If you missed my appearance on NPR's The Story discussing my experience working in the TV shopping industry, you can catch the episode again today. From The Story's website:

Amidst the economic woes and the billion dollar bailout, will consumers have the confidence to go shopping? Meg Favreau knows exactly what it takes to get people to buy goods. Meg's first job was at a television "home shopping" channel.

See? I'm topical! Anyway, you check out stations that carry the show, and if there isn't one near you, you can find the piece on The Story's website in the next couple of days.

Tags: me npr thestory

On Newshour this morning, a reporter was asking people why they'd vote for Barack Obama. This was my favorite:

Because he's young...and full of beans.

Full of beans! Dammit, Obama! That's why this race is so close! You're not getting back to the language values this country was built on. Psh, you might think that the reason why you're polling so close to McCain is that Americans are ignorant and will not only believe that you're a Muslim, but think that's something to be frightened of. No! The problem is that they don't know that you're the candidate that's full of beans. You're bursting with pip and vigor, Barack! Let America see it—drink more coffee! Nibble more chocolate! When you roll into a town, help promote nutrition by eating healthy, fiber-filled bean burritos!

You can win this, Obama. You're the bees knees.

Tags: obama npr

Do you love nervous laughter? Or are you interested in hearing how much nervous laughter a professional radio show removes in post-production? Then you might be interested in listening to me on the radio! I'm going to be on "The Story with Dick Gordon" this afternoon talking about working in TV shopping. My segment will be airing at 1 p.m. (and again at 8 p.m.) on WUNC (they stream online). Want to listen on a radio but don't live in North Carolina? "The Story" might be carried by a NPR station near you. The piece will also be up on the show's archive page after 4 p.m. today.

Side note: when I went in to the recording studio, they almost accidentally put me on "News & Notes" instead. That would have been interesting.

I grew up in a small town in Northern New Hampshire, in an area that was once sustained by the paper mill industry. My father worked at one of the mills for a number of years, as did my uncle and many of my friends' parents. But with overseas competition being what it is, the last twenty years have been poor for the American wood products industry. As long as I can remember the mills existing, I can also remember them slowly closing down.

I saw the decline out of my peripheral vision. Mills changed hands; new signs went up. My friends' parents started losing their jobs. Mike's family moved to Texas, the Arsenaults moved to New York. My father had stopped working at the paper mill before I was born, but he was running the wooden-furniture-parts mill my grandfather had started, and they were also feeling the squeeze. A couple of years ago, my father made the decision to close down my family’s mill. And at the same time, the paper mills were sighing their last, sulphury breaths.

When I visit my parents in New Hampshire now, there's a feeling like everyone is holding their breath for fear that if they exhale, the area will collapse. I always struggle when I try to describe this feeling, because I don't want to give the impression that where I grew up is hopeless and decrepit. It's not. It's beautiful, but it's scared. The paper industry, the beast that built the area up, is now gray in the muzzle and trembling.

Perhaps it's needless to say, but it's not an area that many people pay attention to. That's why I was surprised to hear about it on NPR this morning. Amy Quinton from New Hampshire Public Radio did a piece about the demolition of smokestacks at one of the pulp mills in Berlin, which is two towns over from my hometown. In her short piece, Amy manages to capture the feeling of the area, its relationship with the mills, and its unsurety about how to move forward.

Listen here.