Mary Remar

Brian Williams’s Love Story – Oprah Mag., June 2005

In Falling in Love, Good Face, Icons, Simply the Best, Stars on December 16, 2009 at 1:51 pm

Again, I was cutting out images from old magazines for my Adult ESL students,   thank God my friends are all “Vision Board” collage-ers because I certainly would not keep a magazine from 2005,  and I ran across this article.

I loved this story when I read it, so I’m sharing.  http://www.accessmylibrary.com/article-1G1-134905764/brian-williams-aha-moment.html

For an extra-added bonus, here is another favorite of mine, a holiday treat:  Falling in Love. See the bottom of the page for a further  “Bonos”.

NINETEEN YEARS AGO, I WAS A 27-YEAR-OLD NEWS CORRESPONdent working for a local TV station, making no money, and enjoying the single life in Washington, D.C. I was concentrating on my career as a news anchor, one I’d wanted since I was an 8-year-old boy in Elmira, New York, staging fake newscasts and publishing weekly household reports using my father’s shirt cardboards. I thought I had my life perfectly mapped. I figured I would climb the ladder to success and, once there, my position would enable me to find the right person. But as they say, if you want to give God a good laugh, make a plan.

File:Brian Williams and Jane Williams.jpg

One afternoon while walking through the halls just before going on the air, I turned a corner and almost ran into a woman holding a stack of tapes in her arms. Our eyes met, and she looked down sheepishly. I’d always read about the dynamic of lightning bolts and little cupids fluttering around, and I’d never really believed these things happened. But I’m afraid I couldn’t stop staring at her. When we introduced ourselves, I learned that her name was Jane and she was an executive producer. A few minutes later, when the broadcast began, she was in my head … literally: She kept telling me the time remaining in the segment and making suggestions through the earpiece I was wearing. When it was over, I went to my friend Bernie’s office, shut the door, and slumped down in his chair. “Bernie,” I said, “I think I’ve met her.”

I asked Jane to dinner and went to pick her up in my 1983 beige Ford Escort–a real chick magnet. She came to the door with her hair wet, barefoot in a blue dress, putting on her earrings, and I’ve just never been so sure of anything in my life. After that, all of our dates and conversations were passing time. I knew where this was headed. I proposed to Jane a few months later during a weekend trip to the North Carolina coast. It wasn’t quite what I’d envisioned: We had a fight en route about her driving (and no jury would convict me for the things I said), and she kicked me out of the car. After I spent a short time on the side of the road, we made up, then checked into a hotel that gave new meaning to the word mildew. All we did when we were indoors was sneeze and sniffle. Despite everything, when I asked her on the beach to marry me, she said yes.

We’ve been married for 18 years now, and our two children still enjoy hearing the story of how we met. At the end, I tell them that they’ll know love when they see it. It can’t be manufactured. There’s not a bar that sells it, not a store where you can find it. I tell them that if they are patient enough, they can find someone who is truly right for them. And I tell them that a good relationship takes an extraordinary amount of mutual respect … and a sense of humor. But it all starts at falling in love. Before I met Jane, I thought that such thermonuclear attraction happened only in the movies, with tight shots of both people’s eyes and accompanying music. I thought I was in control of my own destiny … that in a few years I would become my ideal self, and then I would embark on a campaign to find someone to marry. Seeing her in the hall busted my plans and forced me to make new ones. It was the luckiest thing that ever happened to me.

Williams, Brian. “Brian Williams’s Aha! Moment; breaking news: the NBC anchorman learns that love is what happens while you’re making other plans.(LYBL).” O, The Oprah Magazine. 2005. accessmylibrary. (December 16, 2009). http://www.accessmylibrary.com/article-1G1-134905764/brian-williams-aha-moment.html

A final bonus bonus:  Brian Williams and Bono

Wow. David Byrne’s Blog…

In Gardens, Icons, Simply the Best, Travel on December 14, 2009 at 12:52 am

Here is an incredible travel-logue of a trip he took to Portugal. Love that he has a blog.  Love this article.  http://journal.davidbyrne.com/2009/11/111009-sintra-a-mystical-home-in-the-clouds.html

Blog Referrals from The Idiot Programmer

In Good Face, Icons, Simply the Best, Trends on November 25, 2009 at 10:07 am

Great list.  The Idiot Programmer Weblog:  http://www.imaginaryplanet.net/weblogs/idiotprogrammer/?p=83400773

Blogs I am following (June 2009)

Occasionally I feel compelled to mention which blogs I follow on a semi-regular basis. It’s funny how often I change regular haunts,  and that usually happens whenever I lose my Firefox bookmarks.  My blog consumption tastes are fickle, but here are the ones I return to reliably (because generally they haven’t let me down). Looking over the list, it is obvious to me how much I discriminate against blogs that give incomplete RSS feeds and blogs which hide most of their content under the fold with the More link. Doing that forces the read to click the link for every single damn post I wish to read.

  • James Fallows does some extraordinary (and entertaining) reporting about living in Beijing. Unfortunately, this reporting is about to end, but he will still be blogging.
  • Climate Progress is an influential blog about the science of global warming.  Less wonky but more into political and social issues is Grist.
  • For general liberal commentary I check Think Progress’s Wonk Room. (I would call this my main news source these days). I also follow Matt Yglesias pretty closely. I also follow Washington Monthly blog , but not as often because it covers much of the same ground as Think Progress (even though it’s extremely well written).
  • Tiny Revolution is a political satire blog. Very funny sometimes.
  • Robert Reich is a liberal economist who has always been ahead of the curve on policy issues. (For conservative dissent, I check Cafe Hayek) .
  • The Business Desk with Paul Solman. Solman is a great PBS News Hour reporter about economics. He started a recent blog answering one question a day from readers. A lot of great things come up.
  • Houston Chronicle blogs. One reason I hate Chronicle blogs is that they don’t have full RSS feeds. But I end up reading Techblog with Dwight SilvermanLoren Steffy, Lisa Falkenberg, Eric Berger (aka Science Guy). Only senior columnist Leon Hale seems to have a full feed these days. Update: Techblog does have a full RSS feed—horray!
  • Marginal Revolution is an economics blog run by Tyler Cowen and Alex Tabarrok.  I find a lot of off-the-wall social science stuff from there.
  • Sex & Relationships: Roissy has a NSFW blog about picking up women. It’s mildly offensive,  but insightful and well written. I just discovered Savage love blog and expect to be reading this a lot more often. (Dan Savage’s well written dating columns are frank and not to be missed).  For the woman’s perspective on dating, I check out divas on a date .
  • 2blowhards is a general arts blog (with a nonfunctioning RSS feed as well). Focus on movies, sexy links and light-hearted conservatism. Ray Sawhill (the uberblogger behind 2blowhards) has a NSFW cultural blog with personal touches  (with lots of risque pictures—warning).
  • Oddly, I follow  few literary blogs. The reason is simple. I almost never read literary stuff on the computer! (Instead I download longer literary things onto my PDA RSS Reader so I can read it at the supermarket). But I follow Literary License (a Houston literary blog with brief reviews), Fictionaut blog (run by editors of the always-in-beta literary community) and Complete Review/Literary Saloon (outstanding litblog with unfortunately defective RSS feed). On my PDA I always follow Conversational Reading, Mumpsimus, Reading Experience, Useless Tree , Virginia Quarterly Review, Critical Mass National Book Critics Circle blog, The Guardian’s Book Blog , Joy Castro as well as a few dozen by writer friends.
  • Amyshealth. One of the best friends from college developed breast cancer and is describing her experience via blog. It’s harrowing to read, but Amy writes with an almost ghoulish sense of humor. Amy is one of the most upbeat people I know, and it shows.
  • David Hudson’s IFC The Daily is probably the most distinguished film blog I’ve found, marred only by the fact that I can only get partial feeds. House Next Door delivers  in that department. It’s a group blog about cinema, comics and the arts.
  • Bigpicture (gigantic photos about a single topic) and Postsecrets (people send their most private secrets via postcard)  are 2 fascinating. Less known but still fascinating is Mardecortesbaja, a site about public domain art, old Hollywood and comics.
  • Tom Johnson’s I’d Rather be Writing covers tech writing and blogging. Daily blog tips covers useful info for bloggers. Sometimes the lists  begins to seem tiresome (“10 Ways to Make your Blog more fruity” etc).  I still look at the Content Wrangler’s RSS feed though the site itself is unusable.
  • I get a lot of recommendations for downloading free music from Jamendo’s blog.
  • Brad Ideas is a blog of the EFF chairman Brad Templeton. Lots of musings about innovation and government policy.
  • Get Rich Slowly and Penelope Trunk’s Brazen Careerist are two practical blogs about finances and careers.
  • Thenonsequitur analyzes political rhetoric and uncovers the logical fallacies in them. Written by 2 philosophy professors. Even though they sometimes choose easy targets, they also identify many subtle errors in logic which has only made me more careful about what I read.  A similar blog which analyzes fallacies from the point of view of empirical science is the Denialism blog.
  • Ebooks: I am deeply involved in ebook publishing. I used to write/run Teleread (even though now I catch it only on RSS, and not on the blog itself (too much under the fold). Mike Cane’s Ebook Test site covers technical issues as does Threepress blog and Tools for Change Oreilly blog. Finding free ebooks is about what you’d think it’s about.

Blogs I no longer follow religiously for various reasons:

  • Boingboing – still well written and lots of original finds, but too trendy for my liking.
  • New York Times blogs. I read a lot of entries from them, but they have no full RSS feeds and their comment moderation policy for blogs seem inconsistent. (Besides, NYT features individual blog posts on its main site, so I keep up).
  • Oreilly Radar – very well written and cutting edge, but I don’t have time for it.
  • Easter Lemming Liberal is a Texas liberal blog run by Gary Denton. Recently, after he vowed to post less this year, he has been turning his energy to Facebook posts instead.
  • Off the Kuff. Chuck (a college friend) is the place to go for the inside scoop about Houston and Texas politics. I check it when I’m doing research about a political or local issue.
  • Photomatt is still interesting and full of the latest about blog technology, but probably too esoteric for me by now. I’ve kind of veering  out of  software blogs recently.
  • How to learn Swedish in 100 Difficult Lessons. Funny blog by gay American living in Stockholm. I don’t read it often, but generally enjoy it thoroughly every time I do.

Podcasts I follow. By the way, I am extremely picky about the podcasts I follow. I download lots of stuff, but don’t listen to as much as I should. I have several other podcasts I download and listen to, but not reliably, or more selectively. The ones below are ones I listen to almost every episode of.

Follow

Get every new post delivered to your Inbox.