trip, we began noticing something subtly but decidedly different on the interstate road signs we passed. Something about them was changing and it had to do with the lowercase L’s. On closer inspection, we realized there was a whole new typeface being used on some signs. Read more…

A Bridge, Naturally

A Bridge, Naturally

July 13, 2009  
Filed under Detours

It’s not the only natural stone arch found in nature, but it is the first one I’ve ever walked across! We spent one hot and humid Saturday visiting the Natural Bridge State Resort Park in Slade, Kentucky. Read more…

The Long Walk: Cross-Country with Her Horse

The Long Walk: Cross-Country with Her Horse

July 13, 2009  
Filed under People and Places

As the economic turmoil has played out in the lives of ordinary Americans, many face a long, difficult road ahead.

Few, though, face a journey quite like Ann Byrns of Pelham, Massachusetts. She’s walking across the country with her horse. Read more…

Waking Up at Wal-Mart

Waking Up at Wal-Mart

Waking Up at Walmart “We have a reservation,” I said as I hung up the phone.

Julie laughed. Kinda hard.

It was funny because I’d just been on the line with the manager of a Wal-Mart Supercenter outside of St. Louis, asking if they would allow us to park overnight in their parking lot. We’d be sleeping outside “Wallyworld.” Read more…

Life Lessons

Life Lessons

July 10, 2009  
Filed under People and Places

Growing up on a farm in rural Ohio, Jared Rowley would daydream about city life and one day going to college. It was a dream not shared by his parents. So after high school graduation, Jared was on his own. He made his way to Ohio University, but college life was far from what he imagined it would be. Read more…

Saving Berea

Saving Berea

July 5, 2009  
Filed under People and Places

After graduating from high school in rural Kentucky, Natasha Smith applied to and was accepted by the University of Kentucky. She would be one of the first in her family ever to attend college. There was only one problem: her parents had to provide for nine children and couldn’t afford even Kentucky’s in-state tuition. Read more…

From Here to Kingdom Come

From Here to Kingdom Come

One month and three gas caps later, John and I have literally driven from Kingdom Come to Promised Land.

Granted, those are State parks in Kentucky and Pennsylvania, respectively, but in just the few weeks that we’ve been on the road in our rusty, trusty RV we affectionately refer to as the Escaper (because that’s what Toyota called it some twenty years ago as evidenced by the paint job – and it’s absolutely appropriate), I feel like we’ve covered a lot of ground in many ways. Read more…