Wednesday, December 22, 2010

It's A Wonderful Gift Of Life


In the classic Christmas film from Frank Capra, "It's A Wonderful Life" Clarence the angel tells George Bailey: "Strange, isn't it? Each man's life touches so many other lives. When he isn't around he leaves an awful hole, doesn't he?" Well, on December 21st at the Paramount Theatre in Rutland almost 1,400 were around to touch the lives of people they will never know. Blood donors waited in some cases for hours to give "The Gift of Life" so there would be no "hole" in the area blood supply. And when the more than 12 hour marathon was over the event filled that hole with 1,393 pints of blood eclipsing the amount collected in Boston at Fenway Park by 226 pints. The organizers of the event, CVPS, WJJR radio & The Red Cross must be congratulated for all their hard work & long hours but they would all tell you that the outcome of the event wouldn't be possible if not for the people of Rutland & the surrounding communities who touched so many other lives by being part of "The Gift Of Life Marathon". Frank Capra's film was based on a story titled "The Greatest Gift"...perfect! There's no greater gift one can give. Bedford Falls & its giving community may only be a place you find in the movies, but for one special day it was found in a special part of New England called Rutland, Vermont.

Monday, December 20, 2010

Ladies' Night!


Well, it was actually the ladies' afternoon, but I'm sure that Sunday night was one full of celebration for the women of UConn basketball. The Associated Press wrote: Already with no equal in women's hoops, UConn won its 88th straight game Sunday to tie the mark set by coach John Wooden and his UCLA men's teams from 1971-74. UConn already owned the longest winning streak in NCAA women's basketball history (70 games). Next up, the Huskies (10-0) can surpass the UCLA men Tuesday night at home against No. 15 Florida State.

Here's to the women Huskies for an incredible streak....and on Tuesday here's hoping that you stand alone as the most winning team in college basketball history!

Wednesday, December 8, 2010

One Monday Night In December



December 8th, 1980: For me it is one of those dates frozen in time. When I can remember just where I was when I heard the news. There was JFK & RFK, The Beatles on Ed Sullivan......and... December 8th, 1980. I was watching the Monday Night Football game between the Dolphins & Patriots. There were only seconds left in that game as I recall. Place kicker John Smith was just running out onto the field to kick what would be a losing effort at a field goal. But as much of a Patriots fan as I was even back then I only remember those events because of the announcement that came next and the three words uttered by MNF broadcaster Howard Cosell after he told his audience that John Lennon had been shot: "dead on arrival". That's when that piece of time froze for me; and 30 years later I remember it like it was only yesterday. It's only those things that mean a lot to you personally that can have that effect. The image of my mother sitting on the floor as I came home from school after she slid out of her chair in shock about JFK; The image of RFK's own son hearing about his father on television while he sat alone; and three words that took just a bit of my happy youth from me one Monday night in December.

Wednesday, November 24, 2010

Out Of His League


I admit right here before this sentence ends that I was not a Sarah Palin fan from the moment that she stepped into the national spotlight. But now she's really done it!! On the anniversary of JFK's assassination while doing some research I came across an excerpt from Palin's book that accuses Kennedy of quote: "running away from his faith" during his address to the Greater Houston Ministerial Association in September of 1960. Are you kidding me??!! Palin attacking the oratory of JFK is laughable!! Even historian Ted Widmer, who included that very same JFK speech in a Library of America anthology of this country's oratory, was surprised by Palin's comments saying: "It's putting a negative spin on what was interpreted at the time as a sensible and uplifting message. JFK was trying to protect his own right to be a Catholic and to run for president." Of course taking things out of context & using them for her own political agenda is what she does best. Just a word of advice to Ms. Palin; JFK was out of your league a half century ago & 50 years hasn't changed that.

You can hear Kennedy's speech here for yourself: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iDP4qrA8hvg&feature=related

Thursday, November 11, 2010

Veteran's Day 2010


I didn't want today to pass without a word of thanks to all the Veterans of this country. From those as close as Veterans in my own family to those I will never know, a note of thanks must go out to them all. Each day that goes by is another day made possible by the sacrifices of each of our men & women in uniform. So on this Veteran's Day I hope anyone reading this post will take just a moment to think about the servicemen & women who have kept us a free nation since its birth... and those who continue that honorable task today.

Tuesday, November 2, 2010

Somewhere Over The Rainbow


The 51st Rutland Halloween Parade is now history! Rutland's offering is one of the longest running--if not the longest-- Halloween parades in the U.S. It always seems like such an effort to put everything together & get it all set for the big night. It takes an awful lot of work to get things done by the night of the parade, but their always seems to be just enough coordination & willingness to make it happen by all parties concerned that the outcome is always terrific. This year was no exception. Catamount Radio, the parent company of The Drive came in as runner up in the "best float" competition. All 5 of Catamount's radio stations were involved in putting the float together and it certainly paid off. Everyone involved should be proud of the work they did. For those watching the parade last Saturday night, even if it was for just a brief moment or two, we had a chance to take them "Over The Rainbow" to visit the land of Oz & all its characters one more time!

Monday, October 25, 2010

Ob La Di, Ob La Da


It's been awhile since I've checked in here on The Daily Drive. After my last post (Remembering The Light) I just wanted to take some time off from my writing. I spent most of that time just observing the important things & putting them in perspective. Over the course of the summer my daughter left the east coast for California & most recently my son became a homeowner in Boston. Just those two events alone helped to remind me that no matter what happens life continues to go on. If you spend too much time immersed in one thing, you're sure to miss the impact of another. So I'm glad my kids are experiencing life on their own terms & living it to the fullest. I'm happy that friends......true friends..... are there with a hand, a shoulder and, most importantly to me, a laugh when it's needed most. Having the knowledge that family & friends are always there no matter what is going on in their own lives makes you realize that the most important things in life are the people both here & gone that have made your own life special indeed.

Tuesday, July 27, 2010

Remembering The Light


As many of us have been reminded far too many times, it is never easy to say good-bye to loved ones. My family was painfully reminded again of just how difficult that is as we said good-bye to my Uncle Vince last month. When you come from a family as large as mine with 8 or 10 uncles & aunts on each side of the family your youth is rich with happy times; but it also means that as the years pass there will be far too many good-byes to come. I wanted to tell you a little about my Uncle Vince because for me growing up with a "famous" uncle was quite special and as an adult never lost its luster for me. Vince O'Brien lived a full life. He died at the age of 91, on June 19, peacefully at home with his wife, my Aunt Kate, by his side. But this blog is about his life. A life that as I mentioned was a full one. Vince O'Brien may not be a name that you recognize but my bet is that at least some of you have seen his face more than once in your life. He was my mother’s brother and a professional actor. His career spanned 60 years of stage, screen and television. He studied drama and graduated from Carnegie Mellon University in 1949. He performed his first professional stage roles at the Canton Show Shop in Canton, CT during the late 1940's. He was on Broadway in hits such as the original Promises, Promises, Leave it to Jane, Advise & Consent, and Are You Now or Have You Ever Been? My uncle worked in summer stock and in regional theatre too, including the Playhouse on the Mall in Paramus NJ where he worked with Robert Ludlum. He was also noted for his one man show "Clarence Darrow". His television career began right around the time that I was born in the early 1950's as part of the cast of a very popular show at the time called Studio One and received equal billing with Walter Matthau on one show. He played more than 300 roles on television over the next 50 years. He was the original Shell Answer Man when those commercials first hit television. A job that he said was like hitting the lottery. I remember him doing a TV commercial for Life Savers too, where he played a candy store owner telling a little boy “that’s my favorite!” when the little guy finally picks out a certain flavor. We used to joke with him about an Elmer’s Glue commercial that he once did where he builds a dog house for the family pet inside the house and then finds that it’s too big to get outside & can’t pull it apart because the glue is too strong! As kids we always thought that was pretty funny. He acted in Soap Operas for many years too playing roles in Ryan's Hope, The Edge of Night, Guiding Light and in the 60s he was a sheriff in the cult soap opera Dark Shadows. His most recent television role was playing Judge Franks on Law & Order. I remember being surprised when he showed up in that role because I was watching that episode of the show not knowing that he had been cast as the judge. He did a few films too. The first one I ever saw him in was a movie called "The Hoodlum Priest" in the early 1960’s. More recently I’d bet a lot of you have seen him in the films "Annie Hall", “Six Degrees of Separation” and "Quiz Show". My uncle’s very last performance was at the Ivoryton Playhouse in CT, where he reprised the role of "the old actor" in his favorite musical "The Fantastic's", a show that was actually directed at Ivoryton by my sister Julia. Julie directing Uncle Vince….how about that! His final line from that magical performance provides a fitting epitaph to his long career….and a great life.... as he asks the audience, "Please, remember me in light." That, I will always do…. & for me that light will always shine bright.

Monday, June 14, 2010

A Cause to Re-Connect

This past Friday afternoon I joined about 150 family members & friends at Tunxis Plantation Golf Course in Connecticut for the 21st annual Chris Kelly Open. The yearly golf tournament is in memory of my cousin Chris who we lost to a rare form of cancer when he was just 28. Over the years it has always been a real "family" tournament with no major sponsors; just caring members of a circle of friends & family that has been part of this tournament since its inception. Through their generosity well over $125,000 has been donated in the memory of Chris and his mother, my late, lovely aunt Lorraine to the UCONN Medical Center in Farmington, Ct and the George Bray Cancer Center at the Hospital of Central Ct. in my home town of New Britain. However, that's only part of what this tournament has become over the last 21 years. As valuable a resource as it has been for those two wonderful research centers, the tournament is also a valuable resource of another kind. It gives all of us who participate each year a chance to re-connect with each other. Cousins, uncles, aunts, brothers, sisters & friends who don't see one another nearly enough as the years pass by and we live our lives. But for that day, and in some cases even just for a few moments, we remember those days gone by when we all were much younger & we lived, played, laughed....and sometimes even cried together. The fight against cancer is one of the noblest of fights...and when you can fight that fight in the atmosphere of The Chris Kelly Open each year.....cancer patients are never forgotten.....and with a smile, you realize neither are those faces that have been part of that fight for more than 20 years.

Tuesday, March 9, 2010

All Things Must Pass

Rich and I were the kind of friends that you become as you grow older & your lives take you in different directions. The kind of friends that knew the other was there doing what he does to make a living. For Rich it meant being a national voice talent....and a very good one at that. I remember when he left Connecticut (where we worked together) to study to become a voice over talent. He wasn't sure how it would work out at the time, but as it turns out it worked well for him. Rich spent 10 years in Atlanta as the off camera voice of the Weather Channel & HGTV and did countless ads for products as varied as Chrysler and Carnival Cruise lines. He ended up with a home studio on Pawley's Island South Carolina and enjoyed being close to the beach. It had been over a year since I talked with him last & so went to his website this morning to drop him a quick "hello" by email. We'd always follow that up with a phone call....but that wouldn't happen this time. On his website this was all I found:

About Rich Bartholomew:

Rich was trained as a voice talent in New York, spent ten years in Atlanta, and maintained an in-office studio close to the beaches of South Carolina. Well respected in the industry and working with clients throughout the U.S., Rich received a heavy repeat business for his voice talent.

Rich passed away in December 2009. This site is retained as a memorial to his work.

My heart nearly stopped as I read those words. I had no idea that Rich was gone. None of you knew Rich, but my guess is you all have someone that you really care about that you only see or hear from once or twice a year. Do yourself a favor and make that connection more frequently because you may be reminded like I was that one day you may not have the chance.

Yes, Rich Bartholomew was a great talent.....but to me he was also a guy who just liked to laugh about our early days in radio & the characters that we had met during that time....and The Beatles. Only Rich seemed to be as big a fan of them as I am.......and George Harrison was his favorite. And so in memory of Rich Bartholomew I close this post with a few lines from his favorite Beatle:

All things must pass
None of life's strings can last
So, I must be on my way
And face another day

Now the darkness only stays the night-time
In the morning it will fade away
Daylight is good at arriving at the right time
It's not always going to be this grey

All things must pass
All things must pass away

.....Now go make your phone call









Friday, March 5, 2010

A Cheer For The Cheerleaders!


I don't seem to get the chance to post a message here very often lately & I'm angry at myself for not acknowledging before today the State Championship won by the Rutland High Cheerleaders . On February 20th the squad traveled to Vergennes High School to compete in this years state championship. Rutland was nearly perfect in winning for the fourth time in five years. The Raiders received a score of 198 out of a possible 220 points from the panel of judges. As the dad of a former Rutland High cheerleader myself I know the level of commitment that these kids put into their practices & routines on a daily basis. It rivals the practice schedules of every sport at Rutland High.
Cara Austin was the cheerleading coach for Rutland on February 20th, and she was the coach seven years ago when my daughter Taryn was on her squad. I recall how hard those girls (and guys) worked that year to put themselves in the position to go up against Essex with a very good chance of winning it all....and that they did. It was an exciting night for Rutland because unlike recent history, that year was the first time in several that Rutland won the state championship. I haven't followed the cheerleading...or any other sport at Rutland as closely as the days that my kids were students there, but I still feel a sense of pride when the Red Raiders come out winners. I hope the team savors the victory.......they'll be amazed on how quickly it becomes just a memory.....but one that will always deserve a cheer for the 2010 Cheerleaders of Rutland High.

Tuesday, February 9, 2010

Who Dat? Now We All Know!


Congratulations to the New Orleans Saints on their Superbowl XLIV victory. One of the best Superbowls I've seen since The Patriots' back to back wins in Superbowls XXXVIII & XXXIX. Yes, Superbowl XLII was a great one too, but too heartbreaking to remember for a Pats fan! Everyone's talking about the great commercials too, but that I didn't get out of the night. There were a couple of clever ones (Like Punxatawny Polamalu) but none that really floored me. The only thing that I really laughed out load at was the CBS promo for Late Night With David Letterman.....now THAT was funny!

Wednesday, January 20, 2010

Purifying Haiti's Water Supply


It's been awhile since I posted a new message but now I feel it's important to remind you of, or introduce you to, Pure Water For The World. The purpose of this organization is to provide clean water to the poorest areas of the world where none can be found. One of the places that they have been most active is in Haiti providing purified water to thousands of school children & their families. They do this through expensive filtration systems connected to area schools. As you can imagine their network of purifying the Haitian water supply was severely crippled when the earthquake hit destroying most of the 750 or so schools that they provide to. Like most of you, I felt the need to do something to help. I was surprised to learn that with all the wonderful work that PWFTW does in this world they are headquartered right here in Rutland. It just reminds you again of what a small community like ours is capable of. Their commitment to the areas they are helping is long term. As badly needed as the provisions are today to end what seems to be an insurmountable task in Haiti, Water For The World will be there when everyone else has gone. That's why I am asking you to make a donation to this very important part of Haiti's long term health & survival. Thankfully the job of supplying immediate need to the people of Haiti is getting done. But that is just the beginning.....without a supply of drinkable, clean water for the long term the burden of this unimaginable increase in Haiti's suffering will not end. Click the Pure Water For The World logo like the one above on the main page of our website. Read about PWFTW....and then PLEASE make a donation....The survival of an entire country may depend on it.

Monday, January 4, 2010

Happy New Year!


Well, for most of us this morning means back to business as usual as we begin 2010. Just a quick note to say that I hope everyone enjoyed a great New Year's Eve & a relaxing New Year's Day. I certainly did! Here's a wish for a spectacular 2010 for you all.

HAPPY NEW YEAR!