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The Gallant GourmetThe Lost Signal[28 February 2007] by Bill GibronShort Ends & Leader Editor He championed both culinary extravagance and gastronomic restraint. But Graham Kerr's greatest legacy may be his innate ability to reach across the airwaves and touch each viewer's inner epicure.
The Lost Signal
Rod Serling and His Evil ArtBill Gibron25.Apr.08 Serling began his career as one of the most celebrated writers of his generation. But it only took one trip to a particularly troubled 'gallery' to undermine his importance and influence within the entertainment industry.
Sex, Conservative StyleBill Gibron04.Mar.08 Love, American Style's debut was at the very instance when everything censors and prudes had worried over seemed to bubble and blister just beneath the social surface.
Air ApparentBill Gibron30.Oct.07 David Lynch and the illustration of the grand within the grotesque, and the good/bad buried in the bad/good, ala On the Air.
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I always find it curious why writers or any entertainment “interviewer”, write about any thing but Christianity when describing a life lived. You mentioned God once (way down in the latter parts of the article) and just either don’t or won’t go there for some reason. If you truly knew anything about this man and his wife and Christianity in general, then you would understand the deepness of an “authentic” walk with Christ. That, my friend is the reason they walked away from “the world” and began to follow Christ. Jesus says the “world hated me before it hated you” (Jn. 15.18). Come to Christ. You won’t regret it. God Bless.
Comment by terry — March 16, 2007 @ 11:22 am