4Warn Live, please fix your radar!


Stealth thunderstorms invade area under the radar perhaps?

Thunder has been rumbling outside for a good 30 minutes so when I got back to the computer and pulled up my favorite local weather radar (4WarnLive Doppler @ KBTV-Channel 4), I found the above picture. As you can tell, it shows a shower near Houston but no action near where I live to the east in Beaumont. I checked the KFDM-Channel 6 radar and found that we are figuratively swimming in thunderstorms in the area.

I don’t know why I’m not seeing the storms on 4WarnLive, perhaps lightning struck their apparatus or something. An any event, I hope that they get their radar back up and functioning properly soon because KBTV has the best online radar in the area. And I’m not saying that because someone there seems to regularly check my blog, according to my StatCounter information. You don’t think I’d be that much of a kiss up do you? Okay, don’t answer that.

Rebrand this!


A group of marketers are suggesting to regional officials that the Pineywoods region of East Texas — where I was raised — be “rebranded” to attract more tourism. That notion ranks high upon my list of the stupidest suggestions I have ever heard.

If you buy an old business and start a new one, you might want to change its name. If someone important or influential dies then a school district might change the name of an existing school and name it after the dead guy or gal. On rare occasions, a town will change its name. The change might be temporary to reflect a favorite sports team such as in sports-crazed Texas where the town of Buffalo changed its name to “Blue Star” because the Dallas Cowboys were playing the Buffalo Bills in the Super Bowl and later temporarily changed its name to “Green Star” for the NHL Dallas Stars.

A more recent example was the town of Clark, Texas, changing its name to “Dish” in order for the town to get free satellite TV. But renaming an entire region? What kind of crack are these people smoking?

The Pineywoods nickname refers to a roughly-defined geographic area that could in reality encompass the eastern third of Texas. More distinctly, it is used to describe the timber-laden (and traditionally timber industry-dependent)region that extends roughly between Nacogdoches and the Big Thicket inside of an area between the Trinity and Sabine rivers (Texas-Louisiana border).

Regions are largely defined by geographical and physiological features such as the Imperial Valley in California, the Mississippi Gulf Coast or the Trans-Pecos region of Texas. Certain cities or city clusters sometimes get nicknames such as the area in which I now live, the Golden Triangle, which is comprised of the geographical threesome of Beaumont, Port Arthur and Orange in Texas. There is also the Dallas-Fort Worth “Metroplex,” which is a name that always seemed incongruent to me because of Fort Worth’s history as a cow town.

These marketers can rebrand all they want but I predict that they will fail to get all but a few hucksters to call the Pineywoods by a different name. And that is as it should be. After all, what is East Texas without pine trees and wouldn’t it be just more than a little idiotic to rename the place the “Pineplex?”

Blogs hit local TV


One of our area TV stations, KFDM Channel 6, is doing a series on local bloggers. Frankly, I had never heard of any of the three that are being featured. But just because I have never heard of something doesn’t indicate significance or the lack thereof. Nonetheless, I will begin to check these local blogs out more often and even though I’m not totally clear on the point of the series I am glad the local station is giving the topic a look. Blogging is an interesting phenomena. Perhaps the subject gets a little overplayed by the media and definitely provokes an overreaction by media managers. Even though I dabble in a little political discourse here at EFD, my blog is just primarily an exercise to help me write something every day. After all, writing is the way I make my (so-called) living. My mantra: “Write something, even if it’s stupid.”

I put a spell on you


My friend Suzie, who lives in Arkansas, called to my attention yesterday that I had one too few “o”s in my headline “Still too early to revisit that September morning.” She was right of course. I had spelled “too” as “to.” I edited and now it is correct. I had no defense unless you want to count that I still had not finished my second cup of morning coffee when I wrote that. The same could be said for this post. So my thanks to Suzie for, as she called it, “an English lesson.” Where would we be without spelling? Misspelling?

Belated anniversary wish


How could I forget? Some 545 posts later EFD has been here for more than a year beginning on April 21, 2005. A lot has happened since then. I somehow failed to commemorate the anniversary when it happened. Oh well. I guess I’ve been busy. Nonetheless, I’ve enjoyed the blogging experience, for the most part, over the past year. I’ve also enjoyed what I’ve been doing no matter the pain, no matter the struggle to pay bills. So, ‘scuse me for missing my own anniversary here at EFD. Maybe I have just been enjoying life for a change.