2010 Nov 25

written by Sherri Joubert

I had to post this gem. This video is from the 1990 Castro Valley, CA, high school graduation ceremony. Rachel Maddow was 17 when she spoke.

Did you hear someone in the background at the end of the video say,

She’s going on to Stanford, and one day, she’s gonna do something wonderful

That person knew what she was talking about.

I particularly love the white socks, Birkenstocks and shorts under her gown; and the long hair and earrings. Even though she looks totally different today, her voice is unmistakable and her style is a rough version of the polished analyst and progressive pundit she has become.

Fighting closed-mindedness, changing the world, and making America progress are all things Rachel does today on MSNBC, which is seen all over the world.

While the adults and leaders of Castro Valley couldn’t say “condom” in 1990, today Rachel can’t say “masturbation” on her TV show out of total embarrassment. If she said it, they would likely have to go to commercial, and there would be a guest host when they returned. She would hit the floor red-faced and laughing hysterically to the point she could not go on.

I’m going to email her and ask her to discuss this contradiction with her 17-year-old self. By the time she gets back from Thanksgiving vacation, the above video will have gone viral, and I wonder how many other TRMS fans will also ask about this?

On a related tangent, a young lady who strikes me as just as impressive as young Rachel was, is Cadet-Sargent Katherine Miller, who recently resigned from West Point because of the military’s Don’t Ask Don’t Tell policy. She felt continuing in the Army and staying in the closet compromised her integrity. Katie had been out in high school and had to go back into the closet to go to West Point. It was far harder than she imagined it would be, and she resigned publicly in protest to help end the policy. She is currently attending Yale on full scholarship until she graduates, or is able to return to West Point as an out lesbian and serve openly in the Army.

A Brief Rachel Maddow Biography

Rachel was a brilliant, serious child and taught herself to read by age 4. Her mom found her reading the newspaper one morning when she came into the kitchen to make breakfast. From a very young age, she asked difficult questions of all of her teachers.

In high school, Rachel was an impressive athlete in swimming, basketball, and volley ball while performing academically at the top of her class. She was looking at becoming a member of the U.S. Olympic Team, but injured her right shoulder severely and had to decide whether to have reconstructive surgery and take a year off for rehabilitation before trying out, or go on to college. She chose college.

After her athletic career-ending injury, Rachel joined Act-Up, an AIDS organization in San Francisco, before she graduated from high school. Since she could no longer play sports, she had lots of free time.

She attended college at Stanford University where she came out as a lesbian in her freshman year (after figuring out she is gay). She majored in public health policy and minored in ethics. She attended graduate school as a Rhodes Scholar at Oxford, where she earned a PhD in political science. She was the first openly gay student to win a Rhodes Scholarship. There were other gay Rhodes Scholars, but they didn’t come out until after they were awarded the scholarship. In between college and grad school, she worked for the ACLU.

When she returned to the U.S. she decided to move to rural western Massachusetts because she didn’t like the cold, and thought she would be miserable enough to get her writing done quickly. Instead, she found love. She met her life partner, Susan Mikula, while doing odd jobs and trying to write her doctoral dissertation. Susan and Rachel still live in Northampton when they are not in New York. Rachel went into local radio in Massachusetts on a dare, and then she had to take time off to finish writing her dissertation because it wasn’t getting done.

From local radio, Rachel accepted a job at Air America Radio and moved to New York City. She began guesting on various cable TV shows as a progressive political pundit. She was a regular on “The Situation with Tucker Carlson” on MSNBC. She signed an exclusive contract with MSNBC to be a contributor on that network and continued her show on Air America. On 9/8/2008, her show debuted on MSNBC, and it’s still going strong. Unfortunately, Air America Radio went out of business in February 2010, and Rachel’s radio show ended.

Happy Thanksgiving to all, and if Rachel addresses the condom v masturbation word usage problem, I will let you know.

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2010 Aug 30

written by Sherri Joubert

Richard Engel, NBC News Chief Foreign Correspondent, embedded with the last combat brigade on their trip out of Iraq, and broadcast it live on the move during the Stryker convoy to Kuwait.

NBC was able to bring live video of this historic moment because of the “Bloom-mobile”, named after the late NBC foreign correspondent David Bloom. David passed away very tragically during the Iraq invasion in 2003. He suffered a pulmonary embolism caused by deep vein thrombosis, the culmination of cramped spaces with little body movement and insufficient hydration in a dessert climate.

No other TV news network has the technology to broadcast live video on the move. Check it out:

Visit msnbc.com for breaking news, world news, and news about the economy

The technology was new in 2003, 7 years ago. It’s a satellite dish on a gyroscope that tracks a TV satellite in space and stays in constant contact with it as whatever the dish is mounted on moves. It works similarly to the GPS a lot of people have in their cars or as part of their smart phones today. The device on the ground tracks the satellite in space so the device can remain in communication with the satellite.

It surprises me that none of the other networks have invested in this technology since we’ve been at war for over 9 years in Afghanistan and 7.5 years in Iraq. There are other places where such technology could be deployed as well, like during natural disasters when news broadcasters must be able to move at a moment’s notice.

It may be the result that many news organizations are losing money. The number of foreign correspondents has dropped considerably over the past decade. With fewer foreign correspondents, it may have been decided that expensive equipment isn’t worth the cost if only a few correspondents will use it once in awhile.

But if the news is to continue to bring us live coverage of events in a global society, they need to have the technology to do it on the move.

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