The ice cream truck made its first appearance in my Woodbury neighborhood last week. It didn’t take long to recoil from its ‘fingernails on a chalkboard’ signature song: ‘Turkey in the Straw.’ Read more →
MPR News Reflections and observations on the news
Archives for May 2014
Construction is continuing on the new St. Croix Crossing across the Saint Croix River, just south of the old lift bridge in town.
As of last week, 19 of 23 Minnesota approach pier footings are complete and four piers have been built to their full height, according to MnDOT. Of the three bridge abutments, construction of the eastbound ramp abutment is complete.
I got a chance to fly around the area this morning to get a better idea of the progress.
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Some of the questions in this week’s quiz are ripped from the headlines, some from NewsCut. Most flew a little bit under the radar and require deep contemplation before answering. There may be trick answers. Or maybe not. Read more →
Not too many people apparently saw the new CEO of NPR coming. Jarl Mohn takes a job that has been the center of turmoil for years. He comes from a radio disc jockey background and used to be known as Lee Masters before he became an exec at MTV and VH1 back when they were Read more →
The world has now mostly moved on from last month’s story from Nepal, where more than a dozen sherpas were killed as they climbed Mt. Everest. Their job is to go first and do the heavy lifting for climbers. Today, the New York Times provided this video of many of the sherpas, just before their Read more →
South Carolina officer Gaetano Acerra delivers on the police promise to protect — and serve. Read more →
Voters rarely get the opportunity to take a stand on public funding of sports stadiums, so when Cleveland went to the polls this week for continued taxpayer subsidies, it provided a good barometer of public sentiment on the issue. What did we learn? That the vocal opposition to stadiums might be overblown, taxes to support Read more →
A big debate over bullying is underway in Fosston, Minnesota after a mother posted a video on Facebook of her crying daughter who had, she alleges, just been bullied by a bus driver and other students.
The resulting debate is about more than bullying. Should the mother have been filming her daughter at a time when comforting seemed the order of the day? Should a news station have been reposting the video without checking to see if the story was true? Why does a mother have to go to this extent to get satisfaction when her kids are being bullied? Read more →
In the world of hyperbolic “breaking news,” there aren’t many people left who can tell a good story about people who barbecue in the snow, collect laundry soap, or do their own thing outside the 494/694 beltway. Now there’s one fewer. Jason Davis of KSTP has announced a date for the retirement he originally announced Read more →
At a session of the National Association or Broadcasters event today, CEO Gordon Smith urged TV broadcasters to put up a unified fight for a new TV broadcast standard, called ATSC 3.0. It uses Internet and cellular systems for TV transmission instead of antennas on tall towers. Read more →
Congress is about to be tested on how much sway the airline industry holds over consumers on Capitol Hill.
So far, the industry is winning.
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Freighter Hon. James L. Oberstar arrives in #Duluth this morning pic.twitter.com/uEiougm5xE — Andrew Krueger (@akpix) May 8, 2014 As funeral services began today in Maryland for former Minnesota congressman James Oberstar, a maritime tribute played out in Duluth this morning when the laker, “James L. Oberstar” , approached the lift bridge in the city Oberstar Read more →
Railroad buffs, a few reporters, and a couple of officials far outnumbered people getting on or off the Empire Builder train on its return to St. Paul’s Union Depot. Read more →
It might be a tough hiring market for this year’s college graduates, but a new survey says if you’re a young person looking to start a career and put down some roots, you want to be in Minneapolis or Saint Paul. Read more →
So this is a thing, now.
Across the Twitterverse this week, high school and college kids are making deals with their professors and teachers, who are supposed to be in the business of educating students. Read more →