Celeste Headlee scours the country’s newspapers for interesting stories. Here's her list for this morning:
Celeste Headlee scours the country’s newspapers for interesting stories. Here's her list for this morning:
Celeste Headlee scours the country’s newspapers for interesting stories. Here's her list for this morning:
Celeste Headlee scours the country’s newspapers for interesting stories. Here's her list for this morning:
Celeste Headlee scours the country’s newspapers for interesting stories. Here's her list for this morning:
Celeste Headlee scours the country’s newspapers for interesting stories. Here's her list for this morning:
Dawdling on the internet this morning, I found this YouTube, embedded below : http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JrBrQxDDryY&feature=player_embedded
It's a protest, but also a tribute. And it's notable for a couple reasons: first, this is an international theme. I imagine if they had opened it up to foreign languages, we would hear guys described as "Rien ne l'intéresse" or someone might start a YouTube video by saying, "Amo mi hater." This term is globally ubiquitous; there are very few translations of it because in many countries they understand what a "hater" is without a dictionary.
Each morning, Celeste Headlee scours the country’s newspapers for interesting stories. Here's her list for today:
Each morning, Celeste Headlee scours the country’s newspapers for interesting stories. Here's her list for today:
Each morning, Celeste Headlee scours the country’s newspapers for interesting stories. Here's her list for today:
Each morning, Celeste Headlee scours the country’s newspapers for interesting stories. Here's today's list:
"Baseball is a tongue-tied kid from Georgia growing up to be an announcer and praising the Lord for showing him the way to Cooperstown." - Ernie Harwell at his National Baseball Hall of Fame Induction Ceremony (August 2, 1981)
Before I start writing about Ernie Harwell, I feel the need to again to say that I am not a native of Michigan. Harwell wasn't either; he was born in Atlanta and worked as a paperboy there, even delivering the daily rag to novelist Margaret Mitchell. It was his southern roots that give Harwell that distinctive twang in his voice, something he never lost through 55 years of calling baseball games. But by the time he died this week, he had two hometowns: Atlanta by right of birth and Detroit by bonds of love and true loyalty.
Each morning, Celeste Headlee scours the country’s newspapers for interesting stories. Here's her list for today:
Each morning, Celeste Headlee scours the country’s newspapers for interesting stories. Here's her list for today:
Every morning, Celeste Headlee scours the country’s newspapers for interesting stories. Here's her list:
I am not a native Detroiter. In fact, I wasn't thrilled about moving there when I took a job with WDET in 2001. I'd heard all the same things you have, about the crime, the poverty, the burnt out buildings and abandoned homes ... and all of my friends and family were horrified to know that I was taking my 3-year-old cherub to the "Murder Capital."
Every morning, Celeste Headlee scours the country’s newspapers for interesting stories. We're sharing her story lists with you. Here's today's roundup:
Every morning, Celeste Headlee scours the country’s newspapers for interesting stories. We're sharing her story lists with you. Here's today's roundup:
Every morning, Celeste Headlee scours the country’s newspapers for interesting stories. We're sharing her story lists with you. Here's today's roundup.