There’s a deep scar in my throat …Bola Ray narrates how he underwent critical throat surgery
Ghanaian media mogul Nathan Kwabena Anokye Adisi has disclosed that he underwent throat surgery in France after a failed surgery.
Popularly known as Bola Ray, the Chief Executive officer of E.I.B Network has said 2020 ended on a bad note for him after he almost lost his voice following throat surgery.
“When it comes down to my throat is a deep scar,” he disclosed while addressing guests at the 2021 edition of Dusaf Praiz.
He said his health became critical just five days after his surgery and had to fly to France to seek better medical attention.
Wednesday on the evening edition of
The Chad Hasty Show, Texas Lieutenant Governor Dan Patrick joined the broadcast to offer memories of his friend Rush Limbaugh, after the news earlier in the day that Limbaugh had passed away at the age of 70 from complications of cancer.
Patrick, owner of Houston radio station KSEV, and himself a former talk show host, shared a few of his personal experiences with Rush, some dating back to when Limbaugh was first appearing on the national radio scene.
Patrick said, while speaking about his station s early months of airing The Rush Limbaugh Show,
We were one of the first major markets to put him on, and we went from the 40th rank, and you know how hard this is Chad, we went from a 40th ranked station, from 11:00 to 1:00, to number one in about ninety days. And I didn t have any money to promote the show, it just caught on. I ve never seen anything like it in my life.Rush and I became personal friends.We spent a lot of time together. Every
Rush Limbaugh has passed away.
Months ago, millions of Americans were heartbroken to find out that a beloved member of our family was diagnosed with a very serious form of cancer and in a matter of hours, we were moved beyond measure when our beloved relation was presented with the Presidential Medal of Freedom, our nation’s highest civilian honor, live on national television during the State of the Union address.
Because to so many of us, Rush Limbaugh wasn’t just a guy on the radio that we agree with. He was part of our daily life. He was someone we talked to five days a week, for three hours a day. We laughed with him, cried with him, seethed with him, and blew off steam with him. He was who we turned to when the events of the day seemed impossible to process, when tragedy happened, when the actions of the government were incomprehensibly stupid and unfair he was there with us.
Ron Edmonds
It was 1992, and I was on vacation in Dallas, Texas. I had literally escaped Los Angeles after riots had broken out, but that’s a story for another time. My friend, who is an airline pilot, told me about this great new radio program called
The Rush Limbaugh Show, and since I was a passenger in his car I got a chance to listen in. This Rush Limbaugh guy was kind of funny, but a little too bombastic for my then-moderate tastes. So, once I returned to California, I dismissed the show from my mind.
In 1995, I had a roommate who I couldn’t stand, and she was a Dittohead. Rush Limbaugh was in the last year of his television show, so she watched it religiously. I thought it was a bit cultish and, coupled with my disdain for this particular roommate, I decided that if she liked it, then it wasn’t for me. So, I once again dismissed the show.
On Wednesday, during his nationally syndicated radio show, conservative talker Rush Limbaugh highlighted his appreciation for the program's listeners as he grapples with late-stage cancer. | Clips