You left after like song five or six. Went on for a long time. I did get out early, but not early enough. Im very tired. I was really excited to see the opening. Killed it. Fantastic. And then i partied hard. I danced through five songs and then girls got to go to bed. Thats certainly what you did. This girl stayed up a little later. Got late night food. I really regret most of last night. Not the concert, but everything else. Shawn tempesta, what is planned for this weekend . Relaxation. Recoup. I feel like i need to recharge. Thats on my priority list. And some laundry. You . Im halfway through the laundry. I already started that and i have to put together a crib. Oh. Thats cute no. Is it like you have to put it together yourself . I have no idea. I dont know if its allen wrenches. Good luck with that. Let me know how it goes. Of music, the guitar project gee is back. Just take a listen to this. . . Yes. We first met nik kai on the Morning Blend when he was just 11 years old. Now fiv
Sixth floor exhibit today. I think i got that section. I did want to go through this quickly. We have eyewitnesses of the assassination. We have tina who was her youngest photographer at the time of the assassination. Seated behind tina are Dylan Dale Neumann the closest eyewitnesses to president kennedy at the time of the shooting and james payton is here today. He was supposed to be here. Im not sure if he isnt not if he is or not but thats okay. We hope all is well with jim. We had some other folks here. Wayland roads who was the tenth jury selected in the jack ruby trial is here today. Is Bill Williams here . I know we have others and we have been number of Museum Founders in the front row. Allen and Cynthia Montville are wonderful documentarians accreted the film. Where are they are the exhibit designers which continues to jackie mcelheny is here to did research and was involved in reconstructing the snipers perch. And number of our Board Members past and present are here. They se
You might want to save your applause because i have a lot to go through. Seated very close to jim is eugene boom, the dallas Deputy Sheriff for discovered the rifle on the sixth floor that day. Also over in that area we have phyllis hall, a nurse from the hospital who was in trauma room number one when president kennedy died and also rose who worked for the time when bureau in houston at the time of the assassination. Over behind rows we have a wonderful julie who was press aide to governor John Connally at the time of the assassination. One of the first reporters inside this building. Pierce was later our tour narrator for the audio tour which continues to guide guests through the sixth floor exhibit today. I think i get that section. I do want to go through this quickly. We have some eyewitnesses, a teaneck, our youngest photographer at the time of the assassination seated behind to my bill in detail, the closest civilian eyewitnesses to president kennedy at the time of the shooting.
Because of initiatives that kennedy had taken. These issues are fascinating, and they have inspired what is and remain and will remain a passionate debate among people on all different sides of this issue. Thats not what this book is about. I am not writing a book about what shot jfk. I have no new theory to offer about where the bullets came from or who shot jfk. Actually a very different book. What im interested in is not who shot jfk. Im interested in the trants for of political power that takes place in the hours after the assassination. I want to move the focus away from the tragedy that is unfolding in the president ial limousine, and move it back about sixty feet to the car carrying Lyndon Johnson. Follow johnson over the course of the day as he goes to parkman hospital and air force one and back to washington, d. C. To give people a sen of the texture of the decisions he to face and the choices he confronted. When you think about it, the kennedy assassination represented the mo
When Phyllis Hall, of Catahoula, asked Curious Louisiana if it s true that Duke Ellington and his orchestra once played in a swanky nightclub in Bunkie called the Blue Moon, I