Know Your Philadelphia Historic Figures: Ed Bradley

February 5th, 2010

A Black History Month Series

Born: June 22, 1941

Where: Philadelphia

Died: November 9, 2006

College: Cheney State, 1964

First job: WDAS radio. (Bradley covered the ’64 riots.)

Career: Covered the Vietnam War for CBS News, where he was wounded in 1973. First black White House correspondent for CBS News. In 1981, became “60 Minutes” correspondent, where he stayed for 26 years, covering over 500 stories.

Memorable “60 Minutes” stories: Interview with Timothy McVeigh, sex abuse in the Catholic Church, the Columbine High School shootings, the Mississippi murder case of 14-year-old Emmett Till.

Awards: Emmy Award (19 times), Peabody for African AIDS report “Death By Denial,” Robert F. Kennedy Journalism Award, Paul White Award, George Polk Award for Foreign Television and Lifetime Achievement Award from National Association of Black Journalists.

CBS colleague Bob Schieffer on Ed Bradley: “Ed Bradley was the coolest guy I have ever known… People just loved him. Ed always had a kid with him, a godson or someone’s child. God knows how much money he gave away to charity. He was the softest touch in town.”

Passion: Jazz. In Philadelphia, on WDAS, Bradley occasionally did stints as a jazz disc jockey, making $1.50 an hour spinning records by Coltrane, Miles Davis and Billie Holiday. Later in his career, he hosted “Jazz at Lincoln Center” on NPR.

Quote: “For me to be able to stand up in the Khyber Pass and say, ‘Boy, here’s little Butch Bradley from West Philly. Alexander the Great passed through here 2,500 years ago’—God, I mean, that’s a kick!”

Your Post-Holiday Wake Up Tune

November 29th, 2009

“Cry Baby,” Janis Joplin, Toronto, 1970

Late Autumn in Philadelphia

November 18th, 2009

Mighty Writers, 15th & Christian

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Philadelphia Student Union Podcast here.

Irish Parlor Games for Lit Heads

November 4th, 2009

A list of the top 10 Irish literary masterpieces of all-time (compiled by Niall O’Dowd, publisher of IrishCentral.com) is quickly becoming a bit of a Twitter/parlor guessing-game sensation in writing circles.

Check how your own favorites—Yeats? O’Neill? Beckett?—compare to the IrishCentral list here.

And if that isn’t enough leather elbow-patch malarkey for you, check out this Guardian list of Frank Delaney’s top 10 Irish writers of all-time.

When You’re Mighty, Every Place You Go Is A Good Place To Read

September 9th, 2009

Mighty Writers read all the time.

But one particular Philadelphia writer we know reads everywhere she goes—and even as she goes.

She doesn’t just read on buses and trolleys, in cabs and on planes, but as she walks to places too. And somehow she never bumps into people, or telephone poles or parking meters.

“You get a sixth sense where things are after awhile,” she says to those who ask, and many do.

We thought of this Mighty Writer when we saw this NYT slide show of people reading on the subway.

Moral to this very small story: Always carry a book. You may find yourself breaking it out in the most unexpected of places.

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If you’re a basketball fan, good chance you know the name Tracy McGrady. In hoop circles, they call him “T-Mac.”

McGrady is a a seven-time all-star and plays for the Houston Rockets. Like everyone who plays in the NBA, he makes many millions of dollars a year.

But what makes McGrady different than his millionaire colleagues is something he did in 2007 after he heard about the challenges kids from Darfur were facing in refugee camps. He went there and allowed a film crew to shoot his visit.

The resulting documentary—called “3 Points”—probably didn’t turn out exactly how he expected. It focuses tightly on McGrady and the changes he himself went through as he toured the camps, starting as an NBA star who thought building a pool for kids would be a gracious gesture to the dawning realization that the needs of the refugees are far more profound and ongoing than his reach could handle.

It’s a well told story, worth the hour of time it takes to watch, so the next time you need a break from that book you’re reading, click here and check it out.