Reg and Sue Take to the Airwaves

It may be too early to save places on the Hollywood Walk of Fame for us, but Sue and I have made our television debut.

Stephen Long, host of The Writing Life, a series that airs on a McMinnville (near Portland) Comcast community station, invited us to his show. He had read Camino Sunrise: Walking With My Shadows before walking the Camino himself and posed questions about our experiences and the book.

Steve made us feel at home, just like we felt after just one day on our first distance trail in Spain so many miles ago. Sue and I invite you to join us by clicking on the link below. No retakes were offered, so all our words were final answers.

Actually, it was my second TV appearance; I had a very small lip-syncing role on an episode of the hit series Solid Gold in the early 1980s.

Two Clever Words Headline This Story

Branton Middle School bans cell phones, confident it will curb many problems caused by words. Words that bully, humiliate, and distract students from learning.

Reacting to the ban and hyped by a teacher’s assignment, students post sticky notes around the school with an eye to aphorisms, phrases stating important truths. Like “Actions speak louder than words.”

In John David Anderson’s Posted, the sticky-note idea gains traction, with students posting them all over lockers, walls, bathroom stalls. Everywhere.

Then one message goes too far, moving beyond humiliation to become a dart that deeply harms one boy in a tribe of four close friends. The new girl, Rose, who has crashed the boys’ group, intervenes.

“The Gauntlet,” a steep forested hill, takes center stage. Then a race. The loser really loses.

It all comes down to two words that the author left hanging almost long enough to make me skip ahead.

But I’m glad I waited.

Using a boy nicknamed Frost to tell the story, Anderson weaves a compelling tale with lessons for everyone, even if we don’t attend middle school.