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Empty Mansions

by bob.dotson | Jun 9, 2023 | Blog, Hiding in History's Shadow

This was one of the first stories that aired about the mysterious Huguette Clark, a 104 year old woman, whose father was once the second richest man in America. She was worth half a billion dollars. Had no heirs. And hadn’t been seen in public for more than half a century. 

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    https://youtu.be/lkcudOB93rM
  • Nickname Telephone bookJanuary 14, 2026

    If you go looking for folks in Cajun country, it helps to have a nickname handy.  In Beaux Bridge, Louisiana, the phone book lists people by the names they are actually known.  Nicknames.  Too many residents have the same last names.  There are 78 Broussard's.  45 Tibedeaux's.  And 46 different Champagne's.  2 of them have the same first name.  Nicknames here are a necessity. 

    https://youtu.be/PRDhp9KBn_Y
  • Mama HaleJanuary 12, 2026

    Childhood should be a season of dreams, but some children awoke each morning from an American nightmare: They are born addicted to drugs. Clara Hale saved hundreds of them. One morning she found a baby by her door.  Mrs. Hale took him in. Word got around.  Soon her tiny apartment was jammed with cribs.  

    https://youtu.be/tmnD1557Izk?t=14
  • Old BelieversJanuary 11, 2026

    Behind America's success story are untold tales of endurance.  The people who succeed in this country come from sturdy stock, the ones who have always carried on when the going got tough.  Their ancestors thought America’s streets would be paved with gold.  What they found, instead, was opportunity to build, discover, create, achieve, survive, and grow. 

    For many that chance started in wilderness.  They carved out lives, planted dreams and worked hard.   In wilderness, time does not drift back into the past.  It renews itself.  People, too, or so I had heard.  That’s why I went searching for a place few ever find.  A moose munched his lunch by the side of a bubbling stream as my four-wheel drive waddled across the creek and continued up a mountain a few hundred miles southeast of Anchorage. At the top was a remote Alaskan village where the rhythm of life still resembled that in 1650.  

    https://youtu.be/nGFYcit4hac
  • The Ring that Saved a LifeJanuary 10, 2026

    Motts Tonelli enlisted in the New Mexico National Guard to play with an Army basketball team.  The day after the Japanese bombed Pearl Harbor, Hawaii, he traded his ball for a gun.  Tonelli was captured in the Philippines in the opening days of World War Two.  Forced to walk 70 miles to a prisoner of war camp. Along the way, a Japanese soldier gave Motts an extraordinary gift.

    https://youtu.be/e1rSYpgCJWs
  • Farm to FameJanuary 9, 2026

    Chuck Taylor waved at a hawk strafing the wheat field in front of him. “There is beauty everywhere. I just want to express what I am feeling.”

    He pushed up his feed company cap and began to sing louder than his farm tractor engine. Chuck’s voice boomed over that Colorado field, keeping time to the rhythm of his motor. The tractor turned into the setting sun, revealing a big man, close to three hundred pounds, haloed in the cab. Chuck Taylor was wondering why that sun wasn’t a spotlight.

    TURNS OUT, IT WAS. 

    https://youtu.be/zY7Ij9N-jng

  • Family MusicJanuary 8, 2026

    The Knight family, Laura and John and six kids, manage to survive, no thrive, on $4-thousand dollars a year. That’s something to sing about. On their farm, music is all around them.

    https://youtu.be/e8MQLVt7r7k
  • Puppy RescuerJanuary 7, 2026

    Ready for a happy puppy story?  Sure you are.  George Mahle takes pups on a 4,200-mile odyssey to loving arms.  

    https://www.today.com/news/puppy-rescuer-takes-dogs-4-200-mile-odyssey-loving-arms-2D79517768

  • Dog TagsJanuary 6, 2026

    Stacey Hansen, a fire fighter in San Jose, California, found an old dog tag  while vacationing in Vietnam.  It belonged to Marine Corporal Steven Zucroff who died during the War - the day after Mother's day -- his 21st year.  She brought Steven's dog tag home.  His brother Brad lived just an hour away,  They met in a park overlooking the Pacific near Stacey's fire station.  Brad carried an old box with his brother's things. 

    "You've seen his name," he said, as the two walked across the bluff and sat on a bench, "Now you should see the person.”

    He lifted the lid and pulled out a picture.  It was not the image of a weary warrior Stacey expected.   

    https://youtu.be/lYPDwmJ5LQg
  • Worst Weather in AmericaJanuary 5, 2026

    Who gets the roughest weather in America? The place looks looks gentle. Like a smiling stranger with an offer of candy. But, more than a hundred people have died there. Winter can come in any month.  One day in three, hurricane force winds slap the landscape.  Since 1932, a small band of scientists has struggled into this arctic laundromat to be tumbled around in search of the worst weather in the world. 

    https://youtu.be/AmgnpUEY8As
  • Truck Driver SurgeonJanuary 4, 2026

    Wisdom is found in unexpected places. Tools for some of the first microsurgeries were invented in a garage. An out of work truck driver tinkered and perfected them until they changed our world.

    https://youtu.be/e6tI0AmehG4
  • America’s Main StreetJanuary 3, 2026

    Everything immortal must first pass away.  For nearly 60 years, Route 66 was THE way west — America’s Main Street — before highways looped outside little towns and fenced folks off from homemade America.  Route 66 was for most a Yellow brick road, a journey important for what we would find. 

    https://youtu.be/CbUokrIt5VY
  • Animal Hospital January 2, 2026

    Peter Holworth is a foster parent to hundreds of sick little seals that wash up on his shore.  Some are near death from starvation when he finds them.  Peter nurses these babies back to health.

    https://youtu.be/-oy3lbn1F3I
  • Teens Overcome RacismJanuary 1, 2026

    Teenagers in this summer camp have lost something, the wishful, youthful belief that prejudice would never find them. It is easier to see racism in others.  Here teenagers find it in themselves. They had learned to rely on one another in these woods.  Now they were being torn apart.  Camp “Any Town” teaches how to battle discrimination.  Councilors point out that prejudice behaviors are learned. If they catch it in a 15 year old, they have a better chance of doing something.  Those teens have have a lot time to live and will effect more lives.

    https://youtu.be/k3jSOwlNrHU
  • Teen CinemaJanuary 1, 2026

    There are places where the past is not past.  It keeps circling back around.  Many towns in America are like that.  Petaluma, California, continually celebrates a magical time when kids showed up to shoot a low budget movie called "American Graffiti."  It launched some big name careers and boosted an unknown director, George Lucas, into an orbit that would lead to his epic -- Star Wars.  History in Petaluma is never far, far way.  Sadly, this town -- so tied to movie history -- lost its last picture show.   Kids could have just hopped into a car.  Their moms would have driven them to the movies in another town.

    "Oh, no!" Madison Webb looked stricken.  "You're not supposed to go with your parents!”

    So, the teens created a business plan that would reopen their theater.

    https://youtu.be/tPkL0kFf6mc?t=1
  • A New LifeJanuary 1, 2026

    Working folks have always been the great voyagers of America.  There were always new businesses, new jobs, new frontiers just over the next hill. But something fundamentally is changing in the American economy.  Old skills don’t always fit new jobs.  The American instinct to move on when times get tough can no longer solve the problem.  

    We caught up with Jim and Deborah Carey and their daughter Chastity once again.  The bankrupt farmers still had not harvested a dream.  Jim had won and lost six jobs in a year.  Six jobs.  In three different states.  And he had a new baby.  All was not bleak.  Two things were about to happen that would change their lives for the better.

    https://youtu.be/oCVa_Q_fv6s
  • Born to FarmDecember 29, 2025

    Boom times in the past have doubled the cost of farmland in

    this country, a price that few can afford to pay.  Southeastern Massachusetts has lost more farmland in the last 30 years than it did in the previous 300.  Folks in Wesport bucked that trend.  Taxed themselves a bundle to buy one of the last farms.  Put it into a land trust that can only be sold to farmers.  18 year bought it at a bargain price.

    https://youtu.be/m8VEVcOMs7Y

    For the rest of the story, hiding in history’s shadow.  The video runs 4:03.

  • Living Ghost TownOctober 31, 2025

    During this dark time, it is well to remember the families in this country who help others end nightmares and find dreams.   It is the very core of our American story because most of us also have ancestors who risked everything for a better life.  The communities they built prospered because people took care of one another.  Some still do.

    https://youtu.be/nRVEea31rjU

  • Ballet Dancer October 16, 2025

    Elliot Feld would hide his dance slippers in a brief case, so his neighbors would think he had an ordinary job.  He would become one of America’s finest ballet choreographers, but ballet is still out of the question for most of the kids in his old Brooklyn neighborhood.  Too expensive.  He did not recruit from the specialized schools for the performing arts.  He traveled to the public classrooms to look for ordinary 8 year olds with potential. 

    https://youtu.be/zPGCM4QI8eE
  • Post Pawley’s Island school closesMay 5, 2025

    Beloved teacher Ruby Forsyth had died.  The classroom where she taught for half a century was now quiet.  The school she started for Black children was about to close.  Her former students share their memories of what she taught them.

    https://youtu.be/PUNMk77wKNQ
  • Veteran’s LegacyApril 30, 2025

    Jeff Steiner is building a sanctuary.  He is planting trees on a hundred acres he bought after returning from the Vietnam war.  Half a year after high school graduation he was evacuating wounded G.I.'s.  A shell exploded in his face. After his discharge, he became an alcoholic.  Got divorced.  Attempted suicide.  Then, he decided to do something positive.  Plant one tree for each of the 60-thousand fellow soldiers killed or missing in Vietnam.  He had planted 30-thousand, when I met him.

    https://youtu.be/nKeU_rKkf98
  • Beats a 260 mile School Bus RideDecember 8, 2024

    Crane High is the only locally tax supported public boarding school in America.  It was built in a part of Oregon you seldom see in the travel brochures. Out here, people remember bone grey better than rainbows. Southeastern Oregon has a desert so vast, Jerry Deffenbaugh must drive 260 miles round trip to watch his son play high school basketball.  Some weeks he does that 3 times.  The school draws just 50 students from a district the size of Massachusetts. 

    AND YOU THOUGHT YOU HAD A LONG COMMUTE.   

    https://youtu.be/weBnvN8R3q8
  • Kid BillionaireDecember 4, 2024

    Jared Issacman became a billionaire before he could drive.  He as so young, he hired his dad to wine and dine clients.  His mom worked for him too.  Issacman used some of his money to pilot  Elon Musk's all-civilian mission to the edge of the universe. Purchased purchased all four seats. Kept one for himself. Donated the other three to charity. He made his billions by figuring out a way for businesses to process credit cards more quickly. It all began in his basement. He was just 16. This was the first story ever done on the kid who defies the odds. 

    https://youtu.be/c66KlC6POSo
  • A Picture that Touched AmericaNovember 17, 2024

    For families who lived in the 1930’s Dust Bowl, “depression” was not an abstract economic term.  Their farms were buried in burned out soil, and with nowhere to turn, they moved on.  Florence Thompson was 27 years old when the depression started.  She had five children and was pregnant with another — and her husband had died. Did she ever lose hope?  “Nope, if I’d a  lost hope, we never would have made it” 

    https://youtu.be/SdxZG8KGHw4
  • Town Denial (Susan Smith Murders)October 25, 2024

    Susan Smith murdered her two little boys. Strapped them into their car seats.  Stepped out and pushed them into a lake.  She told police she was carjacked. A black man drove away with her sons still inside. For nine days, Smith made dramatic pleas on national television for their safe return. After an intensive investigation and nationwide search, she finally confessed to drowning her two sons. Was sentenced to life in prison without a chance of parole until she was past childbearing age. I covered that sad saga for 9 months.

    https://youtu.be/SON1WhKL1yE

     

  • Blind MusherMarch 3, 2024

    Some races in life begin far from the starting line. That's why Rachael Scdoris and her dad drove 25-hundred miles, to the top of the globe, in the dead of winter, to help her chase a dream she cannot see.  

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=d-iQFBXdIWU
  • Hiding for Half a CenturyDecember 31, 2023

    When Private D.B. Benson decided to hide out from World War Two, he was able to disappear completely for 36 years. Benson slipped into the Kiamichi Wilderness in 1943, after a sergeant told him to go home because he could not read.  He thought he was being discharged.  When friends told him he was Absent Without Leave, he went into hiding.  He stayed nearly half a century because he thought he would be court marshaled and shot.  Benson came out after the Air Force agreed not to prosecute. 

    https://youtu.be/BXzGQXmMYXs
  • Still Got Life to Go – BOB DOTSON’S FIRST NATIONAL EMMY NOMINATION, 1971December 30, 2023

    Four out of five felonies are committed by repeaters, those who have been through our corrections system. Out of every 10 persons imprisoned for serious crime, four will return to that way of life again. Our failure to rehabilitate is costing us 20 billion dollars in crime each year, but more importantly, our failure is etched in the endless suffering resulting from crime.  Tackling the rehabilitation problem must begin with the young adult offenders.

    Bob Dotson spent a year with corrections officers and convicts, in Oklahoma, exploring the failure of the Corrections system for this half hour documentary special.  He found more than problems.  He found solutions.  

    https://youtu.be/V5LFswHXHkM

  • Smoke and SteelDecember 28, 2023

    Some holiday gifts for you this week.  Today, one my first films.  It WAS shot on film.   An investigative documentary about high rise fires. We not only uncovers problems, but offer a solution, a theme my stories would follow throughout my career.  Stick around for the commentary at the end of this half hour program.  

    https://youtu.be/vwFiFNGc-fI

  • Biggest Test of Her LifeDecember 19, 2023

    Michael Carter is leaving his Fayetteville, North Carolina, school in search of a new kidney, while his teacher, Jane Smith, prepares for the biggest test of her life.

    https://youtu.be/bmvF7yxITIs

  • Face of GodDecember 19, 2023

    Deborah Evans looks to God for help.  She says, He told her to look a little closer to home.  She believes a teacher in Fayetteville, North Carolina. is the closet she’s come to the face of God.  

    https://youtu.be/g0PI2xXGR_I
  • A Life LessonDecember 18, 2023

    Keith Lyle is a nice kid from a nice part of town.  He has had a terrible struggle with drugs. Now, he has an even bigger problem. 

    https://youtu.be/xUm63MCLbJg
  • $2 Doc’s “Big” Pay RaiseDecember 17, 2023

     An update to the story about Dr. Russell Dohner.  27 years later, he had raised his fee for a visit from $2 to $5. He looked after his neighbors for 55 years, charging them about what we pay for a fancy cup of coffee. Most of his nurses had been with him nearly as long as his furniture. They were paid well because Doc worked around the clock. He would go anywhere, at any time, to help those in need, often arriving before emergency crews.  

    https://youtu.be/oqD6EJaWcN4
  • Delivering News on Foot December 16, 2023

    We can all learn what's going on with a touch of a thumb, but there was a time when people in Mountain Home, Arkansas, waited for Nellie Mitchell to deliver the news.  She handed them their morning newspaper, 7 days a week, rain or shine.  Never called in sick.  Never took a vacation or a day off.  At 86 she was still on her morning route, walking 5 miles a day,  when trudged along with her.  A gracious reminder of how life used to be. 

    https://youtu.be/69KeSxDJvJc
  • A Living Statue of LibertyDecember 15, 2023

    Each evening the scruffy tabby cats listen for a single voice, the distant squeak of a rusty cart.  Mary Burns, making her rounds,  For more than a quarter of a century, she has fed the lost cats of Miami Beach.  8 Hours a day.  Every day.  Restaurants along her way give food.  Veterinarians help her tend the sick.  Mary has been a voyager all her life.  She came from Yugoslavia.  She simply took the Statue of Liberty at its word.

    https://youtu.be/QXeFsH1A_5k
  • Geezer RockDecember 12, 2023

    This story is something of a mystery.  It begins on a quiet street in Rochester, New York.  You won't believe where it ends.  Something strange is happening over at Dave Hickey's house.  He bought a set of drums and disappeared  with his brother Bruce and their pals.  Together, they helped each other find the notes that had been missing from their lives.  They practiced 18 hours.  Weekend after weekend.  For six months.  Back in the 1960's they had a garage band called the Invictas that had one hit song.

    https://youtu.be/4DX-27Udnj8
  • Coal Miner’s DaughterDecember 11, 2023

    Brenda Brock went looking for a job in a coal mine.  She showed up hungry and broke on a mine foreman’s doorstep.  All she had was a sleeping bag.  Her work below was a trade off for her life above.  Brenda had seen the ugliness that her mom and dad had escaped.  “And yet, you get here and lose your heart.”

    https://youtu.be/9AzHKr2Mfmg
  • Bedrock AmericaDecember 10, 2023

    Of all the folks who went west looking for gold, one family went further, dug deeper and stayed longer.  They settled in the Marble mountains of Northern California, in a region so difficult to reach, they still don’t have electricity.  Each day Chet McBroom did what his father did.  Pick down 6 tons of ore.  If he’s lucky, he’ll find a few flecks of gold.  “If I had to do it over again, you know what I’d change?” Chet asked.   “Nothing.”

    https://youtu.be/18WFiB_Qlx0
  • He Was Our SantaDecember 9, 2023

    Pepe Gallego never learned how to read or write.  He worried that might cost him his job at a sawmill, but owner, Bill Gregory, set up a small classroom to teach him.  

    "My whole life was get up, go to work, come home, lay down, watch TV and sleep," he said.  "Twenty three years just slipped away."

    It was all the more frustrating because it was a web of his own weaving.  

    Bill Gregory changed Pepe’s life.

    “He was my Santa Claus,” Pepe said, “a Santa offering dreams.” 

    https://youtu.be/QbQxrhGkFgs
  • Charles Banks WilsonDecember 5, 2023

    For years artist Charles Banks Wilson crisscrossed the West stopping in small town pool halls and churches seeking faces that make each Indian tribe unique.  Native Americans can look as different from one another as a Turk from a Swede, but that is changing.  

    https://youtu.be/Z5RDpuNZQdM
  • Santa CreekDecember 4, 2023

    Dee Newberry teaches kids in a two room school house in a vast wilderness.  A billion ounces of silver were pulled from a nearby valley.  Discovered after Noah Kellogg tossed one of those silver rocks at a mule that ran away.  The town that bear his name once put up a sign that said, "Discovered by a jackass.  Inhabited by his descendants.”

    https://youtu.be/cbuxoEE_NA4
  • Junk Food CriticDecember 2, 2023

    Most food critics get the benefit of dining in some fine restaurants.  Not George Tumor.  He reviews food that most of us eat.  George sports a 280 pound resume to prove his dedication to the work.  

    https://youtu.be/PSQIokIT_CM
  • 102 Year Old files for Social SecurityDecember 1, 2023

    Joe Carter had just turned 102, but he didn’t stand for much fuss.  There was work to be done.  Carter was a farmer.  He still puttered about on an old A Model John Deere tractor, the one he bought in 1954, the year before farmers were brought under Social Security.  As a group, people on Social Security are healthier, less frail and living longer than ever before.  The year Joe Carter got married, all the Americans over 85 would have fit on his small farm.  Their number has been doubling every 20 years.  Twice as fast as the rest of the  population.  By the time today’s Baby Boomers reach that age, there could be 16-million Americans over 85.

    https://youtu.be/FqNBnOG5zRk
  • The Sidelines of LifeDecember 1, 2023

    David Edwards stood on the sidelines of life until Patricia Fulton asked him to dance.  His mind is not quick.  She doesn't care.  Being less than perfect is the fragile thread that binds all of Fulton's dance partners.  Patricia Fulton pulls them from the sidelines of life and helps the soar.  

    https://youtu.be/xBfpjquQLNA

    David Edwards stood on the sidelines of life until Patricia Fulton asked him to dance.  His mind is not quick.  She doesn't care.  Being less than perfect is the fragile thread that binds all of Fulton's dance partners.  Patricia Fulton pulls them from the sidelines of life and helps the soar.  

    https://youtu.be/xBfpjquQLNA

  • Social Security Anniversary, Part OneNovember 30, 2023

    They jam the southbound lanes.  12-thousand people a month. Retired Americans.  Looking for paradise.  Today’s elderly are pioneers.  The first generation with enough health and enough wealth to choose where they will spend their last years.  Most who move come to Florida.  It is unique among states.  One person in five is retired.   The biggest source of personal income is Social Security.  

    https://youtu.be/3KWCpWLuiho
  • BoggingNovember 29, 2023

    Grownups have finally found out that mud can be fun.  On Sunday afternoons in Coon Mizell’s cornfield, anyone with a pickup truck worth its pull is pitted against slime in the local Boggin’ hole.  The winner is the driver who goes the farthest before getting stuck. 

    https://youtu.be/wnG-5U5ZB8o

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