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The Good Guys Ride Bikes
The Good Guys Ride Bikes
All John Finello ever wanted was to ride a motorcycle. It carried him away from school in the 10th grade. He never returned. That free life John chased so loudly had some unexpected snares. Heroin. Cocaine. And booze. He started stealing to support his habits. Finally, was arrested for armed robbery in Saugus, Massachusetts.
“The only thing left for me was either death or prison,” Finello said.
But a remarkable thing happened. He found a job. Got married. And became a dad. He was free of the alcohol and drugs that held him half his life. John and his biker friends decided to form a group that did not get high and began making converts. There are 70 of them now, counseling high school kids.
Bulldog’s Pickers
Bulldog’s Pickers
An aging group of friends moved to south Texas one winter because they didn’t like weather they had to lift. The friends noticed that machines only harvested one vegetable at a time. They missed a lot. On one farm in the Rio Grande Valley, 6 million pounds of vegetables — that were too small or too ripe — were left to be plowed under. So the elderly went after them, gathering left over vegetables for the poor.
Unwed Fathers
Manny Cardona seeks out teenage fathers and leads them back to the families they created. He gets their girlfriends medical attention. Guides them off welfare. And tries to keep them in school.
Cardona was once like them, an unwed teen father, who put himself through college, got a masters degree and a job at the Bridgeport, Connecticut, YMCA. Manny represents something in short supply this neighborhood. Success.
Anti-smoking Tobacco Heir
Anti-smoking Tobacco Heir
In the 1980’s Americans started smoking fewer cigarettes for the first time since 1913, that’s when R.J. Reynolds took a picture of a circus camel and stuck it on the side of a pack. Six years later, nearly half of the people in America who smoked cigarettes, smoked that one brand — Camels. His ads were the first to link smoking with the good life. That didn’t just sell cigarettes. That made them part of our culture. NBC’s first TV newscast gave them to lucky viewers.
One of R.J. Reynold’s grandsons, Patrick, twisted those advertising techniques to get people to stop smoking.
Scoop City
Scoop City
Focus all of your energy, not on fighting the old, but on building the new. That’s the key to a long and happy career. I learned that lesson in a small city, half way between St. Louis and Kansas City, where stories seldom go untold.
Everglades Changing
Everglades Changing
Out here, the alligators look like they’re sighting down a gun barrel. Survival goes to the swift. But even the fastest cannot run from the pollution that seeps from sugarcane fields. In south Florida over the years, the Federal Government drained the heart of the Everglades. 700-thousand acres were turned into some of the richest farm land in America. Now, environmentalists are battling to cleans the deadly phosphorus that the draining unleashed.
Final Choice
Before hi-tech medicine, death was a member of the family, something families nearly always chose to have happen at home. Today, 8 out of 10 Americans die in hospitals, surrounded by strangers. Often alone in webs of wires and tubes. Hospice care gives the terminally ill a chance to live a near normal life, until they die. A quarter of million Americans at the end of their lives have checked themselves out of hospitals and into hospice programs. In 1974 there was one hospice in America. Twenty years later there were 2,000. Mostly staffed by volunteers. That keeps costs low. On average, about $80 a day. Nearly 10 times cheaper than some hospital stays. Add in Medicaire and Medicaid, the out of pocket cost — $16 bucks a day. Nine out of ten hospice programs are in people’s homes. For those whose final choice is to go gently, they will not be forced to do otherwise.
Animal Beauty Aids for People
Animal grooming products have become some of the hottest beauty aids for people. A lot of folks who’d never been inside a feed store began using them. 90 % use horse products for themselves. That pushed sales for “Main and Tail” from $500,000 to $30 million. Farm mothers have quietly used these protein lotions for years. They are about half as expensive as what comparable products cost in the beauty shop.
Desoto Hour
Most of the time Georgia Tech’s Rambling Wreck radio sounds like a three car pile up. Even among college stations, its programming is considered extreme. But stuck between “Concussion Theater” and a show called “Tongue Bath” is the station’s longest running program — Fred Runde’s Desoto Hour — the show with the most listeners. The 77-year-old disc jockey is not a Georgia Tech student. Nor a teacher. Never was. He’s been spinning Big Band magic here since Jimmy Carter was in the White House. Fred wandered through the door looking for something to do in retirement. Students swooned for his oasis of sound. Runde believes that noise is merely music someone doesn’t want to hear.
Rosewood
There are few traces of Rosewood. Graves hidden in the weeds of time. A fist full of photographs. Fading, like the memory of what happened in the north Florida woods. The tragedy began after a White woman, Fanny Taylor, said she was beaten by a Black man, a story she may have made up to cover a fight with her White lover. The attacker was never found. But a mob raged through Rosewood for 8 days. The sheriff did not stop them. The governor did not send help. The burnings. The beatings. The looting continued for a week. A least 8 people lost their lives. Rosewood had been a prosperous place. The families owned a turpentine plant and cut much of the Cyprus for school pencils in this country. No one was prosecuted. Ever. Fear kept Black families from returning, even to sell their land. Rosewood’s survivors became an address list of long forgotten names. Their story nearly died with them. But now, justice — a long last.
The Good Guys Ride Bikes
The Good Guys Ride Bikes
All John Finello ever wanted was to ride a motorcycle. It carried him away from school in the 10th grade. He never returned. That free life John chased so loudly had some unexpected snares. Heroin. Cocaine. And booze. He started stealing to support his habits. Finally, was arrested for armed robbery in Saugus, Massachusetts.
“The only thing left for me was either death or prison,” Finello said.
But a remarkable thing happened. He found a job. Got married. And became a dad. He was free of the alcohol and drugs that held him half his life. John and his biker friends decided to form a group that did not get high and began making converts. There are 70 of them now, counseling high school kids.
Bulldog’s Pickers
Bulldog’s Pickers
An aging group of friends moved to south Texas one winter because they didn’t like weather they had to lift. The friends noticed that machines only harvested one vegetable at a time. They missed a lot. On one farm in the Rio Grande Valley, 6 million pounds of vegetables — that were too small or too ripe — were left to be plowed under. So the elderly went after them, gathering left over vegetables for the poor.
Unwed Fathers
Manny Cardona seeks out teenage fathers and leads them back to the families they created. He gets their girlfriends medical attention. Guides them off welfare. And tries to keep them in school.
Cardona was once like them, an unwed teen father, who put himself through college, got a masters degree and a job at the Bridgeport, Connecticut, YMCA. Manny represents something in short supply this neighborhood. Success.
Anti-smoking Tobacco Heir
Anti-smoking Tobacco Heir
In the 1980’s Americans started smoking fewer cigarettes for the first time since 1913, that’s when R.J. Reynolds took a picture of a circus camel and stuck it on the side of a pack. Six years later, nearly half of the people in America who smoked cigarettes, smoked that one brand — Camels. His ads were the first to link smoking with the good life. That didn’t just sell cigarettes. That made them part of our culture. NBC’s first TV newscast gave them to lucky viewers.
One of R.J. Reynold’s grandsons, Patrick, twisted those advertising techniques to get people to stop smoking.
Scoop City
Scoop City
Focus all of your energy, not on fighting the old, but on building the new. That’s the key to a long and happy career. I learned that lesson in a small city, half way between St. Louis and Kansas City, where stories seldom go untold.
Everglades Changing
Everglades Changing
Out here, the alligators look like they’re sighting down a gun barrel. Survival goes to the swift. But even the fastest cannot run from the pollution that seeps from sugarcane fields. In south Florida over the years, the Federal Government drained the heart of the Everglades. 700-thousand acres were turned into some of the richest farm land in America. Now, environmentalists are battling to cleans the deadly phosphorus that the draining unleashed.
Final Choice
Before hi-tech medicine, death was a member of the family, something families nearly always chose to have happen at home. Today, 8 out of 10 Americans die in hospitals, surrounded by strangers. Often alone in webs of wires and tubes. Hospice care gives the terminally ill a chance to live a near normal life, until they die. A quarter of million Americans at the end of their lives have checked themselves out of hospitals and into hospice programs. In 1974 there was one hospice in America. Twenty years later there were 2,000. Mostly staffed by volunteers. That keeps costs low. On average, about $80 a day. Nearly 10 times cheaper than some hospital stays. Add in Medicaire and Medicaid, the out of pocket cost — $16 bucks a day. Nine out of ten hospice programs are in people’s homes. For those whose final choice is to go gently, they will not be forced to do otherwise.
Animal Beauty Aids for People
Animal grooming products have become some of the hottest beauty aids for people. A lot of folks who’d never been inside a feed store began using them. 90 % use horse products for themselves. That pushed sales for “Main and Tail” from $500,000 to $30 million. Farm mothers have quietly used these protein lotions for years. They are about half as expensive as what comparable products cost in the beauty shop.
Desoto Hour
Most of the time Georgia Tech’s Rambling Wreck radio sounds like a three car pile up. Even among college stations, its programming is considered extreme. But stuck between “Concussion Theater” and a show called “Tongue Bath” is the station’s longest running program — Fred Runde’s Desoto Hour — the show with the most listeners. The 77-year-old disc jockey is not a Georgia Tech student. Nor a teacher. Never was. He’s been spinning Big Band magic here since Jimmy Carter was in the White House. Fred wandered through the door looking for something to do in retirement. Students swooned for his oasis of sound. Runde believes that noise is merely music someone doesn’t want to hear.
Rosewood
There are few traces of Rosewood. Graves hidden in the weeds of time. A fist full of photographs. Fading, like the memory of what happened in the north Florida woods. The tragedy began after a White woman, Fanny Taylor, said she was beaten by a Black man, a story she may have made up to cover a fight with her White lover. The attacker was never found. But a mob raged through Rosewood for 8 days. The sheriff did not stop them. The governor did not send help. The burnings. The beatings. The looting continued for a week. A least 8 people lost their lives. Rosewood had been a prosperous place. The families owned a turpentine plant and cut much of the Cyprus for school pencils in this country. No one was prosecuted. Ever. Fear kept Black families from returning, even to sell their land. Rosewood’s survivors became an address list of long forgotten names. Their story nearly died with them. But now, justice — a long last.
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