Tag Archives: new york

Michael Goodwin on Andrew Cuomo’s bomb false alarm, plus his appearance on CNN

Big John, Ramblin’ Ray, and NY Post author Michael Goodwin discusses the latest news stories. With the bombs that are being found addressed to political leaders, and the insensitive comments that have been made comparing it to 9-11. Plus his latest article in the New York Post, Liberals won’t admit Trump was right about migrant caravans.

Trip Sisters Episode 20 (10-13-18) New York

Sisters Colleen Kelly and Catie Keogh talk tips and trends on all things travel. Travelers say new budget airline left them stranded after selling flights that didn’t exist. Dogs now have their own Instagram pop-up because humans can’t have all the fun. Hear some of Colleen and Catie favorite things to do in New York.

The Steve Dahl Show – April 19, 2018 – Sample

A 2am granola call brings Steve to insanity this afternoon, while reflecting on his diet. Papa isn’t speaking to Rosie Dahl at the moment. Tune into an explosive Ask Janet where she talks decorating, New York, casseroles, and more!

Bob Sirott Interviews Paul Shaffer

Bob Sirott Interviews Paul Shaffer on CBS News Magazine West 57th.  Bob follows Paul to 30 Rockefeller Center in New York where Paul leads his World’s Most Dangerous Band on NBC’s Late Night with David Letterman.  Saturday Night Live’s Executive producer Lorne Michaels tells Bob why Shaffer’s hip act is so effective. Plus more!

Actually, Many ‘Inner Cities’ Are Doing Great 

To hear Donald J. Trump tell it, America’s “inner cities” are on fire. They’re “a disaster education-wise, jobwise, safety-wise, in every way possible,” he declared in this week’s presidential debate.

“You walk down the street,” Mr. Trump said in his first debate with Hillary Clinton, “you get shot.”

It often sounds as if he is describing the Bronx in the 1970s, and not American cities like New York and Washington, D.C., that today surround his own real estate projects.

But that’s the power of this perception. The phrase “inner city” is often used to suggest that the historical image and the modern place are one and the same — or even that the “inner city” is still a meaningfully identifiable place at all, with clearly implied demographics (black, poor) and connotations (violence, decay). It still invokes the particular context when the phrase became popular in the 1960s and ’70s.

Read more from the New York Times’ article here – Actually, Many ‘Inner Cities’ Are Doing Great – The New York Times