The David Goldstein Show (KIRO Saturdays, Sundays; 7-10p) tonight:
7p: What does our local media elite’s chumminess with our local business elite have to do with the $100,000 no-bid contract issued by Safeco Field? The Stranger’s normally shy News Editor Josh Feit will join Goldy in studio.
9p: Regular listeners can toddle off to the TV room, or light up the ear candles as Goldy mines the vast, ratings-rich, KIRO Oregon livestream market with blogger TJ from Loaded Orygun discussing Oregon politics at the breadcrumb level. (BlatherWatch, 9p TV pick: FoxNews' Geraldo at Large; Tonight's topic: "Considering Myself ," (number 38 in a 80 part series).
oh christ, maybe Goldstein will get the Oregon guy talk to about pet food...
Posted by: drack | May 12, 2007 at 08:31 PM
Is there any pet food left to talk about? I'm trying to figure out what to buy . . . anybody got any ideas? So far, my cat seems to like teriyaki chicken.
He does not like veggies at all.
I had three cats who lived to over twenty-one years of age and all I fed two of them was lean uncooked hamburger. They loved it.
Posted by: joanie | May 12, 2007 at 10:03 PM
SIX MONTHS LATER-Dillard Montrose sat in the comfortable chair opposite the radio staion honcho's desk as the man looked over his resume. Montrose was feeling anything but comfortable. This was the last station in the Seattle market where they did any kind of talkradio. He'd been politely shown the door at the rest of them, over the past six months. Finally the honcho spoke- "I have an appreciation for the kind of numbers you were pullin g over at KROW, Mr. Montrose, but frankly, that was before what has become to be known around town as the "Lobsterman Incident". Our audience frankly doesn't really care for that kind of stuff. I just don't think you're a good fit for our station. I'm sorry, Montrose. I'll have security escort you out of the building. After all I don't want you pulling a gun on me." Montrose stared at the honcho, thinking that the man was merely making an offensive, bad joke, but the radio executive quickly pushed a red button on his intercom, which sent out a signal into the outer offices which sounded like one of those repeating warning buzzers that go off in a nuclear power plant when the core reactor is melting down. Instantly , two burly, uniformed security guards opened the office door , and strode into the room.........
Posted by: Tommy008 | May 13, 2007 at 01:52 AM