#which is just all his beef with all writers of the 1840s
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ephemeral-winter · 2 months ago
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edgar allan poe's poetry is kinda whatever tbh but his literary criticism is absolutely insane. off the charts levels of haterism. scathingly funny and real even though all these people are long dead and mostly forgotten and i'd never heard of any of them. an inspiration to haters everywhere
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papermoonloveslucy · 4 years ago
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MRS. COOPER’S BOYFRIEND
February 10, 1950
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“Mrs. Cooper’s Boyfriend” is episode #75 of the radio series MY FAVORITE HUSBAND broadcast on February 10, 1950.
Synopsis ~ Liz decides that the only way to keep George's mother from coming over on Valentine’s Day is to get her a boyfriend.
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“My Favorite Husband” was based on the novels Mr. and Mrs. Cugat, the Record of a Happy Marriage (1940) and Outside Eden (1945) by Isabel Scott Rorick, which had previously been adapted into the film Are Husbands Necessary? (1942). “My Favorite Husband” was first broadcast as a one-time special on July 5, 1948. Lucille Ball and Lee Bowman played the characters of Liz and George Cugat, and a positive response to this broadcast convinced CBS to launch “My Favorite Husband” as a series. Bowman was not available Richard Denning was cast as George. On January 7, 1949, confusion with bandleader Xavier Cugat prompted a name change to Cooper. On this same episode Jell-O became its sponsor. A total of 124 episodes of the program aired from July 23, 1948 through March 31, 1951. After about ten episodes had been written, writers Fox and Davenport departed and three new writers took over – Bob Carroll, Jr., Madelyn Pugh, and head writer/producer Jess Oppenheimer. In March 1949 Gale Gordon took over the existing role of George’s boss, Rudolph Atterbury, and Bea Benaderet was added as his wife, Iris. CBS brought “My Favorite Husband” to television in 1953, starring Joan Caulfield and Barry Nelson as Liz and George Cooper. The television version ran two-and-a-half seasons, from September 1953 through December 1955, running concurrently with “I Love Lucy.” It was produced live at CBS Television City for most of its run, until switching to film for a truncated third season filmed (ironically) at Desilu and recasting Liz Cooper with Vanessa Brown.
MAIN CAST
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Lucille Ball (Liz Cooper) was born on August 6, 1911 in Jamestown, New York. She began her screen career in 1933 and was known in Hollywood as ‘Queen of the B’s’ due to her many appearances in ‘B’ movies. With Richard Denning, she starred in a radio program titled “My Favorite Husband” which eventually led to the creation of “I Love Lucy,” a television situation comedy in which she co-starred with her real-life husband, Latin bandleader Desi Arnaz. The program was phenomenally successful, allowing the couple to purchase what was once RKO Studios, re-naming it Desilu. When the show ended in 1960 (in an hour-long format known as “The Lucy-Desi Comedy Hour”) so did Lucy and Desi’s marriage. In 1962, hoping to keep Desilu financially solvent, Lucy returned to the sitcom format with “The Lucy Show,” which lasted six seasons. She followed that with a similar sitcom “Here’s Lucy” co-starring with her real-life children, Lucie and Desi Jr., as well as Gale Gordon, who had joined the cast of “The Lucy Show” during season two. Before her death in 1989, Lucy made one more attempt at a sitcom with “Life With Lucy,” also with Gordon.
Richard Denning (George Cooper) was born Louis Albert Heindrich Denninger Jr., in Poughkeepsie, New York. When he was 18 months old, his family moved to Los Angeles. Plans called for him to take over his father’s garment manufacturing business, but he developed an interest in acting. Denning enlisted in the US Navy during World War II. He is best known for his  roles in various science fiction and horror films of the 1950s. Although he teamed with Lucille Ball on radio in “My Favorite Husband,” the two never acted together on screen. While “I Love Lucy” was on the air, he was seen on another CBS TV series, “Mr. & Mrs. North.” From 1968 to 1980 he played the Governor on “Hawaii 5-0″, his final role. He died in 1998 at age 84.
Gale Gordon (Rudolph Atterbury) and Bea Benadaret (Iris Atterbury)  are not heard in this episode. 
Ruth Perrott (Katie, the Maid) was also later seen on “I Love Lucy.” She first played Mrs. Pomerantz (above right), a member of the surprise investigating committee for the Society Matrons League in “Pioneer Women” (ILL S1;E25), as one of the member of the Wednesday Afternoon Fine Arts League in “Lucy and Ethel Buy the Same Dress” (ILL S3;E3), and also played a nurse when “Lucy Goes to the Hospital” (ILL S2;E16). She died in 1996 at the age of 96.
Bob LeMond (Announcer) also served as the announcer for the pilot episode of “I Love Lucy”. When the long-lost pilot was finally discovered in 1990, a few moments of the opening narration were damaged and lost, so LeMond – fifty years later – recreated the narration for the CBS special and subsequent DVD release.
GUEST CAST
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Eleanor Audley (Leaticia Cooper, George’s Mother) previously played this character in “George is Messy” and “Dinner for 12″. She would later play Eleanor Spalding, owner of the Westport home the Ricardos buy in “Lucy Wants To Move to the Country” (ILL S6;E15) in 1957, as well as one of the Garden Club judges in “Lucy Raises Tulips” (ILL S6;E26).
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Hans Conried (Mr. Anderson) first co-starred with Lucille Ball in The Big Street (1942). He then appeared on “I Love Lucy” as used furniture man Dan Jenkins in “Redecorating” (ILL S2;E8) and later that same season as Percy Livermore in “Lucy Hires an English Tutor” (ILL S2;E13) – both in 1952. The following year he began an association with Disney by voicing Captain Hook in Peter Pan. On “The Lucy Show” he played Professor Gitterman in “Lucy’s Barbershop Quartet” (TLS S1;E19) and in “Lucy Plays Cleopatra” (TLS S2;E1). He was probably best known as Uncle Tonoose on “Make Room for Daddy” starring Danny Thomas, which was filmed on the Desilu lot. He joined Thomas on a season 6 episode of “Here’s Lucy” in 1973. He died in 1982 at age 64.
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Hal March (Mr. Jenkins / Mr. Crockett) first appeared on the “I Love Lucy” in “Lucy Fakes Illness” (ILL S1;E16) using his own name to play an actor posing as the doctor who diagnoses Lucy with ‘golbloots.’ March got his first big break when he was cast as Harry Morton on “The George Burns and Gracie Allen Show” in 1950. He eventually lost the part to Fred Clark who producers felt was better paired with Bea Benaderet, who played Blanche, and here plays Iris Atterbury. He stayed with the show in other roles, the last airing just two weeks before his appearance as Eddie Grant in “Lucy is Matchmaker” (ILL S2;E27). In 1966 he was seen on “The Lucy Show.”
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Frank Nelson (J.Q. Williams, Chairman of the Bank) was born on May 6, 1911 (three months before Lucille Ball) in Colorado Springs, Colorado. He started working as a radio announcer at the age of 15. He later appeared on such popular radio shows as “The Great Gildersleeve,” “Burns and Allen,” and “Fibber McGee & Molly”. This is one of his 11 performances on “My Favorite Husband.”  On “I Love Lucy” he holds the distinction of being the only actor to play two recurring roles: Freddie Fillmore and Ralph Ramsey, as well as six one-off characters, including the frazzled train conductor in “The Great Train Robbery” (ILL S5;E5), a character he repeated on “The Lucy Show.” Aside from Lucille Ball, Nelson is perhaps most associated with Jack Benny and was a fifteen-year regular on his radio and television programs.
EPISODE
ANNOUNCER: “As we look in on the Coopers it’s morning. George Cooper is eating breakfast, while Liz in the kitchen talking to Katie, the maid.”
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Liz is planning the menu for an intimate Valentine’s Day dinner with George.
LIZ: “Hearts of beef, hearts of artichoke, hearts of lettuce, heart-shaped candy, and heart-shaped cake.” KATIE: “That oughta give ya heart-shaped heartburn!” 
Liz joins George for breakfast and notices that he has nicked himself shaving - several times.
LIZ: “You look like you have your face up in paper curlers.”
Liz confesses she used George’s razor to string beans! Liz apologizes with a smooch. She brings up Valentine’s Day, and George breaks it to her that his mother is coming. George reminds Liz that his mother always spends the holidays with them. 
LIZ: “It’s Valentine’s Day, not Halloween!  Can’t we give her a rain check until Groundhog Day or something?” 
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Groundhog Day is an American folk tradition established in Pennsylvania around 1840, that supposes that if a groundhog comes out of his burrow and sees his shadow, we are in for six more weeks of winter. The tradition has inspired a Hollywood film and a Broadway musical.  Since the date is traditionally February 2 (before Valentine’s Day), Liz is really extending her hospitality into 1951! 1955′s “Lucy Goes to a Rodeo” (ILL S5;E8) opens with Ricky penciling in Lucy for a kiss on February 2nd, which Lucy notes is Groundhog Day. 
Liz is upset that her romantic dinner for two will become a threesome. she suggests that if his mother wants to celebrate Valentine’s Day she should get a boyfriend. George says she has no interest in men.
LIZ: “Well, she did once. Or did she win you in a game of Canasta?”
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Canasta is a card game of the rummy family devised around 1939. It is most commonly played by four in two partnerships with two standard decks of cards. The game was mentioned several times on episodes of “I Love Lucy.” 
George comes around to the idea of getting his mother a boyfriend - but who? 
LIZ: “Gee, all I can think of is the Smithsonian Institute!” 
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In “Never Do Business With Friends” (ILL S2;E31), Ethel complains that her washing machine is old enough to belong in the Smithsonian Institution. Dubbed ‘the Nation’s attic’, the Smithsonian museums (located primarily in Washington DC) will be mentioned again in reference to the antique Cadillac that Fred buys for the trip to Hollywood.  
George rushes off to work. The new bank Chairman is visiting. Liz tells Katie to plan to serve three for Valentine’s Day dinner. Liz says that her mother-in-law uses any excuse to visit - even Boys Week. 
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Boys (and Girls) Week was a movement to help build citizenship among youth. The movement began in 1920 with boys. In 1934, Boys Week became known as Youth Week, and in 1936, Boys and Girls Week. A project of the Rotary International, their sponsorship ceased in 1954.  
Liz has invited Mother Cooper (Eleanor Audley) over to talk about the idea and before they know it, she has arrived.
LIZ (to Katie): “Well, speak of the devil-in-law.” KATIE (hushed): “How does she get in the house so quietly?” LIZ: “She’s got a muffler on her broom.”
No sooner is she in the kitchen when she is telling Liz that there’s dust on top of her bookcase.  Liz quickly changes the subject to dating.
MOTHER COOPER: “It would be nice to have dates, but not a man!”  LIZ: “Not a man!?!  Well, I don’t know any kangaroos!” 
Mother Cooper is intrigued by the idea, but doesn’t think anyone would be interested in a woman of her age.
MOTHER COOPER: “The man isn’t man living who’d have plain old me!” LIZ: “Well, we’ll dig someone up.”
Mrs. Cooper describes her ideal man. Liz urges her to compromise. Mother insists he is only 41 years old. As she leaves, she tells Liz to forget the whole thing. 
Katie tells Liz to try looking at the Sheridan Falls Friendship Center, where her sister found all her husbands. 
LIZ: “Katie, I’ll do it!  I’m going to get a man for Mother Cooper if I have to get an Erector Set and build her one!” 
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Erector Set was a brand of metal toy construction sets which were originally sold by the Mysto Manufacturing Company in 1913, a successor to wooden Lincoln Logs and a predecessor to plastic LEGO. 
END of PART ONE After a short Jello-O commercial featuring announcer Bob LeMond providing a macaroon pudding recipe, the story resumes. 
Liz has embarked on her manhunt and we find her downtown at the Sheridan Falls Friendship Center. The building is marked by a large neon sign that says “Lonesome?” The doorbell sounds “Here Comes The Bride”. 
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Thomas ‘Cupid’ Jenkins (Hal March), the founder, opens the door. 
LIZ: “I’d like to order a man!”
Liz immediately states that it is not for her, although Mr. Jenkins clearly doesn’t believe her. 
MR. JENKINS: “I understand perfectly. He’s a gift for a friend.”
Liz tells him it is for his mother-in-law. The phone rings and Mr. Jenkins answers it congratulating the caller on her success and promising to remove her card from his file. 
MR. JENKINS: “Goodbye, Lady Ashley.” (hangs up) LIZ: “Was that THE Lady Ashely?”
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Sylvia, Lady Ashley (1904-77) was an English model, actress, and socialite who was best known for her numerous marriages to British noblemen and American movie stars. On December 20, 1949, she married Clark Gable, the fourth of her five husbands. The pair divorced in 1952. 
It turns out to be a different Lady Ashley. Liz and Mr. Jenkins fill out an application card for Mother Cooper. Although Liz describes her as ‘41, attractive and wealthy’, Mr. Jenkins immediately interprets that as ‘65, old battle axe, and broke’!  Liz wants someone to come to the house tonight. Mr. Jenkins promises the perfect man will come with a written 30-day guarantee!  
At the bank, George is visited by the new Chairman of the Board, J.Q. Williams (Frank Nelson). He wants to get to know the employees and George invites him over for dinner that evening. Unfortunately, their home phone seems to be out of order so he can’t alert Liz. He tells Mr. Williams the address to meet him there.
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That evening, Mrs. Cooper is preparing to meet the gentleman Mr. Jenkins is sending over. The doorbell rings. It is Mr. Williams from the bank. Liz immediately assumes that he is from the Friendship Society and that the Mrs. Cooper he has come to meet is her mother-in-law.  
Liz doesn’t want Mother Cooper to know that he is an arranged suitor, so she asks him what they should say about his professional life.  
MR. WILLIAMS: “Let’s just tell her I’m Chairman of the Board at the Bank.” LIZ: “Come, now. Let’s not overdo it.”
Believing Mother Cooper to be George’s wife, he sits down next to her. Just then George comes home from work. Liz heads him off at the hallway to tell him that she’s arranged a Lonely Hearts prospect to come over for dinner. George is sure he’s a bum. 
LIZ: “You’ll die when you see him!” 
Before going into the living room to meet him, George tells Liz that he’s invited the new Chairman of the Board of the Bank to dinner - a Mr. Williams. Liz screams in horror and explains what she’s done.  The doorbell rings again. 
While George takes Mr. Williams aside to explain things to him, Liz answers the door. It is Mr. Crockett (Hal March again). Before he can get a word out, Liz immediately assumes him to be the man from the Lonely Hearts Club. She quickly instructs him to act like an old friend of hers and ushers him in to meet Mother Cooper.
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MOTHER COOPER: “I liked the other one better.” 
The doorbell rings again, it is Mr. Anderson (Hans Conried), the man from the Sheridan Falls Friendship Center. He immediately assumes that Liz is the woman that Mr. Jenkins has sent him to meet!
MR. ANDERSON: “After 15 years of sending me lemons, he’s finally sent me a peach!” 
Liz is confused, but shows him in to the living room to meet Mother Cooper.  
MR. ANDERSON: “Shucks. Back to Lemons again.”
Having explained the confusion, George returns with Mr. Williams, who eagerly agrees to be Mother Cooper’s escort for the rest of the evening. Liz tells Mr. Anderson and Mr. Crockett to go back to the Friendship Center, but Mr. Crockett is confused. 
MR. CROCKETT: “What Friendship Center? I just came here to fix the telephone!”  LIZ: “Oh, no!!!”
END of EPISODE
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In the live Jell-O commercial, Lucille Ball and Bob LeMond go South of the Border, where all the ‘J’s are pronounced like ‘H’. 
Lucille is Hosephine and her brother is named Himmy, who is strong as Jerkules. She reads a poem:
I know a little café It’s a perfect place to go  Because they always serve Jell-O vanilla tapio- Ca pudding. It’s delicious and tempting And you sap,  You also ought to order some Jell-O chocolate tap- Ioca. It’s so rich the kids all say it’s good I cannot rhyme Jell-O orange vanilla tapioca, I wish I could. 
Bob LeMond sums up her poem with one succinct line.  But Lucille concludes:
Those lines they tell the story, They cut the time in half.  They talk of Jell-O pudding, but they don’t get any laughs!
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lillamolntuss · 6 years ago
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please do tell us abt the beef
thank you!! this got really long but it needs to be said! okay so it all starts with Kierkegaard who was just obsessed with fairy tales, and Andersen was just establishing himself as a fairy tale writer so you’d think that they would get along just fine? But nooo Kierkegaard didn’t like Andersens fairy tales and thought they were too innocent and poetic or something, he wanted his stories to be EDGY, INDECENT and DEMONIC, and Andersens were just snivelingly naive i guess? So Kierkegaard was critical towards Andersens latest novel agnete and the merman, which Andersen allegedly heard about, and answered by making fun of young intellectuals who loved Hegel (aka Kierkegaard) in some sort of performance. Andersen also kinda mocked Kierkegaard in his fairy tale The Galoshes of Fortune, by writing in this talkative parrot. And Kierkegaard, who already was writing an analysis of Andersens novel only a fiddler, was offended and turned his analysis into more of a call out of Andersen as a person. But his current publisher wasn’t okay with the changes so Kierkegaard had to get a new one, namely the same publisher Andersen had! So in 1838 Kierkegaard published his first book From the Papers of One Still Alive, that was 80 pages full of critique of Andersen, just sweet sweet revenge. The book attacked Andersens femininity and impotence and was written with such complicated language that not even Andersen could really follow it at times. 
So after that exposé the two became rivals of sort, even though they were really quite alike as people, and read each others work sort of secretly. And Andersen had to bite back, which he did with a play in 1840 called A Comedy in the Open, where one of the characters is a hairdresser who says stuff like: “As an individual depressed by the world but at bottom guided by a philosophy for the existance of my tranquility! I am the theater hairdresser!” and other quiasi-philosophical mumbo jumbo. Kierkegaard attacks back furiously with his reply “Wait a Moment, Herr Andersen” where he ridicules Andersen with easy and accessible language. But he didn’t publish it, he just kept it for himself, and in 1843 they kinda reached a truce because Andersen really liked either/or. So it kind of worked out? Andersen didn’t really stop putting in subtle insults towards Kierkegaard in his novels after that though so who knows lmao
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thewebofslime · 6 years ago
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51° Sign Up Log In Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Instagram Visit our other papers: The Windsor Times Cloverdale Reveille The Healdsburg Tribune NEWS ARTS & CULTURE SPORTS OPINION CALENDAR LEGAL NOTICES OBITUARIES BUY & SELL SO-CURIOUS CONTACT+ PREV PREVIOUS River area flood recovery update Important dates to know about debris pick-up, dumpsters, the… NEXT NEXT UP SLIDESHOW: Community Awards Night The 44th annual Community Awards was held at the Sebastopol … FEATURED Forestville & Russian River Fire Chief Max Ming resigns By Frank Robertson, Staff Writer Dec 19, 2017 5 Facebook Twitter Email Facebook Twitter Email Print Save Max Ming, who was praised as a unifying leader when he was named co-chief of the Forestville and Russian River fire protection districts nearly seven years ago, resigned last week from both positions. Max Ming Ming was asked to resign by the Forestville Fire District’s board of directors but his departure was unopposed by the River Fire Protection District Board, said river district board member Mark Emmett. “It was their (Forestville’s) decision,” said Emmett. Ming, who could not be reached for comment this week, was technically an employee of the Forestville district, with the Russian River district paying half Ming’s full-time salary in exchange for Ming’s services as the river district’s half-time chief. Ming technically resigned Dec. 6 from the Forestville district, making his employment with the river district terminated as well, said directors. Ming sent a brief letter of resignation to the Russian River Fire District, said district board president Nance Jones. “We enjoyed working with Max. We wish him well,” said Jones who added the district will continue without a permanent chief for the time being. “We’re investigating where we go from here,” said Jones. “We liked the idea of a shared chief. It was cost effective.” Ming’s total annual compensation serving as chief of both districts was approximately $165,000, including salary and benefits. Prior to being named chief of the two districts, Ming served nearly 30 years as a firefighter in Forestville, where he started as a volunteer in 1984 and was hired a year later as a paid firefighter. Officials said they did not expect an outcry similar to that of four years ago when Guerneville Fire Protection District directors attempted to remove Ming as the Russian River chief, prompting protest letters from firefighters in both districts and ultimately a successful recall election that ousted two river board directors, Kevin O’Shea and Linda Payne. Following that turmoil, Ming was reinstated as the river district chief. Since then he had continued serving as shared chief of both districts without controversy. His resignation came after several closed session meetings with the Forestville district directors. “I think there were a lot of things,” that led to Ming’s departure, said Monte Rio Fire Protection District Chief Steve Baxman, who also served as operations chief with the Russian River District. As for any future joint chief arrangement supervising two districts, “I think that’s over,” said Baxman. The Forestville Fire Protection District’s Assistant Chief, Dave Franceschi, will serve as Forestville’s interim chief. Although Forestville firefighters supported Ming and the shared chief arrangement in 2013, Russian River directors do not foresee a repeat of the 2013 protest. “Do you see anyone putting [protest] signs out?” said Baxman. Facebook Twitter Email Print Save (5) comments Kai Dec 28, 2017 3:27pm What many do not understand with this sort of thing is that Personnel issues CANNOT be discussed with the community! Everyone might want to know, they feel they should be told, they just think it is all shenanigans etc.- In Fact! The Fire Districts by law cannot discuss Personnel Matters with anyone but the person affected! Even other employees are not told anything! This goes for all manner of employee related issues! Quit asking, they won't tell you - in Fact THEY CANNOT tell you and if they do they are violating the law! Folks just don't want to hear this, I know! Cocomo Dec 22, 2017 1:32pm since my recall I have continued to attend the meetings, 2nd Weds of every month, funny I don’t see anyone else there. Lots of answers if you bother showing up. Richek Dec 21, 2017 12:46pm As a forestvillian i was interested in what the hell is going on and why it is that all of a sudden Ming is out on his ear again , This time as a resignation. Yet this article tells me absolutely nothing about why this is coming to pass. Considering his sizable salary one has to assume the worst. Did he sexually harass the secretary, did he steal from the dept., was he having an affair with one of the other fire fighters, or was he found out to be a Russian spy? Ridiculous that our little town would not be able to own up to the why's and wherefores of this issue . It should. I should do it right now. Beef Dec 23, 2017 9:10am I agree. It is time to pull back the curtain and reveal the wizards. Unfortunately this is about our Fire Department, which should have no wizards, only dedicated professionals. Beef Dec 20, 2017 8:39am Ok so here we go again with the cryptic comments and closed door shenanigans with our local fire department employees and board members. Even the direct and usually frank Steve Baxman is only offering a snippet of his thoughts. What goes on with our fire district employees anyway? Is the fire department malfunction a by-product of BOS tomfoolery or are our local employees the source of weirdness? Am I the only one who was curious then and still curious now? We give those departments a lot of money and yet one must wonder where it goes. Yes we all already know the funds received by the fire department are NEVER enough, that is acknowledged. And yet when I see Ming walk away from $165K plus benefits one must ask WHY? What malfunction or dysfunction is serious enough to have caused the ruckus in the first place? Thanks to SonomaWest for providing real news to the West County. Would love to see more about the fire department as it is the single most impactful agency along with the Sheriff and we need to stay informed. Welcome to the discussion. 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