I was a small-town girl.
Aside from the ridiculous green beret and homely green jumper, signing me up for Girl Scouts was the best decision Mom made for her fifth-grade daughter. I already knew how to build a campfire, and selling cookies wasn't the highlight of my year -- it was the field trip to the radio station that thrilled my little eleven-year-old heart.
There it was, five thousand watts of crystal-clear power...it was a daytime-only radio station, the voice of our town.
One look into that studio and I was hooked. I begged them to let me take home the unused news copy from the AP wire. I hung it up on my wall like a rock-star poster. I got a tape recorder and practiced doing newscasts, writing exciting stories of neighborhood gossip. I practiced my commercials, imitating TV ads for Miss Clairol.
In the seventh grade, I entered a speech contest and won three of the four categories. The judges were the owners of that radio station.
Within a week of winning the speech contest I had my first on-air job: "Delilah, on the Warpath," school news and sports, taped weekly.
By the time I was in high school I had worked into a full-time part-time position at the radio station. I wrote afternoon newscasts, wrote and produced commercials. I took the empty soda pop bottles back for the refund. Six days a week I was at the station. Six days a week I was happy!
It's been over 25 years, and fourteen stations since Mrs. Davis's Girl Scout troop walked through the doors of that first radio station. Today, my show isn't on a five-thousand watt daytime AM station, but the thrill of the microphone hasn't disappeared. Radio is still my first love.
Sports: Watching my son, Isaiah, play soccer
Food: YES!!
Color: Yellow!
Season: Summer in Seattle, Autumn in New England
Activity: Painting (art, not walls -- although I do murals!)
Passions: Gardening, camping
Send Delilah an e-mail at d@delilah.com.
Star Trek films best voyages
The reviews are in and Star Trek Into Darkness, the second big screen adventure helmed by J.J. Abrams, has joined his 2009 reboot with critics phasers set on stunning. more
|
Scatter My Ashes at Bergdorfs (PG-13)
If fashion is a religion, one of its sacred shrines is an emporium that takes up a whole city block on Manhattans Fifth Avenue, a store so venerated by devotees that a celebrated New Yorker cartoon had one matron confess to another, I want my ashes scattered over Bergdorfs. more
|
The Angels Share (unrated)
A barrel of whisky would usually spell doom for the working-class blokes who always find their way into Ken Loach films. But it is redemption the director and his longtime creative collaborator, writer Paul Laverty, have in mind in the unexpectedly warm, hopeful and humorous brew of The Angels Share. more
|
Silent movie opens window on lost world of Eastern European Jews
In the fraught world of the silent film The Yellow Ticket, the heroine confronts anti-Semitism and moral hypocrisy, fights for survival and nearly dies before discovering her true identity and finding acceptance and happiness. more
|
Pain & Gain, a movie based on South Florida murders, is a painful reminder to victims families
Victims relatives say action-comedy Pain & Gain starring Mark Wahlberg and Dwayne Johnson trivializes a Dade couples murder. more
|
|
|