Wednesday Morning Links: Links and stuff

Good Wednesday morning. 2010 is waning down and I look forward to 2011.  This year has been a year that I will look back at it and say, “It was the start of something amazing.”

Here’s Wednesday’s Free-For-All. Jump in for conversation and fun.

Today’s weather word is DAMP High will be 64 and there’s a 30% chance of rain. Tonight there’s a 90% with severe weather forecast for New Year’s Eve.

While NY Mayor Michael Bloomberg catches grief for lack of snow response, Newark Mayor Cory Booker is hailed as a hero for his use of Twitter to connect to Newark’s residents. I know if Jackson got 3o inches of snow, we’d be right on it.

Oprah Winfrey has her OWN network. Next year’s goal, to have her OWN continent.

Slain homeless woman found dead off of I-20 in Jackson was beloved by those who knew her. Tuesday would have been Connie Stubbs’ 52nd birthday.

If you are traveling over the New Year’s holiday, expect delays.  Airlines are still trying to recover after the blizzard that hit the Northeast.

Tuesday Night Football (I like the ring of that): Vikings upset the Eagles 24-14.

An interesting story from the NY Times about “Doubling Up” — people moving in with family because of lost homes due to the economic crisis.

Here’s a good story about how Walt Disney World is tackling lines — you know that thing that makes theme parks a living hell.

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Tuesday Morning Links: Links to news and stuff

I’m baaaaaccccck!!!!!  After a few days of cyberhybernation, I’m back on the keyboard and ready to link away.  I hope you had a good Holiday — I know here at Tiny Wheels Media, LLC we did.  Lots of food, family, fun and festivities.  It was a blessing and in light of all the change that has been thrust my way, I am glad I could enjoy a couple of days with people who care about me. I did read an incredible book: Unbroken: A World War II Story of Survival, Resilience and Redemption by Laura (Seabiscuit) Hillenbrand.  I give it ***** out of five.

Weather: Say goodbye to winter (it has been cooooold) and hello to spring.  Today it will be sunny with a hi of 53. By Thursday it’ll be in the 70’s and there will be severe weather on New Year’s Eve.  A perfect way to ring out violently changing year: Tornadoes.

The Deepwater Horizon’s Final Hours.  I read this amazing New York Times piece on Christmas Day (now this is journalism) and was in awe at the mistakes made and the human tragedy of the disaster that changed the Gulf for years. It’s one of the best newspaper reads I’ve had in years.

The Northeast looks like the North Pole. A blizzard has slammed the Northeast, fouling transportation around the entire nation. One town where my parents used to live, Rahway, NJ, got 32 inches of snow.  We got flurries here in Jackson.  I know it has been tough to cope.  The Vikings strange odyssey of not being able to play games because of snow continues — Sunday Night Football will be on Tuesday. Favre is doubtful to start.

Pop singer Teena Marie may have had a seizure in her sleep. Singer Alanis Morissette gives birth to a baby boy.

Apparently the Mayans were thinking of the oil companies when they thought about the world ending: Analysts are predicting gas could be $5 a gallon by 2012.  If that happens, say hello to the Great Depression part 2.

Here’s a really over-thinking look at the new version of ‘True Grit”‘s religious take on the world vs. the John Wayne version and the book.

Who Dat? Saints rally to beat the Falcons 17-14 to secure playoff berth.

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Top words for 2010 and 2011

The top word looked up on Merriam-Webster Dictionary’s website was “Austerity.” For those of you who are curious, austerity means “enforced or extreme economy.”  Sounds reasonable — I know the word has made an appearance in my household budget.  But I suggest we come up with a better word for 2011.   Let’s try “audacious.”  Like, “I set some audacious goals for 2011 and reached them.”

A little audacity will make austerity a word of the past.

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Merry Christmas

I’m taking the day off to be with my family. I hope this Christmas brings the same for you, too.

So Merry Christmas.  Your continued support has been the greatest gift I could have received this year.

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Memorializing a man who didn’t want to be memorialized

Word came that he had died.  Although he wasn’t in great health, it came as a shock. He died in a tragic way — and I’m still stunned.

He was my Dad’s friend.  One of three men who told bad jokes, passed time and created a strange support group for three men who’d never admit to having a support group. Now there are two.

He was a funny man. A caring one, too.  He was a father and a businessman.  A man who had reinvented himself years ago and started his own business.  He loved his ailing wife. And you could tell how much he loved his grandchildren.  The world has a big void in it now.

I knew he liked me.  You could see it in his smile when I’d visit him at his office.  He also looked forward to my family’s Christmas card that I’d drew every year. He was very disappointed that I had not done one this year. If he had lived, he would have gotten one after Christmas.

Hillary Clinton wrote a book with the title “It takes a Village to Raise a Child.”  He didn’t raise me — but he made my Dad happy.  And I respected him.  He’s just one more person who has entered my life and now left who left their mark on me. His death has left me sad to the core.

There won’t be a memorial service for him. Those were his wishes. But he’ll always be remembered.  At least as long as I’m alive.

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Christmas Eve Links: News and other Yuletide cheer

Good morning! Hope you’re ready for the big day.  Me?  Well I’m sitting in the eye of a three-boy Christmas hurricane.  The excitement level is now at an 11 out of 10. My oldest son asked for sleeping pills. Um… no.

Here’s the Christmas Eve Free-For-All for any last minute visiting before Christmas.

WEATHER: The weather outside is delightful but the day tomorrow will be frightful. I wish it was a little bit more cold, let it snow, let it snow. Today it’ll be sunny and 51. Tomorrow it will rain and be 47.

Best story that represents the spirit of Christmas: A teenager’s simple act elevates all. Just when you thought all stories about teenagers were bad.

Pilgrims and tourists head toward Bethlehem. Bethlehem : A popular destination since 0 AD.

Area stores stretch hours for last minutes shoppers. My wife is about to head out to buy her last Christmas gift from me. Yes, I know that is not traditionally how it is done.

An early Christmas present: Economists see a stronger recovery coming next year. I know I’m ready for it.

World War II pilot who forever repaid his rescuers dies at 94. Fred Hargesheimers’ P-38 Lightning was shot down by a Japanese fighter. He landed on a deserted Pacific isle and was rescued after 31 days by local hunters. He spent the rest of his life giving back — first building a school and then raising money for a hospital. And then he eventually moved back and taught the islanders’ children. It’s an amazing story of gratitude and love.

The weirdest Political Moments from 2010 via CNN.

All California wants for Christmas is no more rain! They’re digging out.

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2010 Christmas Cartoon

Every year I paint or draw a scene from around Mississippi. This year I chose the Natchez Trace Overlook on the Ross Barnett Reservoir. This is based on a photo I took the other evening while walking with my sons and it’s one of my favorite views in the whole state. It’s a pen and ink drawing with the color added on the computer with with Photoshop.

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Come to LEMURIA BOOKS today at 1 p.m. for book signing!

Come by Lemuria Books (off the I-55 S frontage road in Jackson) at 1 p.m. and I’ll sign you a copy of my Greatest Hits book 10!. It’s $14.95 (plus tax) and makes a great stocking stuffer.  Have one already?  You have more than one toilet that needs one!

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Thursday Morning Links: Links to news and stuff

BREAKING NEWS: Terror attacks in Rome: Blasts at Swiss, Chile embassies.

I slept in. I did not get up at 5 and do this like I should have — but I wasn’t on the radio this morning and I went to bed at 12:30 last night. So I slept until 7 a.m.  And if felt sinful.

If you’d like to buy a personalized copy of my Greatest Hits books,  I’ll be at Lemuria Books today at 1 p.m.  Come say hi! I’d love to see you.

Weather. The bi-polar weather continues. The warm weather is over and the cool down begins.  Today’s high will be a sunny 51 but there’s actually a rain/snow chance on Christmas Eve. Snow on Christmas. Now wouldn’t that be something.

Hancock Bank will become HANCOCK BANK after a $1.5 billion merger with New Orleans-based Whitney Holding Corp.  That will make Hancock the largest Mississippi-based bank and the 32nd largest in the nation.

Mississippi unemployment rate rose to 9.8% in November. And that doesn’t count the underemployed and the people who are part-time. However it is lower than the 10.4% rate from last year.

Take the politics of the elections out of the equation and Congress finally gets busy. The lame-duck Congress that compromised and could.

I went to see True Grit yesterday and I’d give it ***** our of five.  Haliee Steinfield, who plays Mattie Ross in the remake of the 1969 John Wayne classic, deserves an Oscar. I wouldn’t say it was better than the original, but it stands on its own as a fantastic example of the genre.  Check out the trailer here.

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The last-minute Wise Man

He turned on his blinker and pulled his camel off the interstate. What a stressful trip — camels aren’t known for their speed or their comfort.  And the worst part was the honking trucks.  He wished there was a camel-only lane on I-20.

It was Christmas Eve and he needed to buy a gift. Immediately. And he had come from the east in search of a place to buy it.

He was a Wise Man, but still a man. That meant he had procrastinated and not bought his gift ahead of time like his wife told him to. (In all truth, she was the wise one in the family.).  He pulled onto Lakeland Drive and headed toward the glut of stores.  All were hoping to lure last minute shoppers like himself inside.  His head hurt under his purple turban.  He HATED shopping.

A car full of shepherds honked as they sat next to him at a traffic light. They were waving bags full of stuff.  He sighed. They hadn’t waited until  the last minute like he had. And there was the kid with his drum.   The Magi laughed — how many sleeping babies want to hear a beating drum? It doesn’t take a Wise Man to know that’ll make Mary mad as a hornet when the baby wakes up screaming.

He eased the camel into the first store’s parking lot.  He found a spot next to a Chevy and a Honda.  “I hope they didn’t hit the camel with their doors”, thought the Magi. Camels tend to spit back when whacked with a car door.  He followed the mass of men into the brightly lit mega-store.

The security system went off when he went through the door, causing suspicious stares from the other customers.  “What?!?” he said, “Haven’t you seen a man in a turban and purple robes before.”

It was Mississippi. They hadn’t.

He looked at the sea of shelves. His hunt for the proverbial needle in the haystack had begun. In the corner was a sobbing man, clutching a list in his wife’s handwriting.  Apparently he had found nothing on it. The man needed a Christmas Miracle. Santa couldn’t save him — he was Scrooged. To the right he noticed a display of Gift Cards.  That was as tempting as the Devil himself.  But getting Frankincense, Gold and a Gift Card just didn’t have much of a ring to it.  He grabbed a cart and took the plunge.

There was a Saints Snuggie. Now the child COULD use a Snuggie. He was in a manger after all.  The Wise Man threw it in the cart.  He noticed a bottle opener that played Jingle Bells. “Um, no,” he thought. He kept looking.

The shelves were picked over.  He found a jar of pickled pigs feet. No.  An ashtray with “Ford” on it. No.  A can of Spam.  No.

He swung his cart into the baby aisle.  He tossed some formula and diapers into the cart.  Sure, they were practical gifts, but it would be appreciated.  Then he grabbed a couple of baby outfits. They looked warm. Warm is good.  They were nice gifts but not worthy of this child. He kept looking.

The sobbing man was being comforted by a security guard as the Magi circled back around to the front. The Wise Man was about to join him.  He sighed and clutched his Bank of Bethlehem debit card.  The clock was ticking.  He began to sweat.

And then he saw a bright star outside the store window.  The Wise Man paid for what he had in his cart and went outside to hop on his camel.  He didn’t even turn on his Garmin. He just followed the bright light.

It came to the Wise Man: Gold! I will get the baby gold!  He guided the camel into a jewelry store parking lot. As he sat looking at the star, it occurred to him that it wasn’t about the gift. It was about the thought behind it.  Gold represented how precious he thought the Child was.  It wasn’t about stuff. It was about love.

The Wise Man eased the camel back onto Lakeland Drive. And then he smiled.  He had received a gift himself that night.

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