Showing posts with label dead. Show all posts
Showing posts with label dead. Show all posts

Tuesday, July 19, 2022

RESPECT: Engineers

 Astronaut and humanitarian, the late Neil Armstrong put aside his trepidations and made a rare public appearance in 2004 to honor a fellow engineer, James Doohan, Star Trek’s Lt. Montgomery Scott.

Armstrong served as keynote speaker during Planet XPO's "Beam Me Up One Last Time, Scotty" convention in 2004. The gala event, attended by Trek luminaries William Shatner, Leonard Nimoy, Nichelle Nichols, Walter Koenig, George Takei and Majel Barrett Roddenberry, celebrated Doohan's awarding of a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame.
During a banquet in Doohan's honor, Armstrong gave a heartfelt speech that excited, amused and delighted the many fans that had gathered to see the iconic Trek engineer at his last convention appearance.
, “So, I’m hoping for my next command, to be given a Federation starship,” said Armstrong. “And, when I get that command, I would like to have a crew like Captain James T. Kirk had. Spock and Chekov and Uhura and Dr. McCoy and Sulu and the others we all remember.
“Now I have a confession to make. I am an engineer. And if I get that command, I want a chief engineering officer like Montgomery Scott. Because I know Scotty will get the job done and do it right. Even if I often hear him say, ‘But Captain, I dinna have enough time!’
“So from one old engineer to another, thanks, Mate”
#startrek #JamesDoohan #neilarmstrong #Apollo11 



Tuesday, September 21, 2021

RESPECT: Our CEO, Leader, and brother in Radio Fred Weinberg has passed.

OBITUARY FOR FREDERIC MARCK WEINBERG

Frederic Marck Weinberg passed away September 23 in Reno, Nevada after a short illness.
Fred was born in Albuquerque, New Mexico 3/17/1952, the son of Philip and Rose Weinberg. Dr. Weinberg moved the family to Peoria, Illinois in 1956 when he joined the faculty of Bradley University.
Fred attended Richwoods High School where he developed a love for photography and sports reporting. He flew with the Civil Air Patrol and worked as a stringer for the Journal Star before heading off to college at Southern Illinois University. He returned to Peoria to study journalism at Bradley. He became involved with WCBU, the campus radio station, where he was station manager.

Weinberg took a detour from broadcasting in 1975 for careers at the Penny Press Peoria Newspaper, E F Hutton and ownership of Three Worlds Disco. He tried his hand in the oil business and did a stint with ABC TV before deciding to get back into the business he loved – radio.

Fred owned stations in Claremore/Tulsa, Oklahoma and Las Vegas, Nevada. He put together a chain of small radio stations across Nevada before joining USA Radio Networks in 2016.

He bought that business out in 2018 and ran it as CEO until his death. USA Radio Networks provides long-form radio shows and news to more than 400 stations across the country. They also run stations in Dallas, Phoenix and Cedar Rapids, IA.

Weinberg also published the Penny Press Nevada, a conservative weekly online newspaper, and worked with the Nevada Republican party in his spare time.

He was known to broadcasters and politicians across the country. Sometimes boisterous and often opinionated, he always had a deal working. Two cellphones and a laptop seemed to be attached to his body. Fred was loyal to a fault, and his employees stuck with him through many stations and opportunities, good times and bad.

Fred met his wife, Charlotte Alarid, in Las Vegas in 1999. They married in Hawaii in 2004. She survives as well as his step-children, Randi and Stephen Alarid, both in Reno. Weinberg is also survived by sisters Susan Weinberg (Martin Arend) and Andrea Weinberg-Chestnut, two nieces and two great-nephews.

A memorial service will be held in Reno at a November 6.. In lieu of flowers,The family requests donations to the Weinberg Family Scholarship fund at Bradley University in Fred’s name. https://www.bradley.edu/giving



Thursday, May 18, 2006

RESPECT: Frankie Thomas (1921-2006)

 

From The Los Angeles Times Frankie Thomas, 85; Starred in TV's 'Tom Corbett, Space Cadet' By Dennis McLellan, Times Staff Writer May 17, 2006 Frankie Thomas, a popular stage and screen juvenile actor in the 1930's who gained widespread fame on TV in the early 1950s as the star of "Tom Corbett, Space Cadet," has died. He was 85.Thomas, who later became a leading recreational bridge instructor and an author, died Thursday of respiratory failure at Sherman Oaks Hospital, said his stepdaughter, Julie Alexander. The Manhattan-born son of actors Frank M. Thomas and Mona Bruns, Thomas established himself on Broadway in the early 1930s. After appearing in the drama "Wednesday's Child," the teenage Thomas came to Hollywood to appear in the 1934 film version at RKO. Over the next few years, he shuttled back and forth between Hollywood and New York, appearing in plays such as "Remember the Day," "Seen but Not Heard" and "Your Loving Son" and in films such as "A Dog of Flanders," "Boys Town" and "The Major and the Minor." The curly-haired Thomas also starred in "Tim Tyler's Luck," a 1937 adventure serial. And he played Nancy Drew's droll boyfriend, Ted Nickerson, in four of the teenage sleuth films starring Bonita Granville in 1938 and 1939. After serving in the Navy and the Coast Guard during World War II, Thomas moved back to New York and worked frequently in radio and early television, including the soap opera "A Woman to Remember." In 1950, he was cast in the title role of Tom Corbett, a Space Academy cadet in training to become a member of the elite Solar Guard, 400 years in the future.In landing the title role in the children's adventure show, Thomas beat out a number of young actors, including Jack Lemmon. "Frankie looked like the all-American boy," said Jan Merlin, who played the wisecracking cadet Roger Manning ("So what happens now, space heroes?"). "There was a style of acting that kids in those days had, particularly Hollywood kids," Merlin told The Times. "If you were playing the all-American boy, you talked a certain way, you tensed your jaw in a certain way, and he fitted it. "Everyone in the room knew immediately this was the guy we were going to get." "Tom Corbett, Space Cadet" debuted in October 1950 as a 15-minute, three-nights-a-week series on CBS. The show later expanded to 30 minutes and aired variously on ABC, NBC and the DuMont networks. There also was a radio version. In that pre-Sputnik era, the adventures of Tom Corbett and his fellow space travelers quickly caught on with viewers, who included a surprising number of adults."The disc jockeys all picked up our lingo: 'Blast your jets,' 'Don't fuse your tubes, 'Spaceman's luck,' " Thomas recalled in a 2005 interview with Starlog magazine. "We were hearing all of this and we said, 'Hey, if they're saying it, they're watching it.' " Eventually, Thomas told the Asbury Park Press in 2000, "there were 135 different products bearing the name of 'Tom Corbett.' Kellogg's, which was a wonderful sponsor, renamed their second-biggest seller, Kellogg's Pep, the 'Solar Cereal.' They had my picture on the box." Because the show aired live, it was prone to occasional flubs. "Frank had a wonderful retentive memory, and frequently if an actor went up with his lines, Frankie would pop in and say the guy's lines for him," Merlin said. On one occasion, Merlin recalled, "a fella was so nervous he began with Frank's line. So Frank answered with his line, and they did that through the entire scene. At the end of the scene, the director came out of the booth and said how wonderful they were and didn't realize they had changed lines."Frank was delighted with that; he had a marvelous sense of humor." After the TV series ended in 1955, Thomas gave up acting and wrote for television and radio for a time. He then played on the bridge circuit with master players and taught recreational bridge for many years. He also was the longtime editor of the American Bridge Teachers' Assn. Quarterly Magazine and served as president of the organization. Thomas also wrote a string of mystery novels, including "Sherlock Holmes and the Masquerade Murders," featuring Arthur Conan Doyle's famous character. Thomas' wife, Virginia, died in 1997. In addition to his stepdaughter, he is survived by his stepson, James Aicholtz, and a step-grandson. At his request, Thomas was buried Tuesday in his "Tom Corbett, Space Cadet" costume. Tom Corbett, Space Cadet: http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0042156/ Frankie Thomas: http://www.imdb.com/name/nm0858833/

Thursday, May 04, 2006

RESPECT: Elma G. (PEM) Farnsworth (1908-2006)

 

The "Mother of Electronic Television" is Gone. I was so HONOURED to have interviewed this extraordinary woman for the 75th anniversary of the very FIRST TV broadcast. The reason I say electronic television is because there was once a mechanical television first invented by John Logie Baird in Scotland. It made its debut at Selfridges on 25 March, 1925. The two were like Beta and VHS. And we know which one won out. :-)

More info: http://www.farnovision.com

Saturday, March 11, 2006

The Londoner (My Second Home)

We had a marathon remote at The Londoner in Addison this Sat. Underground Shopper was from 12-3, The North Texas Gourmet with Bruno Dinola and me from 3p-5p and The Beer Show from 5p-6p. Then I drove over to USA Radio and did Cyber-Line from 9p-12a. Been up for 17 hours. Man I beat. The Austin Healey Motor Club came out with about 6 vintage cars! The Londoner has a lot of meaning to me. Andy Tarczon and I ate there almost every day back when he was with Psion and I was at Comp USA. We "immersed" ourselves in the culture as we prepared for a trip. Psion was giving away an all expense paid trip to London to the salesman who sold the most PDA's. I was number one in the nation! When I left Comp USA in the later part of 1997, Lucia and I celebrated my last day playing pool all night. The Londoner was in its old place then. It later would move to its new bigger expanse across the street. Over the course of time, I'd bring friends to share a meal. I was known to always be brainstorming over Chinese buffets. But the Londoner was the place I was more able to relax and unwind over fish and chips, scotch eggs and a Guiness. And now, I'm pretending to be producing shows and doing live remotes from the Londoner! I've always had good things happen when I was involved with this great place. If still around when I die, I'd like to have my wake there as well and have let my wife Diane know!