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oldshowbiz · 1 year
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1975.
Radio KMOX presents The Jesse White Interview
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fcaynak · 9 months
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İSTE BEKLENEN Evliya-Serisi
Vodpod videos no longer available.  Evliyalar Serisin, posted with [hulu http://www.hulu.com/watch/369061%5D [hulu id=369061] [hulu http://www.hulu.com/watch/369061 width=512 height=218] or To embed the video with default width and height adapted to your theme: To specify the width and height explicitly: To specify the width only: To hide the related videos from appearing after the video is…
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Sam Clancy at KSDK: 
ST. LOUIS — Mike Shannon, the St. Louis native who became the voice of his hometown team for 50 years, has died. He was 83.
The team confirmed the news Sunday afternoon.
Shannon was born and raised in St. Louis, graduating from CBC High School in 1957 and attended the University of Missouri for a year before signing with the St. Louis Cardinals in 1958. He made his Major League debut in 1962 and played his entire career with the Cardinals.
After a nine-year career with two World Series championships, Shannon retired in 1970, and began his broadcasting career on KMOX in 1971.
In his 50-year broadcasting career, he was beloved for his quirky turns of phrase that became known as Shannonisms. He could be heard on many summer and fall nights willing a long fly ball to "get up baby, get up."
He was on the mic for World Series championships, pennant chases and the legendary home run chase between Mark McGwire and Sammy Sosa in the summer of 1998, when McGwire broke Roger Maris' decades-old, single-season home run record.
In August of 2021, Shannon said a bout with COVID-19 put him in a coma for "a long time, too long" and that he was still feeling the impact of his near-death experience almost a year later as a COVID long-hauler. He would retire as the voice of the Cardinals at the end of the 2021 season after a 50 year career.
As for his legacy, Shannon said in 2021 that it was pretty simple.
Longtime former Cardinals radio announcer Mike Shannon passed away at 83.
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muscleonly4u · 1 month
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Hugo Kmox ( Stuart Tomlinson )🇬🇧
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Whole 'nother Story - February
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britishchick09 · 22 days
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senpai on the radio! :D
wnew in new york (1937), kwoc in poplar bluff, missouri, cbs studios in new york and kido in boise, idaho (1939)
bonus- 'postal telegraph theater guide' and 'ripley's believe it or not' in 1937 and a 1988 kmox interview from the alton museum:
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nyrdcastpodcast · 1 month
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anumberofhobbies · 5 months
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If I touch this tower, I die
Nov 16, 2023 KMOX-AM is a 50kW clear channel station in St. Louis, MO; take a tower of the tower and transmitter site! Special thanks to Audacy and KMOX-AM engineers for assisting us with this tower tour. Find KMOX online here: https://www.audacy.com/kmox
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cbatue57 · 6 months
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Classic Facts: Week 7
Broadcast Stations List (Part One)
The following tv stations are known to have aired Colonel Bleep, whether by original air runs and/or reruns.
Note that there may be more stations that have aired the series but are not on this list.
- CKLW-TV (now CBET-DT)
- CKMI-TV (now CKMI-DT)
- KBET-TV (now KXTV)
- KBYU-TV (now BYU-TV)
- KCND-TV
- KDKA-TV
- KELP-TV (now KVIA-TV)
- KHJ-TV (now KCAL-TV)
- KONA-TV (now KHON-TV)
- KMOX-TV (now KMOV)
- KPIX-TV
- KREM-TV (now KREM)
- KRNT-TV (now KCCI)
- KROC-TV (now KTTC)
- KROD-TV (now KDBC-TV)
- KTVW (now KCPQ)
- KVAR (now KPNX)
- KVOO-TV (now KJRH-TV)
- WAFB-TV (now WAFB)
- WAKR-TV (now WVPX-TV)
- WBAL-TV
- WBRE-TV
- WBZ-TV
- WCCO-TV
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oldshowbiz · 1 year
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1973.
Radio KMOX interviews Margaret O’Brien
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rich4a1 · 1 year
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Danny Liston is Making a Scene
Making a Scene Presents an interview with Danny Liston What do record mogul Ahmet Ertegun, blues legend Gregg Allman, and Grammy award-winning producer Jim Gaines have in common? They all played a significant role in the music that is truly Danny Liston. Growing up in the St. Louis Irish working class neighborhood known as Dogtown, Liston came from a musical family. His mom Lucille sang on KMOX…
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muscleonly4u · 2 months
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Hugo Kmox ( Stuart Tomlinson ) 🇬🇧
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goalhofer · 1 year
Conversation
2022 St. Louis Cardinals Famous Relations
#32 Steven Matz: Husband of Christian singer Taylor Cain Matz and brother-in-law of Christian musicians Madison Cain and Logan Cain.
#39 Miles Mikolas: Husband of celebrity blogger Lauren Mikolas.
#4 Yadi Molina: Brother of KMOX cardinals analyst Bengie Molina; Jr. & former Los Angeles Angels catching coordinator José Molina.
#28 Nolan Arenado: Brother of former Richmond Flying Squirrels 3B Jonah Arenado and cousin of Gwinnett Stripers 1B Joshua Fuentes.
#71 Kramer Robertson: Son of Louisiana State University women's basketball head coach Kim Mulkey Robertson.
#21 Lars Nootbaar: Great-grandson of businessman the late Herbert Nootbaar and brother of former Delmarva Shorebirds P Nigel Nootbaar.
Pitching coach Mike Maddux: Brother of former University Of Nevada, Las Vegas pitching coach Greg Maddux.
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lboogie1906 · 1 year
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William De Kova White (born January 28, 1934) is a former baseball first baseman who played for the New York / San Francisco Giants (1956, 1958), St. Louis Cardinals (1959–65, 1969), and Philadelphia Phillies (1966–68). He was an eight-time All-Star and seven-time Gold Glove winner, who earned a championship as a top contributor to the 1964 World Series Champions. In 1989 he was elected President of the National League. He served as NL president until he retired in 1994. He became a full-time sportscaster after his playing career ended in 1969, and was the play-by-play man and color analyst for New York Yankees television and radio broadcasts for 18 years. He graduated from Warren G. Harding High School in Warren, Ohio in 1952, and was both president and salutatorian of his class. He then stayed in-state to attend Hiram College from 1953 to 1955. In both high school and college, he lettered in baseball, basketball, and football. He earned a sports program on KMOX radio in St. Louis while he was still playing for the Cardinals. Following a trade to the Phillies, he did a program there. He became a sportscaster for WFIL-TV in Philadelphia. He became the first African-American to broadcast NHL games when he called several games of the Philadelphia Flyers. In 1971, he joined the New York Yankees' broadcast team. He called Yankee games from 1971 to 1988, most often teamed with Phil Rizzuto and Frank Messer. White did the team's broadcasts on both radio and television during most of that stretch. He was the first regular African American play-by-play announcer for a major-league sports team. Outside of baseball, he was part of the coverage of the Winter Olympic Games in 1980 and 1984. The Yankee organization showed their appreciation following his years in the broadcast booth when they selected him to receive their Pride of the Yankees Award in 1990. #africanhistory365 #africanexcellence https://www.instagram.com/p/CoAPsHqL9An/?igshid=NGJjMDIxMWI=
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90363462 · 1 year
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A St. Louis news anchor reported on the latest school shooting. It was her daughter’s school
“The reporter said, ‘There’s been a school shooting.’ I said, ‘I know, it’s my daughter’s school.’”
Oct. 25, 2022, 6:47 PM EDT
Your Video Begins in 00:13
KMOX Morning Drive anchor Debbie Monterrey was reporting live on the air in St. Louis, Missouri when she started receiving text messages from her 17-year-old daughter, Caeli.
"My kids text me all the time when I'm on the air," Monterrey told TODAY Parents. "I looked down quickly and it was in all caps, which is unusual for my daughter. She wrote: 'OMG THERE'S AN INTRUDER IN THE BUILDING.'"
As a seasoned reporter with decades of experience and a mom of two, Monterrey said her initial reaction was to "not panic." 
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On Oct. 25, a 19-year-old gunman entered the Central Visual and Performing Arts High School in St. Louis with what authorities described as a “long gun” and killed one teacher and a 15-year-old student. The shooter died after exchanging gunfire with law enforcement officers.
Monterrey's daughter is a senior at the Collegiate School of Medicine and Bioscience; the magnet high school shares a building with the high school where the shooter carried out his attack.
Monterrey looked at a TV screen in the studio and saw arial footage of a building — her daughter's school. A reporter from the KMOX newsroom then ran into the studio and whispered, "We have breaking news."
"I was just in shock mode, trying to keep everything together," Monterrey said. "The reporter said, 'There's been a school shooting.' I said, 'I know, it's my daughter's school. Caeli is texting me right now."
As the news continued to break, Monterrey was receiving real-time updates from her daughter via text.
"There's helicopters."
"I hear so much police outside the door."
"People are yelling police."
"We all ran out of the building." 
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As her daughter told her she was leaving the building, Monterrey looked up at the television screen and watched lines of students run towards safety. 
Thirty minutes after that first text, Monterrey knew her daughter was safe. At that moment her program cut to commercial, and the mom broke down crying. Her co-anchor, Carol Daniel, embraced her as she sobbed.
I figured, if I was going to hold it together I had to hang onto the facts.
noneDebbie Monterrey 
Still, she had a job to do: Report the news. 
"I only had 30 seconds to feel my feelings because we had a job to do," she explained. "We went back on air and the reporter is saying what she's hearing from police and I'm relaying what my daughter is telling me. I figured, if I was going to hold it together I had to hang onto the facts."
For 20 minutes, Monterrey stayed on the air, reporting the very latest news as her daughter was living through it. 
"There were no commercials," Monterrey said. "I kept thinking, 'I need to take a break because I needed a breath, but the producer had taken all the commercials out because our news director was saying to just keep going." 
Monterrey stressed that her news director did check in to make sure she was OK. Because she was in constant communication with her daughter and knew she was OK, Monterrey said she decided to "just keep going."
After what Monterrey described as the "weirdest 45 minutes of my broadcasting career," she received a text message from her daughter to come pick her up. 
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TODAY Parents reached out to Monterrey's employer, KMOX, for comment but did not hear back at the time of publication.
Once reunited with her daughter, Monterrey said they shared an uncharacteristically long hug. 
"My daughter is not much of a hugger," she said. "But as soon as I saw her I got a very, very long hug. I think it was really intense for both of us."
Since the shooting, Monterrey said her daughter has experienced a wide range of emotions. That evening, the pair spent nearly four hours listening to news coverage. 
"She wanted to know what happened, who the shooter was, and how many people were shot," she said. "I think she was still numb."
That night, Monterrey said her daughter "got weepy," then scared when she was "hearing noises outside." The next morning, she seemed happy, Monterrey said, but then grew "melancholy and stayed in her pajamas until 11." At one point, she told her mother she didn't want to go back into the building again.
"It's been a roller coaster of emotions, which is normal," Monterrey added. "But the trauma that we inflict upon the kids of our nation with these school shootings and doing nothing about it? I don't know how this damage manifests itself in the short- and long-term."
It could happen to anyone at any time, anywhere.
noneDebbie Monterrey 
Monterrey said she's still processing what happened, too.
"In our gun-worshipping culture that we live in, it could happen to anyone at any time, anywhere," she explained. "I hope to be able to move forward and just live my life and enjoy the community that I love, and not have this constantly over my head or having me looking over my shoulder. I hope that is the reality for me and for my kids. I don't know if that's possible."
The shooting at Central Visual and Performing Arts High School occurred exactly five months to the day after 19 fourth grade students and two teachers were shot and killed inside Robb Elementary School in Uvalde, Texas. 
So far, there have been 40 school shootings in 2022, according to Education Week — the most since the independent news organization started tracking school shootings in 2018.
Related video:
Danielle Campoamor is a reporter for TODAY Parents. Previously, she was a contributing editor at Hearst and freelance writer with bylines in The New York Times, Washington Post, NBC News THINK, Vogue, Vanity Fair, and more. Born and raised in Eagle River, Alaska, she lives in Brooklyn, NY with her partner and two sons.
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