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For many of us, the idea of buying or refinancing a home is terrifying… not just when thinking about years of commitment, but right from the first step in the loan process – the application. It's big, it's detailed and it requires that you bring all sorts of documentation to the table, but is it really THAT bad? Loan pro Julie Bannon has been front and center during AnnieMac Home Mortgage's transition to the new Universal loan application, and she's with us this week to break through the rumors, concerns and paranoia about these apps that plagues many first-time borrowers. Get the 411 on what to expect when you fill out your first (or next) loan application on this week's show!
The Lux Radio Theatre. December 2, 1940. CBS net. "Knute Rockne, All American". Sponsored by: Lux. Win one for the Gipper! Both the Warner Brothers film and this broadcast were based on a story originally broadcast in December, 1938 on "The Cavalcade Of America." Donald Crisp, Fay Wray, Cecil B. DeMille, Arthur Q. Bryan (doubles), Bob Burleson (doubles), Celeste Rush, Charles Seel (doubles), Earle Ross (doubles), Edwin Max (doubles), Forrest Taylor (doubles), Frederick Shields (doubles), Griff Barnett (doubles), Harold Daniels (doubles), James Eagles (doubles), Joe Pennario (doubles), Lou Merrill (doubles), Louis Silvers (music director), Melville Ruick (announcer), Ted Bliss (doubles), Julie Bannon (commercial spokesman), Duane Thompson (commercial spokesman), Verna Felton (commercial spokesman), Jane Morgan (commercial spokesman), Martha Wentworth (commercial spokesman), Robert Buckner (screenwriter), Sanford Barnett (director), George Wells (adaptor), Pat O'Brien, Ronald Reagan, Charlie Forsyth (sound effects). oldtimeradiodvd.com iheartradio.com/talk
The Lux Radio Theatre. October 9, 1944. . "In Old Chicago". Sponsored by: Lux, Spry. Good brother vs. bad brother in old Chicago...and their last name is O'Leary! See cat. #93183 for a rehearsal recording of this program. John Hodiak, Cecil B. DeMille, Cy Kendall, Janet Scott, John Milton Kennedy (announcer), Louis Silvers (music director), Ruby Dandridge, Tom Holland, Griff Barnett (doubles), Edward Marr (doubles), Charles Seel (doubles), Norman Field, Truda Marson (doubles), Leo Cleary (doubles), Ed Begley (doubles), Tommy Cook, Dickie Meyers (doubles), Bob Martell (doubles), Herb Lytton (doubles), Homer Hall (chorus), Sidney Pepple (chorus), Jan Williams (chorus), Stewart Bair (chorus), Enrico Ricardi (chorus, choral director), Julie Bannon (commercial spokesman: doubles), Doris Singleton (commercial spokesman: as "Libby"), Ann Tobin (commercial spokesman), Thomas Hanlon (commercial spokesman: doubles), Lamar Trotti (screenwriter), Sonya Levien (screenwriter), Niven Bush (author), Fred MacKaye (director), Sanford Barnett (adaptor), Charlie Forsyth (sound effects), Dorothy Lamour, Robert Young. oldtimeradiodvd.com
The Lux Radio Theatre. May 14, 1945. CBS net. "Alexander Graham Bell". Sponsored by: Lux. A rehearsal recording. The story of the invention of the telephone. There is lots of kidding around in the studio after the show. Don Ameche, June Duprez, Mitchell Leisen (host), Boyd Davis, Charles Seel, Dickie Meyers, Edwin Rand, Ferdinand Munier, Francis X. Bushman, Griff Barnett, Gwen Delano, Herb Lytton (doubles), John Milton Kennedy (announcer), Louis Silvers (music director), Myra Dell, Norman Field, Paul McVey (doubles), Regina Wallace (doubles), Stanley Farrar (doubles), Tommy Cook, Truda Marson, Doris Singleton (commercial spokesman: as "Libby"), Julie Bannon (commercial spokesman), Betty Jean Hainey (commercial spokesman), Lamar Trotti (screenwriter), Ray Harris (author), Fred MacKaye (director), Sanford Barnett (adaptor), Charlie Forsyth (sound effects).oldtimeradiodvd.com on sale
In October of 1934, "Lux Radio Theater" debuted in New York on NBC's Blue radio network. Presenting audio versions of popular Broadway plays, the show failed to garner an audience and soon ran out of material. After switching networks to CBS and moving to Hollywood, Lux found its true market. The show began featuring adaptations of popular films, performed by as many of the original stars as possible. With an endless supply of hit films scripts and an audience of more than 40 million, Lux enjoyed a prosperous run until the curtain fell in 1956.THIS EPISODE:October 20, 1941. CBS net. "Blood and Sand". Sponsored by: Lux. The rise and fall of a great bull fighter, the role made famous by Rudolph Valentino. Kathleen Fitz, Lester Schott, Lou Merrill, Louis Silvers (music director), Elsa Brand, Erik Rolf, Gale Gordon, Howard McNear, Jeff Corey, Bruce Payne (doubles), Cecil B. DeMille, Anne Stone, Tyrone Power, Annabella, Bea Benaderet, Sanford Barnett (director), George Wells (adaptor), Charlie Forsyth (sound effects), Vicente Blasco Ibanez (author), Lois Collier (commercial spokesman), Nancy Bickell (commercial spokesman), Jo Swerling (screenwriter), Nick Toms (doubles), Paul Dubov, Walter Tetley, Ben Alexander (commercial spokesman), Julie Bannon (commercial spokesman), Melville Ruick (announcer). 59:45.