Between 2 and 5 I'm reading in to find out what's been going on while I've been asleep.
I'm still excited at being at a microphone and talking to listeners. I love that. It's the most basic element of what I do and I still enjoy it very much.
A little learning is a dangerous thing, but a lot of ignorance is just as bad.
If you want anything done well, do it yourself. This is why most people laugh at their own jokes.
At a tiny station in New Albany, Indiana, which is right across from the river from Louisville, Kentucky, where I grew up. The Louisville stations were loath to hire beginners, so I had to go across the river.
In college, I got interested in news because the world was coming apart. The civil rights movement, the antiwar movement, the women's right movement. That focused my radio ambitions toward news.
But when you see personal artifacts relating to - by genealogy at least - a living human being, it was just more impressive to me than just about anything I've ever read about slavery before.
I go home by noon, and I'm in bed by 6 p.m. I get up at 1 and do it again.
I got to know every format of every station and who was on and what time.
I think we're doing the right things for the right reasons. We're not doing it to sell products. We're not doing it to be popular. We're doing it because in our judgment these stories are important to do, and at this length and this much depth.
I wake about 1 a.m. I'm in the office by 2 a.m. We're on the air at 5.
I was encouraged to read aloud in class and vocalize.
Any outfit that has to beg its listeners for money is an organization that has to constantly please its listeners or it will dry up and go away. It shouldn't work when you think about it.
When Solomon said there was a time and a place for everything he had not encountered the problem of parking his automobile.
Never exaggerate your faults, your friends will attend to that.