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airchexx · 2 years
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Bobby Rich on "The Top FM 106" WWSH Philadelphia | February 28 1984
Bobby Rich on “The Top FM 106” WWSH Philadelphia | February 28 1984
   WWSH The Top FM 106 Philadelphia – Bobby Rich – February 28 1984 Back in the 1980s, the 106.1 FM frequency in Philadelphia struggled to attract an audience. It started the decade as WWSH Wish FM 106. It had a Beautiful Music/Easy Listening format with a sizable audience, but Cox radio, who owned the station, was not happy with that older audience, and wanted to make the station appeal to…
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justforbooks · 1 year
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Raquel Welch, who has died aged 82, had only three lines as Loana in the 1966 film fantasy One Million Years BC but attained sex-symbol status from the role, in which she was dressed in a fur-lined bikini. The image made its imprint in popular culture and the publicity poster sold millions. The feminist critic Camille Paglia described the American actor’s depiction as “a lioness – fierce, passionate and dangerously physical”.
The tale of cavepeople coexisting with dinosaurs was Welch’s breakthrough film – and the beginning of a largely unsuccessful battle she waged to be taken seriously as an actor. When she arrived on set, she told the director, Don Chaffey, she had been thinking about her scene. She recalled his response as: “Thinking? What do you mean you’ve been thinking? Just run from this rock to that rock – that’s all we need from you.”
Ursula Andress, who had emerged from the sea in another famous bikini for the 1962 James Bond film Dr No, had turned down the role of Loana. It went to Welch, on contract to 20th Century Fox, when the American studio agreed to hire her out to the British company Hammer Films.
Welch had to contend with critics who believed her looks to count for more than any acting ability she possessed. It was true that the film was pure kitsch and noteworthy only for Ray Harryhausen’s remarkable special effects with stop-motion animation creatures – and for making Welch a star.
Nevertheless, Welch later showed her aptitude for comedy when she played Constance, the French queen’s married seamstress in love with Michael York’s D’Artagnan, in the 1973 swashbuckler The Three Musketeers, directed by Richard Lester. The performance won her a Golden Globe best actress award and she reprised the part in The Four Musketeers: Milady’s Revenge (1974).
She increasingly took roles on television and worked up an act as a nightclub singer that she took across the US. She showed her performing mettle when she made her Broadway stage debut, taking over from Lauren Bacall in the musical Woman of the Year at the Palace theatre (1981-83). In an updating of the Katharine Hepburn-Spencer Tracy 1942 movie of the same title, she gave a show-stopping performance as the TV news personality Tess Harding.
“When she makes her first appearance in a low-cut gold lamé gown, her attributes can be seen all the way to the mezzanine,” wrote the New York Times critic Mel Gussow, unable to ignore what Welch brought to the stage visually. “It would be inaccurate to say that Miss Welch is a better actress than Miss Bacall, but certainly at this stage of her career she is a more animated musical personality.”
Around that time, Welch said: “I have exploited being a sex symbol and I have been exploited as one. I wasn’t unhappy with the sex goddess label. I was unhappy with the way some people tried to diminish, demean and trivialise anything I did professionally. But I didn’t feel that from the public.”
She was born Jo-Raquel Tejada in Chicago, Illinois, the first of three children, to Josephine (nee Hall) and Armando Tejada. Her father, an aeronautical engineer, was Bolivian. When Raquel was two, the family moved to San Diego, California, and, five years later, she joined the city’s junior theatre, attached to the city’s Old Globe, as well as starting ballet classes.
She said her father was volatile and terrifying, and she never saw any tenderness between her parents. One escape from this unsettled childhood came through putting on plays in the garage for friends and neighbours, using bedspreads for curtains.
On leaving La Jolla high school, San Diego, in 1958, she won a scholarship to study theatre arts at San Diego state college, but dropped out after a year to marry James Welch and became a weather presenter on KFMB, a San Diego television station.
After giving birth to two children, Damon and Tahnee, she left her husband, intending to follow her acting ambitions in New York. In the event, she worked as a model and cocktail waiter in Dallas, Texas, before moving to Los Angeles.
She was screen-tested by the producer Cubby Broccoli, who had seen her in a Life magazine photo-spread, for a part in the 1965 Bond film Thunderball, and signed up by 20th Century Fox. But a technicality involving start dates and contract options ruled out the Bond film and she was cast in Fantastic Voyage (1966), a big-budget sci-fi submarine saga, clad in a wetsuit.
After One Million Years BC, Welch – again in a bikini – played Lilian Lust, one of the Seven Deadly Sins, alongside Peter Cook and Dudley Moore in Bedazzled (1967), a comedy irreverently resetting the Faust legend in 1960s swinging London.
Burt Reynolds and Jim Brown were the stars when she brandished a shotgun in the 1969 western 100 Rifles – another action role. But Welch made clear to the director, Tom Gries, that she would not be following his instruction to run naked through the desert with the weapon. She also disregarded attempts to get her to shower under a water tower minus her shirt.
She returned to comedy for the satire The Magic Christian (1969) to play Priestess of the Whip alongside Peter Sellers’s millionaire who adopts the homeless Ringo Starr. She took top billing in Myra Breckinridge (1970), as a transgender movie critic, in a misjudged adaptation of Gore Vidal’s landmark novel.
Welch had the chance to shine in The Wild Party (1975), a period drama about the demise of silent pictures from the producer-director partnership of Ismail Merchant and James Ivory, in which she was cast as Queenie, the lover of a fading screen comedian. But she fell out with Ivory over a number of issues, for example refusing to do a bedroom scene nude. “From nearly the first day, we were at loggerheads,” he recalled, “and no professional relationship, no working relationship, was ever established.”
Switching to television brought Welch cameos in everything from the sitcoms Mork & Mindy (in 1979, as a villain from outer space) and Evening Shade (1993) to Lois & Clark: The New Adventures of Superman (in 1995) and CSI: Miami (in 2012). She also comically played a temperamental version of herself attacking Cosmo Kramer (Michael Richards) and Elaine Benes (Julia Louis-Dreyfus) in a 1997 episode of Seinfeld.
She had a regular role in the comedy-drama series Date My Dad (2017) as Rosa, former mother-in-law of Ricky (Barry Watson), trying with his three children to find him love again following the death of his wife.
In 1997, there was another stint on Broadway, in the musical Victor/Victoria. She replaced Julie Andrews, who was undergoing throat surgery, for the final seven weeks of its run at the Marquis theatre. Variety described Welch as “at best a pleasantly passable singer”, suiting “the costumes better than she does the vocal and acting requirements”.
She returned to the cinema with a cameo role in the romcom Legally Blonde (2001), starring Reese Witherspoon. Her last film was How to Be a Latin Lover (2017).
Welch was married and divorced four times. She is survived by Damon and Tahnee, and by her brother, Jimmy.
🔔 Raquel Welch (Jo-Raquel Tejada), actor, born 5 September 1940; died 15 February 2023
Daily inspiration. Discover more photos at http://justforbooks.tumblr.com
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11/1/1981🌴CBS8💛KFMB🌊Oh to be 11 years old and in San Diego again…
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beardedmrbean · 1 year
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A 39-year-old tree trimmer died in Bonita after an accident trapped him on a palm tree, California firefighters told news outlets.
Rescue crews responded to the front yard of a home at 11:30 a.m. Monday, Feb. 13, the Times of San Diego reported.
Palm fronds had collapsed onto the trimmer as he worked, trapping him, KFMB reported. Other workers were trying to free the man, who was pinned about 50 feet up the tree.
It took rescuers 35 minutes to free the man and lower him to the ground, where he was pronounced dead, KSWB reported.
“We have seen this in the past with these palm fronds falling on these tree trimmers and it is something that is relatively unique to certain types of palm trees,” Chula Vista Battalion Chief Tim Mehrer told KNSD.
The San Diego County Medical Examiner’s Office identified him as Bardomiano Bautista-Perez, KSWB reported.
The father of four from Escondido had been hired by a friend as part of a four-person team, his family told KGTV. The team was on its second job of the day when the accident took place.
“We can’t believe it,” sister-in-law Rosario Martinez told the station. “You can’t describe it in words.”
His daughter told KGTV she hopes to make Bautista’s dream of a family-owned tree-trimming business come true despite his death.
Bonita has a population of about 13,000 people and is about 10 miles southeast of San Diego.
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whileiamdying · 1 year
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Raquel Welch, Actress and ’60s Sex Symbol, Is Dead at 82
Beginning with a doeskin bikini in “One Million Years B.C.,” she built a celebrated show business career around sex appeal and, sometimes, a comic touch.
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When Playboy in 1998 named the 100 sexiest female stars of the 20th century, Raquel Welch came in third, after Marilyn Monroe and Jayne Mansfield.  Credit... Sunset Boulevard/Corbis, via Getty Images
By Anita Gates
Feb. 15, 2023
Raquel Welch, the voluptuous movie actress who became the 1960s’ first major American sex symbol and maintained that image for a half-century in show business, died on Wednesday at her home in Los Angeles. She was 82.
Her death was confirmed by her son, Damon Welch. No cause was given.
Ms. Welch’s Hollywood success began as much with a poster as with the film it publicized. Starring in “One Million Years B.C.” (1966) as a Pleistocene-era cave woman, she posed in a rocky prehistoric landscape, wearing a tattered doeskin bikini, and grabbed the spotlight by the throat with her defiant, alert-to-everything, take-no-prisoners stance and her dancer’s body. She was 26. It had been four years since Marilyn Monroe’s death, and the industry needed a goddess.
Camille Paglia, the feminist critic, described the poster photograph as “the indelible image of a woman as queen of nature.” Ms. Welch, she went on, was “a lioness — fierce, passionate and dangerously physical.”
When Playboy in 1998 named the 100 sexiest female stars of the 20th century, Ms. Welch came in third — right after Marilyn Monroe and Jayne Mansfield. Brigitte Bardot was fourth.
The critics were often unkind. Throughout her career, Ms. Welch was publicly admired more for her anatomy than for her dramatic abilities. She even called her 2010 book, a memoir and self-help guide, “Beyond the Cleavage.”
But when she had a chance to show off her comic abilities, they were kinder. Ms. Welch won a Golden Globe for her role in Richard Lester’s 1973 adaptation of “The Three Musketeers”; her character was a hopelessly klutzy 17th-century Frenchwoman, torn between two lives — as a landlord’s wife and the queen’s seamstress.
Despite a career based largely on sex appeal, Ms. Welch repeatedly refused to appear nude onscreen. “Personally, I always hated feeling so exposed and vulnerable” in love scenes, she wrote in her memoir, noting that even when she appeared in a prestigious Merchant Ivory film (“The Wild Party,” 1975), the filmmakers, those acclaimed arbiters of art-house taste, pressured her to do a nude bedroom scene, to no avail.
“I’ve definitely used my body and sex appeal to advantage in my work, but always within limits,” she said. But, she added, “I reserve some things for my private life, and they are not for sale.”
Jo-Raquel Tejada was born in Chicago on Sept. 5, 1940, the oldest of three children of Armando Carlos Tejada, a Bolivian-born aeronautical engineer, and Josephine Sarah (Hall) Tejada, an American of English descent. They had met as students at the University of Illinois.
When Raquel was 2, the family moved to Southern California for her father’s work in the war effort. At 7, encouraged by her mother, she enrolled at San Diego Junior Theater, where her only early disappointment was being cast in her first play as a boy. She began ballet classes the same year and continued to study dance for a decade.
After graduating from La Jolla High School in San Diego, where her nickname was Rocky, she received a scholarship — thanks to success in local beauty pageants — to study theater at San Diego State College. But she dropped out at 19 to marry her high school boyfriend, James Wesley Welch. Because of her local celebrity, she landed a job as the “weather girl” on KFMB, a San Diego television station.
The birth of her two children complicated her career plans, but she soon left her husband — “the most painful decision of my entire life,” she called it — and moved to Los Angeles to pursue acting. (They divorced in 1964.)
She had hoped to move to New York instead, she recalled. But the trip would have been prohibitively expensive, and, anyway, she didn’t own a winter coat.
It was not long before she had a contract with a major studio, 20th Century Fox. She had early hopes of making her big-screen debut in a James Bond movie; the producer Albert R. Broccoli wanted her for “Thunderball.” But that dream was quashed when she was cast in “Fantastic Voyage” (1966), a science fiction film about scientists reduced to microscopic size to travel inside a diseased human body. Then came “One Million Years B.C.,” and that did it.
“There’s a certain thing about that white-hot moment of first fame that is just pure pain,” Ms. Welch said in an interview with Cigar Aficionado magazine in 2001. “It’s just not comfortable. I felt like I was supposed to be perfect. And because everybody was looking at me so hard, I felt there was so much to prove.”
She appeared in some two dozen films over the next decade, perhaps most notably “Myra Breckinridge” (1970), based on Gore Vidal’s campy novel, in which she played a glamorous transgender woman, and “The Last of Sheila” (1973), a semi-campy murder mystery with a luxury-yacht setting and a script by Stephen Sondheim.
Some of her most memorable roles were small ones. In “Bedazzled” (1967), Stanley Donen’s Faustian fantasy with Peter Cook and Dudley Moore, she played Lust, one of the Seven Deadly Sins; in “The Magic Christian” (1969), with Peter Sellers and Ringo Starr, her character’s name was Mistress of the Whip.
Ms. Welch had love scenes with the former football star Jim Brown in “100 Rifles” (1969), a western set in Mexico. She followed “The Three Musketeers” with its 1974 sequel, but those films never led to the sophisticated comedy opportunities she had hoped for. (She did, however, have a memorable chance to display her comedic side years later, when she played herself in a 1997 episode of “Seinfeld.”)
After “Mother, Jugs and Speed” (1976), a farce about ambulance drivers (which also starred Bill Cosby and Harvey Keitel), her screen acting was limited mostly to television guest appearances.
But she had already discovered the joys of stage work. Inspired after seeing Frank Sinatra’s nightclub act, Ms. Welch made her club debut, singing and dancing, at the Las Vegas Hilton in 1973. Eight years later she made her Broadway debut, hired as a two-week vacation replacement for Lauren Bacall in the hit musical “Woman of the Year.” Her reviews were so admiring (Mel Gussow’s in The New York Times ended by writing, “One hopes that Miss Welch will soon find a musical of her own”) that she returned the next year for a six-month stint in the role.
“The first minute I stepped out on that stage and the people began applauding,” she told The Times later, “I just knew I’d beaten every bad rap that people had hung on me.” She returned to Broadway in 1997, replacing Julie Andrews for seven weeks in “Victor/Victoria.”
In 1987, Ms. Welch published “The Raquel Welch Total Beauty and Fitness Program,” which included exercises based on the principles of hatha yoga. She released a companion video with the same title.
Michael Levenson contributed reporting.
A correction was made on Feb. 15, 2023: An earlier version of this obituary misstated how much time elapsed between Marilyn Monroe’s death and the release of the movie “One Million Years B.C.” It was four years, not three.
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thenewsart · 5 months
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Family visiting from out of town finds body in home’s freezer, California police say
A family visiting San Diego from out of town found a body, believed to be a woman, inside a home’s freezer, California police told news outlets. The family reported the gruesome discovery at a home in the Allied Gardens neighborhood to police at 11:45 a.m. Friday, Dec. 22, police told KSWB. The body, found in a chest freezer, appears to be a woman, police told KFMB. The cause of death has not…
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shahananasrin-blog · 9 months
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[ad_1] A woman in Southern California has been arrested for allegedly trying to hire someone to kill her estranged husband and get rid of his body, authorities said.Tatyana Remley, 42, was arrested on Aug. 2 during a sting operation conducted by undercover detectives with the San Diego County Sheriff's Department, the department said in a news release. Remley allegedly provided information to detectives detailing how she wanted to have her husband Mark Remley killed and have his body disposed of. Remley allegedly offered $2 million to have her husband killed, CBS affiliate KFMB-TV reported. Prior to her arrest,  Remley had lived a life of luxury about 20 miles north of San Diego in Del Mar, filled with multi-million dollar homes and prized horses, the station reported. Tatyana Remley from Del Mar allegedly provided information to detectives detailing how she wanted to have her husband Mark Remley killed and have his body disposed. https://t.co/xnq5zQgAYa— CBS 8 San Diego (@CBS8) September 1, 2023 Remley brought three guns and money as a "down payment" for the murder when she met with undercover detectives, the sheriff's department said. Remley was arrested and charged with solicitation of murder. Remley's arrest followed an investigation by the North Coastal Sheriff's Station after the department received information that she was trying to hire someone to kill her husband, KFMB-TV reported.According to court documents obtained by the station, Remley and her husband separated in May after being married since March 2011. Remley requested $15,000 a month in spousal support as part of their divorce, according to a July court filing.The San Diego County Sheriff's Department's investigation into Remley began one day after deputies responded to a house fire at her home on July 2, authorities said. According to the sheriff's department, Remley, who was in possession of three firearms and ammunition, was arrested for gun-related offenses and later released. The cause of the fire remains under investigation. A month later, she was charged with solicitation of murder and gun-related offenses and  booked into the Vista Detention Facility. A preliminary hearing for Remley is scheduled for Nov. 16.KFMB-TV reported that Tatyana and Mark Remley made headlines in 2012 after their horse acrobatic show ''Valitar'' abruptly closed. Performers said they were not paid and ticketholders were left without any explanation for week, the station reported. The Remley's told KFMB-TV at the time that the show was cancelled due to poor ticket sales.  Trending News Stephen Smith Stephen Smith is a senior editor for CBSNews.com. [ad_2]
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365store · 1 year
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Tumultuous past surrounds the suspect in Colorado Springs Club Q shooting
Tumultuous past surrounds the suspect in Colorado Springs Club Q shooting
As the 22-year-old arrested in the deadly rampage at a Colorado Springs LGBTQ club made an initial court appearance Wednesday and was ordered held without bond, pieces of the suspect’s past are slowly emerging, suggesting a volatile upbringing and a fractured family life. Anderson Lee Aldrich’s father said in an interview Tuesday with the CBS affiliate KFMB in San Diego that he believed Aldrich…
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recentlyheardcom · 1 year
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A turbulent past surrounds suspect in Colorado Springs Club Q shooting
A turbulent past surrounds suspect in Colorado Springs Club Q shooting
As the 22-year-old arrested in the murderous rampage at a Colorado Springs LGBTQ club appeared in court for the first time on Wednesday and was sentenced to detention without bail, pieces of the suspect’s past are slowly emerging, suggesting an unstable upbringing and a fractured family life. Anderson’s father Lee Aldrich said in an interview with CBS affiliate KFMB in San Diego on Tuesday that…
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epacer · 2 years
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Classmates
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Phyllis Schwartz, Class of 1972
Hard-driving news executive becomes children’s book author
Her TV station boss nicknamed her ‘Schwarzkopf,’ but now Phyllis Schwartz writes poetry
When PSA flight 182 crashed in North Park on Sept. 25, 1978, Phyllis Schwartz was a tenderfoot newscast producer at KFMB-TV Channel 8 faced with gathering the heartbreaking facts and updates at breakneck speed for news reports.
Early one morning six months later, she was the only staffer in the newsroom during the Three Mile Island nuclear accident in Pennsylvania. Adrenalin pumping, she alerted her news director at home and contacted the network to gather information for delivery on Sun Up San Diego.
Schwartz went on to a long, successful career in TV news and management in Chicago and San Diego, including operating KNSD-TV Channel 7/39 as president and general manager from 2000 to 2007.
Skip forward to Sept. 25, 2022. Schwartz will be doing something far calmer on the 44th anniversary of the PSA collision and crash that claimed 144 lives.
She will be autographing her first children’s book at Warwick’s in La Jolla. And, while this seems far afield from the breaking news that was the lifeblood of her former career, it is impactful in a different way.
This book, “When Mom Feels Great, Then We Do Too!” also grew out of tragedy, but of a more personal nature.
Schwartz was diagnosed with cancer — not once, but three times over several years. She endured the triple-C onslaught beginning in her 20s when she learned she had Hodgkin’s disease, previously considered a death sentence.
Doctors warned her that the aggressive radiation treatment necessary to cure the Hodgkin’s lymphoma might make her susceptible to future health setbacks, including breast cancer. And it did.
Luckily, her breast cancer was discovered at stage 1 in 2013. “I couldn’t have any more radiation on my chest after my Hodgkin’s experience,” she says. “So, for me, the choice of a double mastectomy was not as hard as it might seem.”
If bad things seem to occur in threes, Schwartz’s cancer experience proved no exception. Six years ago, the Encinitas mom was diagnosed with an unrelated, rare pancreatic cancer. Hers was treatable but required a debilitating surgery called a Whipple. She was warned it was one of the toughest surgeries a person could endure, and it lived up to its reputation.
“Just bad luck,” she says, “but I’ve been fortunate to have good medical care in Chicago and San Diego. And a great group of family, friends and colleagues that loves me.”
From her childhood days, Schwartz loved reading nursery rhymes and books. She also loved writing, especially in her diary. After a hard day in the newsroom bombarded by sad and distressing events, she would return home and write poetry to relax and take her mind to a happy place.
After being diagnosed with breast cancer, she wrote a short poem, “The Wait.” Her test results vigil ended with fighting words: “It wasn’t benign. But neither am I. Let the games begin.”
Poetry was the genesis of her children’s book, “When Mom Feels Great, Then We Do Too!” She uses cadence and rhyme almost like a Trojan horse to sneak helpful tips to cancer patients’ children and loved ones while they’re having a fun read.
The child narrator says: “We made her funny videos and colored a card. We even helped weed daisies in the yard.”
The book started its life as a poem. “I wanted to write about a mom coming home and not feeling well, and I wanted it to be optimistic and upbeat — and that’s when I wrote this poem.”
Then Schwartz realized that, with some adjustments and illustrations, it could be much more.
She found an illustrator, Siski Kalla, through a book editing site called Reedsy.com.
Schwartz has three more recently written poems that she plans to turn into children’s books.
Meanwhile, with publication set for Sept. 23, she is scheduling autographing events at local bookstores. A list is on her website: www.phyllisfeelsgreat.com.
In October, which is Breast Cancer Awareness Month, she’ll sign books at American Cancer Society Discovery Shops, with those proceeds going to the cancer society. On Oct. 16, she is attending its Making Strides walk here and giving away 100 books.
Susan Taylor, who anchored KNSD evening news when Schwartz was boss, is emceeing the event, as she has for the past 25 years.
“The reason I like the book is its appeal to younger children,” says Taylor, whose mother also suffered from breast cancer.
Parents may not want to tell their 3- and 4-year-old kids why mom is in bed, or why mom lost her hair or that she has cancer, Taylor adds.
She capsulizes the message of Schwartz’s book: “Mom’s not feeling well, but let’s makes her laugh and have some fun. Let’s give her a hug, and let’s all be together as a family.”
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“A lot of people who know me from the news side, don’t realize I’m such a gooey goo softie,” says Schwartz. When she was V.P. of news at ABC-owned WLS-TV in Chicago, the station general manager nicknamed her “Schwarzkoph,” referring to Gen. “Stormin’ Norman” Schwarzkoph, who led coalition forces during the Gulf War.
“That kind of defines me — hard core, fast talking, quick thinking, loud — that impatient news gal wanting to be in the newsroom fray,” she says. “None of them would have imagined I would be writing kids’ books.”
Actually, Taylor can make that leap. “The Phyllis I’m seeing today is more reflective, more vulnerable than the Phyllis I knew at the TV station. But cancer does that to you. It changes you and makes you re-evaluate what’s really important in your life,” says Taylor, now director of external affairs for Scripps Health.
Schwartz has plenty of material for a fascinating tell-all memoir. “I know so much about so many people,” she admits, but she doesn’t want the stress and possible hurt feelings that such revelations might entail.
She prefers what she is calling her passion project.
The children’s book is semi-autobiographical.
Like the sick mom in the book: “I love almond lattes and chocolate chip cookies, and I do get grumpy when I’m soaked in the rain.” She also wears red sunglasses, sometimes fastens her hair in a ponytail on one side and wears Frida Kahlo-print socks.
Cancer isn’t mentioned in the book — just the removal of mommy’s “bumps.” That is intentional because her message applies to a number of health issues.
Schwartz’s goal was to make a sad and challenging subject more fun and upbeat — “something a parent can use to have a good talk with their kids.” And that’s what she did. *Reposted article from the UT by Diane Bell, August 13, 2022
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oldshowbiz · 5 years
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KFMB Nightly Newsroom 
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yvie-draws · 5 years
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More quick practice with Hassei, originally created by Max Mao at Lifepoint1
His concept art had him with more wild hair so I went for that rather than the shorter hair he had in the flash that featured him
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intervalmagic · 5 years
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Had fun at @cbs8 with @jennymilkowski this morning! https://www.cbs8.com/article/news/local/morning-extra/learn-to-perform-magic-from-a-professional-magician-in-classes-for-adults/509-bbd90673-5eca-4699-86da-0ab9f225cb81 #sandiego #magician #news8 #cbs8 #kfmb (at KFMB Stations) https://www.instagram.com/p/BzbRa78njrH/?igshid=ti9nmz3s5qbu
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yankee1155 · 5 years
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#AAFFootball #2019 #FleetCommanders #CBSSports #KFMB #CBS8SanDiego #KENS5 #CBSSanAntonio #SportsFan (at Alamodome) https://www.instagram.com/p/BwvykbhHT-F/?igshid=1myx93n83sym9
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yonjuns · 4 years
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baekhyunie-l replied to your post: is there a ksoo network? if not…whom wanna make...
don’t think there any active ones as of now ^^ if you open one i’d love to join✨
i’ve had a look and from what i’ve seen there hasnt been an active one since 2017/18 or so, so i might make one!!! 
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ritware1850 · 6 years
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#Repost @j_r_bees_llc ・・・ Big shout out to @kfmbfm for calling us out to relocate this beehive🐝🐝! #jrbees #beekeeper #beek #savethebees #sandiego #kfmb #liveremoval #beeremoval #bugsofinstagram #insectagram #masterbeekeeper #california #nature #bees https://www.instagram.com/p/Bpy3vlWnepC/?utm_source=ig_tumblr_share&igshid=z0nf2y8vfrye
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