Author: Bo Roberts
Mr. Roberts was founder of an international marketing consulting firm, which, together with Tom Jackson & Associates, served such clients as Miss Universe, Inc.; Rockwell International; Kansas City, MO. Mayor’s Office; Ringling Brothers, Barnum and Bailey & Associates; and the Michael Jackson Victory! Tour; the 1985 World’s Fair in Tsukuba, Japan and the 1986 World’s Fair in Vancouver, B.C. Canada...
Shani’s Song
Think of all the songs and melodies that have echoed in your mind and wouldn’t go away. It’s a common experience. The one that stuck in my head over the past few days didn’t even have a melody; it didn’t even have words, just a title: Shani’s Song. Those words have been reverberating in my thoughts recently because a former
Read MoreThe Gold Rules, Voters Pay
It’s not exactly true that “every Tom, Dick and Harry” is running for president, but it seems like it. There are, so far, at least two Toms, two Johns, a Sam, a Joe and a Mike. They are joined by Dennis, Duncan, Barack, Rudy, Mitt and Hillary. Who knows who else might surface (a Newt? an Al?). Now if you,
Read MoreC’mon teachers, get real
It’s easy to get “furiouser and furiouser” watching educated people kicking, not just looking, a gift horse in the mouth. I don’t know who volunteered to anonymously donate $400,000 for incentives to help in producing better results in some of Metro’s most troubled schools, I know that they must be a generous and dedicated citizen. However the “who” is not
Read MoreLightening Never Struck
I left the early-voting location with trepidation. Surprisingly, lightening didn’t strike. I thought immediately of my deceased mother, hopeful that she wasn’t watching from above. My just-completed, totally unprecedented action would really disturb her: I had just voted in a Republican primary! As a life-long Democrat, I confess to voting on rare occasions for a Republican candidate in a General
Read MoreThe Faces of Energy behind the Music City Center
Like me, I’m sure that you have often heard the ubiquitous phrase: “They said.” Quite often the person citing “they” is hard pressed to name the actual source that said something, anything or, even nothing. As the effort to educate Middle Tennesseans about the benefits of the proposed Music City Center moves forward, we might lapse into the “they said”
Read MoreBrilliance+Wisdom+Trust=Health Care Solutions
As an astutely brilliant former Speaker of the Tennessee House of Representatives once told me: “Neither party has a monopoly on ignorance;” his statement framed one of my earliest, most significant political lessons. The current furor over the nation’s health care reform is an excellent demonstration of that Speaker’s insightful adage. The idiocy of the right, railing about death panels
Read MoreMusic City Looks Ahead
A friend of mine figured prominently in two recent stories of great significance to our community. It was no coincidence that Butch Spyridon was quoted in both front page articles in the Tennessean: One announced plans for a world-class Music City Music Festival, and the other presented the report for the Music City Center, Nashville’s hoped-for new convention center. In
Read MoreThe Fallen Hero
Pride and pain. These words resonated again after a recent Nashville Tennessean article on the mounting casualties in Iraq for the 101st Airborne, headquartered in neighboring Clarksville. As a veteran, I am filled with pride by living near the historic 101st, and feel, if only tangentially, the pain suffered by the parents, spouses and children of those who, no doubt,
Read MoreA Different Kind of Politician
Over the past several decades, I have had the pleasure (and occasional displeasure) of knowing many politicians. Some were good, some were great, some were not so good, and some were outright bad; yet most of them reflected what their constituents wanted in their elected officials. I suppose that’s why I find it so ironic to see Governor Phil Bredesen’s
Read MoreMaybe we need another helicopter ride
There was no strain as the helicopter carrying 1200 Nashvillians took off and flew us into the future. Most of us were mesmerized as the then-mayor, Phil Bredesen, piloted the virtual helicopter six years into the future. We looked out in amazement to see a new Nashville arena, and, wait, across the street a new downtown hotel…and, wait, can you
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