Dec 4, 2015

The Strange and Cut Throat World of Talk Radio........

After listening to talk radio and writing about it for a really long time--seeing my favorites disappear without any explanation, and hearing unbelievable comments from crazy hosts without any repercussion whatsoever--I have come to the conclusion that radio must be the weirdest and most cut throat job out there in media land. 


chloe louise--the ronnie republic radio round-up,,,,,,,,,any comments or posts are welcome, agree or disagree.


Loved listening to Geraldo Rivera and Noam Laden every day......wishing both of these very talented individuals the best.


copied from all access........




Geraldo - Seriously?
You made a hand shake deal with the Tricky-Dickies? What the hell were you thinking? These two guy are the shadiest operators on the planet! Perhaps you have missed all the complaints and backlash over the past few years of the shady deals, the mass firings of great people just to pad the bottom line so they could get their bonus packages!?
What in gods name were you smoking? These two jackrabbits have destroyed countless fabulous careers of some very talented people. What made you think you were immune to their back stabbing nonsense? Are you that special in your own mind? You must have an ego to match those two ass-hats for sure!!
Lew Dickley used to give these awesome speeches about how Cumulus was poised to run Clear Channel or now i-fart media into the ground. He was convinced he could have Cumulus take over the world. He and John are both giant bags of wind. Or, a big puffy cloud. They look and talk big, but have no substance.
Shut your whiny pie hole for just a minute... take what you are feeling right now (you know... betrayed, short sided, lied to, taken advantage of, used, abused, un-appreciated... I could go on) and now... take those feelings and realize that there are literally thousands of people who have been through the same ringer you think you have been singled out for.
You poor soul... getting canned after Thanksgiving. Oh, the tears.
Shut the fuck up. I got canned shortly after Christmas. As did many of my other co-workers. And that 'blood letting' procedure was even after Cumulus so blatantly announced that there would be no more bonuses on rating performances, no contracts, non of it... oh, but they did want to hold folks to non-competes.
You my friend are a total dumbass.
Take your lumps. Shut your hole and deal with it.
We all have






  • Geraldo Rivera Exits WABC/New York Amidst Drama, Acrimony

    November 30, 2015 at 4:01 AM (PT)
  • geraldorivera2015.jpg
    Rivera
    GERALDO RIVERA told his FACEBOOK followers this weekend that he has been let go at CUMULUS News-Talk WABC-A/NEW YORK, and he blamed new CEO MARY BERNER and NEW YORK VP/Market Manager CHAD LOPEZ for not honoring his handshake agreement with former CUMULUS programming chief JOHN DICKEY.
    A post on WEDNESDAY (11/25) said, "To fans of my ‪#‎77WABCradio‬ show this may be goodbye.  I’ve just been informed by Mary.Berner@Cumulus.com the new CUMULUS MEDIA CEO & by Chad.Lopez@Cumulus.com the NEW YORK VP/Market Manager that they do not intend to honor the handshake deal I made with the ousted company chief JOHN DICKEY, an agreement to extend my current contract for a year.  The decision to renege on our deal on the eve of THANKSGIVING is especially upsetting coming in the wake of my emotionally charged and highly rated coverage of the PARIS massacre and frantic efforts by authorities to bring the perpetrators to justice.  Last year, the VILLAGE VOICE named me the ‘2014 Best AM Radio Host in NYC’, writing in part, 'GERALDO RIVERA actually has something to say. The guy understands the issues of the day and has enough confidence in his opinions to call bullshit on blowhards,' which I’m doing here."
    A subsequent, much longer post on SATURDAY outlined CUMULUS' financial problems, called LEW and JOHN DICKEY "honorable" but "over-extended and prey to hedge funders who gobbled up enough clout to oust them as managers and install someone who had no experience in broadcasting but who apparently impressed those adventurous investors."  He said he was locked out of his studio as of FRIDAY although his contract expires DECEMBER 31st, and threatened to sue CUMULUS, saying that "because of their unforgivable disrespect I will fight them and they will end up costing their battered company far more in damages than they expect to save in my salary."

  • - See more at: http://www.allaccess.com/net-news/archive/story/148105/geraldo-rivera-exits-wabc-new-york-amidst-drama-ac#sthash.SCdZ2u7l.dpuf




  • Geraldo Riv

  • Dec 3, 2015

    Trump Is Wrong About People "Cheering" 9/11 In New Jersey -- Here's The ...

    Trump Is Wrong About People "Cheering" 9/11 In New Jersey -- Here's The ...

    Roasted Veggies from Yahoo Food and The Cat Hair Cook.......

    The Easiest Way to Make Roasted Veggies

    feed_manager_auto_publish_494--autopubtest_WPTUMBLR_485 
    Whenever I come home and am finally #blessed with a homecooked meal, the first thing I demand is my mom’s roasted vegetables. The woman is a saint when it comes to cookin’ veggies. How the does she do it?
    When I finally asked what her secret is, I was shocked. It’s the simplest recipe I’ve ever heard.
    All you need is olive oil, the seasoning of your choice, and an oven. Done. Oh, and don’t forget the vegetables.
    Roasted Veggies
    Prep Time: 15 minutes
    Cook Time: 30 minutes
    Total Time: 45 minutes
    Servings: 3
    Ingredients:
    1 head broccoli
    1 zucchini
    1 sweet potato
    1 purple potato
    1 bag baby carrots
    Olive oil
    Salt
    Pepper
    Directions:
    1. Chop up all the veggies you’re cookin’. #SpoonTip: For the vegetables that cook more slowly, cut them smaller. For the ones that cook more quickly, cut them bigger. Easy, right?
    2. Put all the vegetables back in the bag you got from the grocery store (or any plastic bag of your choice).
    3. Add olive oil to the veggies until they’re lightly coated. Add salt and pepper and other seasonings if you’re feelin’ fancy.
    4. Mix ’em up until all the veggies are evenly coated.
    5. Spread veggies onto a foil-lined baking sheet.
    6. Bake in the oven at 400°F for 30 minutes.
    Spoon University is a food network for our generation, where all the content is produced by college students. They cover everything from simple recipes and local restaurants to dining hall hacks and healthy living tips.


    copied from yahoo food

    here is a link to the page because the comments have good tips, too:

    and from the cat hair cook:  please do not forget Perry mason Sweet Potatoes--it is basically the same technique but on top of the stove

    Dec 2, 2015

    Trump Flim-Flams Baja Investors


    Trump Baja venture leaves buyers high and dry

    Deposits totaling $32.2 million are lost in the collapse of the celebrity developer's hotel-condo project.

    March 07, 2009|Associated Press

      • Email
        Share
    SAN DIEGO — Stephen and Linda Drake cast aside concerns about owning property in Mexico because they believed in Donald Trump.
    The Southern California couple made a $250,000 down payment on a 19th-floor oceanfront condo in Trump Ocean Resort Baja in 2006 before the first construction crew arrived.
    But admiration for the celebrity developer and star of "The Apprentice" has now turned into anger and disbelief as Trump's luxury hotel-condo plan collapsed, leaving little more than a hole in the ground and investors out of their deposits, which totaled $32.2 million.
    "I can't even stand to see Trump's face on TV," said Linda Drake, a psychologist whose husband is a commercial airline pilot and financial advisor.
    Investors were told last month that their money was spent and that they wouldn't get a penny back. A single mother in suburban Los Angeles lost $200,000 and won't be able to send her sons to private universities. A Los Angeles-area businessman lost a deposit of more than $1 million on four Trump units, including two penthouses.
    The project's collapse comes at a delicate time for Trump, whose casino company, Trump Entertainment Resorts Inc., filed for bankruptcy protection last month. He also is embroiled in a lawsuit to avoid paying debt on the struggling Trump International Hotel and Tower in Chicago.
    Trump and his children heavily promoted the northern tip of Mexico's Baja California coast. He sold 188 units for $122 million the first day they went on a sale at a lavish event in a downtown San Diego hotel in December 2006.
    "I went out and saw this site, and I was blown away by it," Ivanka Trump said in June 2007. "From the minute I saw it, it was a deal I had to do."
    The location was a contrast to more-expensive Mexican coastal markets such as Puerto Vallarta, Los Cabos and Cancun, she said.
    The Trumps remained buoyant even as the U.S. housing market began to crumble. Ivanka Trump assured buyers in an October 2007 newsletter that all Trump projects were immune to a slowdown.
    "In characteristic Trump fashion, Trump Ocean Resort Baja will be the best of the best, and consequently always in demand," she wrote.
    All that remains of Trump Baja is a highway billboard with a large photo of Donald Trump that advertises condos for sale. It hovers over a closed sales center and showroom, a paved parking lot, a big hole that cuts a wide swath, drainage pipes and construction equipment.
    The failure of Trump Baja is a big blow to a real estate market just south of the border from San Diego that was booming two years ago with U.S. buyers looking for second homes and easy profits but is now similarly swooning. The market has been hammered by Mexico's drug-fueled violence and the global economic crisis.
    Other developers completed big projects nearby in recent years and the area remains home to thousands of Americans, but the cliff-lined coast is pocked with partially built towers. The steel frame of one oceanfront high-rise is rusting, with air ducts hanging from one floor and an idled crane out front. A wind-tattered sales sign hangs outside twin towers nearby -- one that appears almost complete and the other a much shorter steel skeleton.
    Trump Baja demanded about 30% down for units that sold from less than $300,000 to $3 million, buyers said.
    Deposits on abandoned projects are also at risk in the U.S., even in states like California that prohibit developers from spending the money on construction, lawyers say. The risk may be higher in Mexico because consumer protection laws are generally weak.
    "The bottom line in Mexico is caveat emptor -- buyer beware," said Art Spaulding, an Irvine real estate attorney who does business south of the border.
    Trump's condos went on sale when Southern California home prices were near their peak, offering a lower-cost alternative in the Mexican border city of Tijuana. Trump Organization teamed up with Los Angeles developer Irongate Capital Partners, the partnership behind Trump International Hotel and Tower Waikiki in Honolulu.
    Guadalupe Mendoza, 47, paid a $200,000 deposit at the first-day sale in San Diego, refinancing her Downey home and getting a loan from a sister. She watched a giant screen show units getting snapped up.
    After signing papers, buyers were ushered to a buffet of sirloin tip and fish tacos. Cheers erupted in the hotel ballroom for each new owner.
    "I did it in less than a minute," said Mendoza, an administrator in the Los Angeles County Office of Education. "I remember my head was hurting and thinking, 'My God, what was that?' I was thinking maybe I should have asked questions. It was like a roller-coaster ride."
    Buyers pressed for updates as construction fell behind schedule. They got a bombshell letter in December that said negotiations for a construction loan from German bank WestLB had collapsed and Trump Baja had only $556,000 left. It quoted a contract clause that gave the developer a right to spend their deposits

    Trump Baja venture leaves buyers high and dry

    Deposits totaling $32.2 million are lost in the collapse of the celebrity developer's hotel-condo project.

    March 07, 2009|Associated Press

      • Email
        Share
    Another letter came in January that said Trump was removing his name.
    A Feb. 16 letter from a Mexican entity, PB Impulsores, said the project was scrapped "given the extreme dislocation of the financial markets." It said there was no money left to refund deposits.
    The December letter said Trump was not an investor, but buyers said they were sold on his imprimatur.
    "We thought of Donald Trump," Linda Drake said. "If Donald Trump was behind it, it was going to work. . . . I am embarrassed to tell people we got caught up in this."
    Ivanka Trump said in 2007 that her father "is the boss" when asked about his role in the project.
    "He is involved in every capacity," she said.
    In response to a request to interview Donald and Ivanka Trump, Trump Organization issued a statement that said its partner violated an agreement to license the Trump name, missing deadlines to obtain financing and begin construction.
    Timothy Hughes, an attorney for Irongate, said the project "will not be going forward" but declined to answer questions.
    One buyer sued Trump and Irongate in Los Angeles County Superior Court last month, and more litigation is expected.
    "They put their trust in this project and feel betrayed," said Bart Ring, a Woodland Hills attorney who says he represents about 75 buyers who haven't sued.
    Homeowners and brokers in Baja welcomed the publicity and higher prices that Trump brought. Now they wish he'd never come.
    "It was a two-edged sword that's cutting the wrong way," broker Brian Flock said.
    "Everybody is shellshocked. I call it post-Trump syndrome."

    copied from the LA Times