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LAFC head into the international break top of the Western Conference
Contact info: Judyth Jernudd Website: www.JernuddCompany.com Email: Programs@JernuddCompany.com Phone Number: 310.215.9975 Social Media: - Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/judy.jernudd - LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/judyjernudd/ - Instagram: @JudyJernudd - Twitter: @JudyJernudd Bio: Judy Jernudd is a communication and performance improvement expert in Beverly Hills, CA. She is the founder of the Jernudd Company for Professional Development and COBE, the Collaboration of Brilliant Entrepreneurs and Executives (COBE), for Entrepreneurial Growth. Her television career credits include entertainment news and consumer reporting on KTTV and KCOP in Los Angeles. She left LA for Miami to host AM South Florida, a live morning talk show on WTVJ. The New York based Executive Television tapped Judy to prepare executives from Fortune 500 companies for presentations and media interviews. Judy's experience as a television newscaster and TV Talk personality provided her the opportunity for conversations and television interviews with several of the world’s influential personalities, including President Clinton, Oprah Winfrey, Gov. Ann Richards, Meg Whitman, Magic Johnson, Tom Cruise, Tom Selleck, Coach Phil Jackson and Geena Davis. The extraordinary communication skills and success qualities of these icons are the basis for the Jernudd Company and COBE result focused programs and her proprietary processes. In addition to leading Jernudd Company and COBE programs, Judy is a keynote speaker, Emcee and she appears in various media outlets including: Fox News, US News & World Report, Fortune Magazine, and the Los Angeles Business Journal. She is a professional speaker in the National Speakers Association. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Jay Towers & Jim Bowers are together in Detroit and doing something fans have been asking for! Audio commentary of the 188 minute “Superman: The Movie Extended Cut released in 2017. Originally aired as a two-night Broadcast TV Premiere on ABC in 1982, fans were shocked to see a much longer version of the film they watched on the big screen in 1978. This very special Caped Wonder Superman Podcast Commentary puts you in the screening room with Super Fan Jay Towers and CapedWonder.com’s Jim Bowers. This "In Your Car" version allows you to hear Jay, Jim, and some of the film! This version is perfect for listening when you can’t watch the film simultaneously, but want to hear all of the behind the scenes secrets. If you are looking to listen to the commentary while watching the film, we suggest downloading our “Just Jay & Jim” version and follows the instructions.
Our Kindergarten Community of Practice started last December centering around lifting the level of instruction on reading and writing workshop. Since then, KCoP has grown to become a community of support, love, and growth.
Tread Perilously ventures into the surprisingly large selection of dramas and sitcoms featuring surprisingly large families for a theme month we had to call "Too Many Kids!" Our first round: an episode of the short lived dramedy The Bradys called "Bottom's Up." When Marcia feels sidelined by Carol and ignored by her husband Wally, she looks for a chemical way to alleviate her growing ennui. Will the demon liquor become her crutch? Meanwhile, Wally's attempt to secure his position as Mike Brady's assistant leads him directly into the cauldron of graft and corruption. Also, Greg, Jan, and Bobby put their heads together to solve a problem among the town's various trauma centers. Justin tries to understand why people would want to watch family dramas. A discussion of literary fiction ensues. The Brady Bunch phenomenon also gets examined. Erik recalls the afternoon broadcast schedules of KTLA, KTTV, and KCOP in the late 1980s. Justin tries to figure out why Marcia married Wally. He also realizes the actor playing Wally also played "Killer" Carlson in Slap Shot. Erik imagines a version of Dune in which Angela Lansbury played the Reverend Mother Helen Gaius Mohiam. Don Drysdale makes his Tread Perilously debut as an anti-masturbation advocate. Fake-Marcia gets discussed. The duo envision a family friendly teen comedy starring Christopher Knight and the episode's ill-advised alcoholism plot leads to a discussion of a much better version of this story.
Jennifer Hill asks author and TV personality, Judyth Jernudd: “How did you create a successful career in TV and transition into being an entrepreneur?” Judyth discusses her career and how she took risks in order to be successful. Judyth also shares about her organization COBE, that supports entrepreneurs with lasting success. startegic.com/judy-jernudd/meet-judy Judy Jernudd is a communication and performance improvement expert in Beverly Hills, CA. She is the founder of the Jernudd Company for Professional Development and COBE, the Collaboration of Brilliant Entrepreneurs and Executives, for Entrepreneurial Growth. Judy's leadership skills surfaced early in the food and beverage industry when at age 16, she managed the first of her parent's six restaurants in Michigan. From the restaurant industry, Judy set her sights on Los Angeles to study journalism, which led to a career in Public Relations. She soon transitioned into television on KCBS in Los Angeles, the number two market in the country. Her television career credits include entertainment news and consumer reporting on KTTV and KCOP in Los Angeles. She left LA for Miami to host AM South Florida, a live morning talk show on WTVJ. The New York based Executive Television tapped Judy to prepare executives from Fortune 500 companies for presentations and media interviews. Judy's experience as a television newscaster and TV Talk personality provided her the opportunity for conversations and television interviews with several of the world’s influential personalities, including President Clinton, Oprah Winfrey, Gov. Ann Richards, Meg Whitman, Magic Johnson, Tom Cruise, Tom Selleck, Coach Phil Jackson and Geena Davis. The extraordinary communication skills and success qualities of these icons are the basis for the Jernudd Company and COBE result focused programs and her propriety processes.
This is a re-broadcast or episode 9. When Star Trek was cancelled in 1969, there was no reason to think that this little science fiction show would ever come back. But the show's failures actually helped drive its new success in the 1970s. Co-hosts Bob Turner and Kelly Casto look at the syndication juggernaut that was Star Trek in the 1970s. Failure Led to Success Star Trek had not been profitable during its NBC run. In fact, when it was cancelled, its production costs had pushed it to be over $4 million in the red. That's over $30 million in today's dollars! The show was considered a dead property and Paramount desperately wanted to find a way to recoup some of those costs. So the studio decided to move the show into syndication. This was an interesting decision at the time because conventional wisdom stated that a show needed to have at least 100 episodes to be successful. But Paramount's need to make some kind of profit from Star Trek was great so they decided to move forward with just the 79 episodes. The studio did not expect that the show would ever make a profit in syndication. Execs just hoped they would be able to make some money to reduce the show's deficit. Syndication Syndication gave Star Trek a new lease on life. Kaiser Broadcasting, the first TV station group to purchase the show, used it as counter programming, scheduling it against the evening news shows by their competition. Soon other stations around the country picked up on this idea. As a result, Star Trek was able to connect with a new audience of older children, teens and college students. This group was not interested in watching the news, but was eager to see the adventures of the crew of the Enterprise! With the show being broadcast everyday, it became part of their daily lives and something they looked forward to seeing. Star Trek's Ratings Almost imediately, the show began to perform well. A March 1969 advertisement by Paramount touted Star Trek as, "A Space Breakthrough on the audience response barrier," saying it was being seen in over 65 countries. A similar ad sent in August stated some numbers from when Star Trek aired on NBC. The the show was had a 30 share or higher, or another way to put it is that it brought in 30% of the audience watching TV. The show averaged a 39.5 share for all the 61 markets where the show was being broadcast. In February 1970, Paramount ran another ad in Broadcast Magazine quoting the following performance numbers for Star Trek in syndication: WPIX in New York - up 96% WGN in Chicago - up 40% KCOP in Los Angeles - up 77% Minneapolis/St. Paul - up 44% Prividence, RI - up 30% over lead in Las Vegas - up 31% Greensboro/Winston Salem - adult viewers up 50% This ad wrapped with the following call-to-action: "For out-of-this world Star Trek numbers in your corner of the universe, call the Paramount television office nearest you." As the decade wore on, the show's popularity grew. An article in 1976 stated that a Star Trek episode shown during the day on Chicago's WGN was getting 374,000 viewers for reruns of reruns! A Dead Show to "The 79 Jewels" As Star Trek gained steam in syndication, the opinion of the show by Paramount changed. By the mid-1975, when Paramount was starting to look at bringing it back, execs at the studio were concerned that a new version of Trek might damage the interest in the original It was performing so well, that studio execs quietly referred to it as "The 79 Jewels" because of the millions it brought into the studio. It should be no surprise that the show performed well in the 1970s. It was a decade of bad news: Vietnam, Watergate, gas lines, the energy crisis. But in the background was Star Trek, reminding us all that there would be a brighter future ahead. Seeing its positive view at a time when there was so much negativity in the real world is a major reason why Star Trek exploded in the 1970s.  The success that Trek had in reruns and the money that Paramount made from it, ensured that the property would return. The only question was when.
When Star Trek was cancelled in 1969, there was no reason to think that this little science fiction show would ever come back. But the show's failures actually helped drive its new success in the 1970s. Co-hosts Bob Turner and Kelly Casto look at the syndication juggernaut that was Star Trek in the 1970s. Failure Led to Success Star Trek had not been profitable during its NBC run. In fact, when it was cancelled, its production costs had pushed it to be over $4 million in the red. That's over $30 million in today's dollars! The show was considered a dead property and Paramount desperately wanted to find a way to recoup some of those costs. So the studio decided to move the show into syndication. This was an interesting decision at the time because conventional wisdom stated that a show needed to have at least 100 episodes to be successful. But Paramount's need to make some kind of profit from Star Trek was great so they decided to move forward with just the 79 episodes. The studio did not expect that the show would ever make a profit in syndication. Execs just hoped they would be able to make some money to reduce the show's deficit. Syndication Syndication gave Star Trek a new lease on life. Kaiser Broadcasting, the first TV station group to purchase the show, used it as counter programming, scheduling it against the evening news shows by their competition. Soon other stations around the country picked up on this idea. As a result, Star Trek was able to connect with a new audience of older children, teens and college students. This group was not interested in watching the news, but was eager to see the adventures of the crew of the Enterprise! With the show being broadcast everyday, it became part of their daily lives and something they looked forward to seeing. Star Trek's Ratings Almost imediately, the show began to perform well. A March 1969 advertisement by Paramount touted Star Trek as, "A Space Breakthrough on the audience response barrier," saying it was being seen in over 65 countries. A similar ad sent in August stated some numbers from when Star Trek aired on NBC. The the show was had a 30 share or higher, or another way to put it is that it brought in 30% of the audience watching TV. The show averaged a 39.5 share for all the 61 markets where the show was being broadcast. In February 1970, Paramount ran another ad in Broadcast Magazine quoting the following performance numbers for Star Trek in syndication: WPIX in New York - up 96% WGN in Chicago - up 40% KCOP in Los Angeles - up 77% Minneapolis/St. Paul - up 44% Prividence, RI - up 30% over lead in Las Vegas - up 31% Greensboro/Winston Salem - adult viewers up 50% This ad wrapped with the following call-to-action: "For out-of-this world Star Trek numbers in your corner of the universe, call the Paramount television office nearest you." As the decade wore on, the show's popularity grew. An article in 1976 stated that a Star Trek episode shown during the day on Chicago's WGN was getting 374,000 viewers for reruns of reruns! A Dead Show to "The 79 Jewels" As Star Trek gained steam in syndication, the opinion of the show by Paramount changed. By the mid-1975, when Paramount was starting to look at bringing it back, execs at the studio were concerned that a new version of Trek might damage the interest in the original It was performing so well, that studio execs quietly referred to it as "The 79 Jewels" because of the millions it brought into the studio. It should be no surprise that the show performed well in the 1970s. It was a decade of bad news: Vietnam, Watergate, gas lines, the energy crisis. But in the background was Star Trek, reminding us all that there would be a brighter future ahead. Seeing its positive view at a time when there was so much negativity in the real world is a major reason why Star Trek exploded in the 1970s.  The success that Trek had in reruns and the money that Paramount made from it, ensured that the property would return. The only question was when.
The Baby Boomer Radio, TV, Movies, Magazines, Music, Comics, Fads, Toys, Fun, and More Show!
Mike and Smitty pay a visit to legendary Los Angeles Radio and TV personality Larry Van Nuys. Larry joins the G-Men for the first of a two-part interview. Larry remembers his early days in Los Angeles Radio and TV. Some of the radio stations Larry has worked at were KNX, KGIL, KMPC, and KFI. His work in television included stations KTLA and KCOP, along with numerous stations around the country where he performed announcing and voice-over work. Larry was present for many news events that happened in Southern California and he has anchored coverage on wildfires, earthquakes, dam collapses, and the O. J. Simpson trials. Join us and listen to the history of Los Angeles Radio and TV as remembered by Larry Van Nuy
In accordance with their Movie Month Marathon, the Freaks are very proud to present - Superman: The Movie! Hear their memories of this classic and definitive comic book movie with Christopher Reeve as the definitive Superman! The Freaks will be discussing the KCOP version of Richard Donner's masterpiece. What is KCOP? LISTEN AND FIND OUT! NOTE -- The Two True Freaks! now have a phone line where you can call and leave a completely inappropriate message - We just might use it on the show! It's 585-COP-LURE!! ( 1-585-267-5873 )Feedback for this show can be sent to: comics@twotruefreaks.comTwo True Freaks! is a proud member of BOTH the Comics Podcast Network (http://www.comicspodcasts.com/) and the League of Comic Book Podcasts (http://www.comicbooknoise.com/league/)!! Follow the fun on Facebook at https://www.facebook.com/groups/113051642052970/ THANK YOU for listening to Two True Freaks!!
In accordance with their Movie Month Marathon, the Freaks are very proud to present - Superman: The Movie! Hear their memories of this classic and definitive comic book movie with Christopher Reeve as the definitive Superman! The Freaks will be discussing the KCOP version of Richard Donner's masterpiece. What is KCOP? LISTEN AND FIND OUT! NOTE -- The Two True Freaks! now have a phone line where you can call and leave a completely inappropriate message - We just might use it on the show! It's 585-COP-LURE!! ( 1-585-267-5873 )Feedback for this show can be sent to: comics@twotruefreaks.comTwo True Freaks! is a proud member of BOTH the Comics Podcast Network (http://www.comicspodcasts.com/) and the League of Comic Book Podcasts (http://www.comicbooknoise.com/league/)!! Follow the fun on Facebook at https://www.facebook.com/groups/113051642052970/ THANK YOU for listening to Two True Freaks!!
In accordance with their Movie Month Marathon, the Freaks are very proud to present - Superman: The Movie! Hear their memories of this classic and definitive comic book movie with Christopher Reeve as the definitive Superman! The Freaks will be discussing the KCOP version of Richard Donner's masterpiece. What is KCOP? LISTEN AND FIND OUT! NOTE -- The Two True Freaks! now have a phone line where you can call and leave a completely inappropriate message - We just might use it on the show! It's 585-COP-LURE!! ( 1-585-267-5873 )Feedback for this show can be sent to: comics@twotruefreaks.comTwo True Freaks! is a proud member of BOTH the Comics Podcast Network (http://www.comicspodcasts.com/) and the League of Comic Book Podcasts (http://www.comicbooknoise.com/league/)!! Follow the fun on Facebook at https://www.facebook.com/groups/113051642052970/ THANK YOU for listening to Two True Freaks!!
In accordance with their Movie Month Marathon, the Freaks are very proud to present - Superman: The Movie! Hear their memories of this classic and definitive comic book movie with Christopher Reeve as the definitive Superman! The Freaks will be discussing the KCOP version of Richard Donner's masterpiece. What is KCOP? LISTEN AND FIND OUT! NOTE -- The Two True Freaks! now have a phone line where you can call and leave a completely inappropriate message - We just might use it on the show! It's 585-COP-LURE!! ( 1-585-267-5873 )Feedback for this show can be sent to: comics@twotruefreaks.comTwo True Freaks! is a proud member of BOTH the Comics Podcast Network (http://www.comicspodcasts.com/) and the League of Comic Book Podcasts (http://www.comicbooknoise.com/league/)!! Follow the fun on Facebook at https://www.facebook.com/groups/113051642052970/ THANK YOU for listening to Two True Freaks!!
Steven declares it Howie night because of an outstanding Spring outing today against old friend Bud Black's new team, The San Diego Padres. Get caught up on the fun and don't miss Sunday afternoon's game against Oakland on KCOP 13 in the L.A. area.