I just wish that Corey Crawford would comprehend how much more important Automobiles are than Sports and Fitness, including Ice Hockey and Roller Hockey.
I just wish that Corey Crawford would comprehend how much more important Automobiles are than Sports and Fitness, including Ice Hockey and Roller Hockey.
Such a sweet, morally decent person; and a wonderful journalist and announcer Suzie Humphreys is.
For more insight as to why, and how passionately I would relive the 1980’s, in addition to the 1970’s, and the early 1990’s; feel free to purchase a copy of this Book that I wrote under my Pen Name “Wilbur Hay” online from Barnes & Noble: https://www.barnesandnoble.com/w/how-i-wish-things-had-been-in-the-1980s-and-1990s-and-the-reality-of-how-things-were-in-the-late-1990s-and-beyond-6-wilbur-hay/1145935942?ean=9787238996411
Also, feel free to purchase a copy of this Novel that I also wrote under my Pen Name “Wilbur Hay” that I desperately want to have adapted into a Movie, titled “The Day-To-Day Lives Of A Well-Off Couple And Their Autistic Son”: https://www.barnesandnoble.com/w/the-day-to-day-lives-of-a-well-off-couple-and-their-autistic-son-wilbur-hay/1140309955?ean=9781668575581
If you’ve been following this Blog for a while, you may remember me having written a post about my fear over younger generations of people taking over the world as time goes on, and technologies such as Standalone Digital Cameras ceasing to exist: Another Trend That Has Been Present Since The Beginning Of The 21st Century-Documenting One Selves’ Life With A Webcam.
I am “tickled pink” (as the saying goes) to find out, by the way of this article published by the Wall Street Journal; that that young, radical people are falling in love with older technology; including standalone Film and Digital Cameras, and Flip Cellular Telephones:
https://www.wsj.com/tech/personal-tech/flip-phone-digital-camera-28a118dd
https://www.fcc.gov/general/building-high-frequency-shortwave-international-broadcasting-station
https://www.theringer.com/2020/07/27/nba/oral-history-roundball-rock-john-tesh