Rare, Collectible, & Otherwise

Author: admin (Page 190 of 220)

An Eye on the World

The desk is near the window. I can look out and see the cars pulling in and out of the parking lot. No cause for alarm, right?

I found out I’m watching the action a little more closely. A lady stepped on the gas pedal thinking it was the brake over at Braums, and BAM! she wound up inside the store. A lot of broken glass. Fortunately, no broken bones. Happened at Taco Bueno here in Broken Arrow a while back. Same breakage, same good fortune. Apparently, the gas/brake confusion is more common than we think.

The car in Braums (where my wife works) broke the glass wall, shoving a huge standing refrigerator across the room and would have pinned anyone who happened to be poking around in it for some yogurt. Normally, it would have been busy. Luckily, it wasn’t.

So now, when I see a car pulling up on the other side of the glass, stopping at the tiny little curb, I keep watching until I’m sure they’re completely parked. The apprehension will go away after awhile, I’m sure. But in the meantime, when you pull in the parking lot, I’ve got an eagle-eye on ya!

There’s even a book about it:

Mo Info:

Is Your Name Famous?

Find a Book!

Tulsa Hispanic Community

Real Home Based Job Ideas

News Update

Since mentioning the news product shakeup at our local CBS affiliate, I feel obliged to follow-up. An earlier post mentioned the exciting changes KOTV had incorporated in their 10 pm newscast, including rattling some dinosaur-ish tradition bones.

Unfortunately, it may be nothing more than another graphics paint job.

I was thrilled to see what I thought was a tossing out of the old 1950’s formula (1. anchor at desk 2. reporter introduced 3. news subject speaks 4. pompous reporter standup closer 5. back to anchor at desk). Last night, Emory Bryan’s appearance punctuated that alterations were nothing more than cosmetic change.

He was back in an opening standup – the new graphics caught him off-guard and the split screen showed him fumbling around with the microphone as the anchor tossed it to him. He missed it.

Another split-screen had Terry Hood awkwardly smiling while the camera should have been pointed at her co-anchor. Not her fault. The director dropped the ball, which makes the anchors look bad. Graphics.

The only formulaic change of any note had a weather story immediately before shifting to the meteorologist. What a simple method to avoid those awkward moments when Travis Meyer has to segue from a story showing a horrible crash scene to a map showing sunny and bright.

Maybe the control room will work out the kinks with the new graphics. They’re attractive, but they aren’t news. Done badly, graphics are only an expensive distraction. It’s a shame the consultants are back to spray painting a bright finish on a rusty old hulk. The prospect of real innovation was invigorating. Ah well.

Everyone believes that change is difficult. I just never believed it to be impossible.

Meanwhile, the state of the panicky broadcasting industry is fodder for authors:

Calm before the Storm

They’re up! The first wave of holiday lights have been mounted at a local shopping center…it’s two days before Halloween. The news had an item about “black Friday” sales already begun.

We’ve got to get busy!

In fact, a commercial for a seasonal store finished off with the line, “Hurry! Sale ends October 30th!” In other words, after tomorrow, we’re too late to get in on the Christmas Sale (ooops, I mean Holiday Sale). It’s all over before I even got started.

Presumably, the down economy is contributing to the already tense retail atmosphere. With the perception of limited consumer spending, retailers are starting earlier to get their share of the selling-pie. Personally, I think people are tired of riding the pine down in the storm cellar waiting for the economic storm to pass.

“Bust open that door,” I shouted, leaping up from the bench. “Let’s go buy a book!”

“Sounded just like a freight train,” she answered, walking up into the twilight of the clearing skies. “We’re not in Kansas anymore.”

And just like that the Great Recession ended and the country sat back on its haunches and had a good laugh and a bag of Hot Cheetos.

The primer of positive thinking:

Mo Info:

Is Your Name Famous?

Find a Book!

Tulsa Hispanic Community

Real Home Based Job Ideas

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