• Old School
  • May3

    2 Comments

    Amway Arena blows up!

    I just found all my pictures from the morning the Amway Arena was imploded. I have been meaning to put together a few of them in a time-lapse photo to show it going down. One of these days I will. But here is a pretty cool from that morning. While you can see it pretty well, it was the sound that was the best that morning. Very loud!

    The rubble from the Arena is still piled up as the developer works to sort through it and recycle what they can. The Amway Arena implosion is a very ‘green’ project. Most all of the material will be recycled.

  • Jun9

    2 Comments

    I can barely remember the day O.J. Simpson was acquitted. But I do remember where I was. It was 9th grade, and I was in a band class at Southwest Junior High in Forest Lake, Minnesota. A bunch of us played percussion and we’d hide in the back behind the bulky instruments during rehearsal. Bass drums provided excellent cover from the enemy sniper (the instructor). But on October 3, 1995, we were all ears as the our instructor piped in the final moments of the trial through the old, wooden, carpet-covered speakers on the walls. It was quite a moment. I think everyone cheered when the jury read the verdict. The Juice was free. Funny how my views have changed since then, when you grow up and learn how the world ‘really is’.

    Jose Baez and Casey Anthony

    Attoreny Jose Baez and Casey Anthony

    Today I’m working at a television station, intimately covering the next ‘Trial of the Century’ – The murder trial of Casey Anthony. In recent weeks I’ve been providing analysis from our WFTV mobile studio with our legal analyst. I co-host 1/2 hour specials on Saturdays. Testimony airs on our station (and all the others) from 9-5 every day, and even Saturday mornings. Coverage is promoted on radio, TV, the web, newspaper – even from the glow of television screens visible through the glass of restaurant windows as you drive down the street. People are fixated. They love the drama. But this time, it’s not a former ‘hero’ to many young men under the microscope, but an alleged cold-blooded mother who strikes a familiar chord with fellow mothers nationwide.

    Does the Casey Anthony trial have the ability to be as popular or even more popular than the People vs. O.J. Simpson?

    Orange County Chief Judge Belvin Perry seems to think so – stating at one point in court that Anthony’s trial might “even dwarf” the coverage of the so-called “trail of the century,” the first OJ Simpson trial — in the last century.

    Attorney Peter Neufeld and O.J. Simpson

    It’s hard for me to gauge the reach of this trial because I’m living it everyday. When I lived in Minnesota, it was easy to understand the scope of the Simpson trial because it reached a place like Forest Lake (not much happens there!). And O.J. was a celebrity. But Casey Anthony’s story angers people – especially women. So the case has the ability to reach far and wide.

    Also, we weren’t Facebooking, Tweeting, texting, blogging and emailing in 1995. I remember just two years earlier in 7th grade, I clicked a button on my Industrial Tech teacher’s computer that dialed the Minneapolis library TelNet system. When I heard the modem start to chirp, I ran for my life. I thought the cops were coming to get me, having no idea who…or what was going to answer the internet call.

    A TruTV article showed some interesting stats regarding the Simpson trial:

    An incredible 91% of the television viewing audience watched it and an unbelievable 142 million people listened on radio and watched television as the verdict was delivered.

    One study estimated that U.S. industry lost more than $25 billion as workers turned away from their jobs to follow the trial.

    2000 reporters covered the trial. 121 video feeds snaked out of the Criminal Courts building where it was held. There were over 80 miles of cable servicing 19 television stations and eight radio stations. 23 newspaper and magazines were represented throughout the trial, the Los Angeles Times itself publishing over 1000 articles throughout the period. Over 80 books and thousands of articles have already been published, authored seemingly by everyone with any role in the trial.

    Chief Judge Belvin Perry

    Can you imagine if we had Twitter back then? Well, we’re seeing the fanatical social coverage with the Anthony trial right now – so in sheer numbers, I have to believe it will surpass those related to the Simpson case. Tracking analytics will take a small miracle and compiling the data would be quite a chore, but it’d be interesting to see how the two cases stacked up.

    Despite the fact I’m in Orlando and ‘plugged in’ to the case daily, I see the national networks, newspapers, blogs and the like are all over it, so Casey Anthony has reached a cult following.

    And there’s still a month to go in the trial. Will there be trial fatigue? I doubt it. People are becoming even more addicted, even through the boring computer forensics testimony (I loved that the most!). In fact, one person was taken away in a stretcher, and the cops removed a woman from outside of the courtroom today.

    Superior Court Judge Lance Ito

    The day the jury returns the verdict will be a day of fireworks. You can bet when the verdict is read, I won’t be hiding behind a bass drum, but I must admit, sometimes that doesn’t sound like a bad idea. With all this coverage, a nap doesn’t sound like a bad idea.

  • May7

    1 Comment
    Denis McDonough, Osama bin Laden, White House, Stillwater, Scandia, Fastpitch Softball

    Denis McDonough (seated, blue shirt) watches strike unfold

    By now you’ve seen the famous image released by the White House of President Obama and his staff watching and hearing elements of the mission that took out Osama Bin Laden. When I first saw the image, it wasn’t the Commander in Chief who caught my eye, or even Hillary Clinton’s terrified facial expression to which she later remarked, “I am somewhat sheepishly concerned that it was my preventing one of my early spring allergic coughs.”

    Naw, I saw the former outfielder for Scandia Swenson’s Superette Men’s Fastpitch softball team: Denis McDonough.

    Denis is a foreign policy advisor in the Obama Administration. He currently serves as President Obama’s Deputy National Security Advisor. Denis advised the president on foreign policy and helped craft his speeches as director of strategic communications for the NSC. Many say he was a key player in President Obama’s decision to send an additional 30,000 troops to Afghanistan for what was dubbed a temporary surge – while those troops are expected to start coming home in July 2011.

    What Denis is not known for publicly is his time with the Scandia softball team. See, where I grew up in Scandia, Minnesota (population 3,936) – men’s fastpitch softball was huge. It’s how we enjoyed our humid summers before the crazy winter would eat up eight months of our outdoor existence. It was back in 1989-1990 when I was one of the team’s bat boys (the other was former Scandia Merchant’s outfielder Mike McCurdy). My dad and brothers played fastpitch for years. I was too young to play, so bat boy was a role I proudly took on.

    I remember the team was made up of guys I knew from Scandia – mostly my brother’s friends or dad’s acquaintances. I met “Denny” McDonough in 1990 or so. Denny and a guy named Kris Miller joined the team that year. Both guys were from neighboring Stillwater, Minnesota, I believe. Denny was a powerful hitter and great outfielder from what I can remember.  I always looked up to him and how nice he was, even to a little brat like me.

    Denis McDonough, Mike McCury, Josh Benson, Scandia Softball, Men's Fastpitch Softball

    The 1990 Scandia Squad. I'm the runt in the gray shirt on the right. Denis is standing directly behind me.

    I looked up to all the guys on my team. I wanted to be able to stand in the box and swing at a screaming softball that could literally knock your head off. I wanted to hit home runs. I wanted to be more than a bat boy. And I eventually did. We later developed a team as McCurdy and I grew older. I did get in the box and even hit a few home runs. Ah, the days. Now I’m happy, even lucky, to unchain myself from this desk to get out and play a game of slow pitch with the crew at the TV station I work for: WFTV-TV. What I don’t remember from my younger years with the Merchants is the pain that lingers days after a game. Aging sucks, let’s be honest.

    But it’s nice to follow Denis’s success while he rises up through the political ranks. And after seeing that famous photo, I had to do a triple take. But that surely is big ‘Denny McDonough” – one of Scandia softball’s finest – seated in the Situation Room. But this time instead of knocking softballs out of the park, he’s knocking Osama out of existence.

    Good job, Denny. Go USA.

  • Nov25

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    I lived in Tucson, Arizona nearly five years. The Johnjay and Rich radio show is a popular program in those parts. My good buddy Ben Aaron (now on the air at NBC in NYC) used to be my roommate and had a mutual interest in all-things TV. Johnjay approached us to create a promo video for the show. We had a pile of VHS tapes, a mini-DV camera, a Mac with Final Cut Pro…and my Chewbacca costume from Halloween that year.

    We were ready.

    Emmy-style ready.

    Here is what we came up with: