[Small logo of Thornwood girl]    MARK's first movie since Mother Ghost nearing completion for 09

                   



This Chotank Biography Ranked TOPS for Mark and Brian net audience 
 

Mark Thompson & Brian Phelps
of KLOS, Los Angeles. Mark's "Mother
Ghost" has Florence, Alabama, parents

DISNEY'S MARK AND BRIAN

ROAR RADIO FLASH: Mark & Brian are getting a big national publicity boost. "Mother Ghost", written by and starring Mark, has been bundled in the new Red Laser, DVD format for marketing promotion with a special
high definition player. The playback unit debuted at the
International CES 2008 in Las Vegas, January 9th,
when the arrangements with Mark were announced.

Chotank Gives YouTube trailer on Mark's Red Laser movie
-- Click HERE for large window display with YouTube stream of LA Talk Radio --


BIOGRAPHY

As top-rated syndicated morning show personalities, Mark Thompson and Brian Phelps of the Los Angeles based "Mark and Brian Show" entertain audiences LIVE with their dauntless comedy weekday mornings from 6:00 am to 10:00 am PCT on radio. Jump to the KLOS Internet site.

The duo was introduced in 1986 by a mutual friend who was working at radio station I-95 in Birmingham, Alabama who felt that their personalities "might click". Deciding to heed the friend's advice, Mark and Brian each gathered bags of audio cassettes, locked themselves in a hotel room with coffee, junk food and a tape player and proceeded to sit through an entire evening listening to each other's work. Management at 1-95 agreed to give the pair a chance. In no time, the radio team was racking up solid ratings. After a year at the station where they reached number one status, Mark and Brian left Birmingham in September 1987 and ventured west where as they say, "the rest was history!"

Built on the foundation of friendship, comedic timing and mutual respect, the "Mark and Brian Show" is currently in its 22nd year on the air. Already two-time winners of Billboard Magazine's "Air Personalities of the Year," Mark and Brian are also credited with achieving the radio industry's highest honor -- The National Association Broadcasters' Marconi Award for "Air Personalities of the Year."

The duo won an Emmy Award for hosting an Andy Griffith TV Special which airedYou Had to be There on the Fox network. And, they starred in their own NBC television show. Therefore, Eddie Foote predicted long ago that because of Andy Griffith connections and the sagging, shelf-load of Radio and TV awards, they were expected to show up "any year" for the famous University of North Alabama George Lindsey Film Festival. That year finally arrived in April 2004. Mark Thompson attended The 7th annual George Lindsey UNA Film Festival in Florence, and thereby, he promoted a new joint certificate program with UCLA for Dr. Foote's majors. But, Mark came especially to the University of North Alabama hometown to show his own independent film, "Mother Ghost". UNA students, native home media professionals and local Shoals-area fans and friends of Mark converged on the locally-famous and nostalgic Shoals Theatre to see the North Alabama Festival premiere of "Mother Ghost".


Channel 15, founded as WOWL-TV,
NBC in 1957. Now -- The Valley's
CW, Huntsville-Decatur-Florence.
UNA Festival ad from February 08.
  
Eddie Foote is featured on Valley's CW in 2008.
Commercial was shot at old WOWL
television studio, built in
1957 for Florence/Muscle Shoals area.


Dr. Avon Edward Foote, one of several UNA and UCLA instructors in the UNA/UCLA Joint Certificate in Film Program, rubbed shoulders with Mark's North Alabama fans for the screening, and now loudly proclaims the Hollywood radio star's film future to his students. Foote talked of fond recollections of Mark's mother when he took guests, including Jess Daily from UCLA Archives who is Hollywood associate of Dustin Hoffman and Norman Lear, to see Tonya S. Holly's new movie, "When I Find the Ocean". The movie is available on DVD in 2008. Bob Blume, Foote's Shoals friend, went with Jess and Eddie after wives Bets and Dottie departed for home. A few nights earlier, Dottie with granddaughter Niki Foote/Foot of Roanoke, Virginia, had been at a head table for the regional premiere of the film at the Shoals Marriott Convention Center. But, Jess, Bob, and Eddie attended the showing of Holly's "When I Find the Ocean" at the same theatre where "Mother Ghost" had been introduced by Mark Thompson to the Shoals. At dinner in Tuscumbia just doors from the old Bijou Theatre, which closed forever at the beginning of the sound film era, Foote had told all his guests about Dottie's and his own brushes with Mark's "Mother Ghost". The Footes think -- with a smile -- that the Shoals Theatre and other Shoals' film locales, such as the old Bijou building, are haunted since the Shoals' showing of "Mother Ghost". That should make Holly's hair stand on end.

Kathryn Tucker Windham was in the Shoals in September 2006, but she did not speak on Ghosts during the run-up to Halloween. Instead, she played the musical comb with
Professor Bill Foster on banjo and
told her University of North Alabama audiences
many famous family stories. Kathryn's stories are often heard on
Alabama Public Radio, National Public Radio and published in her series of books about Jeffrey the Ghost.
A film about Kathryn won top honors during the
George Lindsey UNA Film Festival.

Ernest Borgnine on his second trip to Muscle Shoals, Alabama, joined Mark Thompson at the 2004 Festival. Friends Borgnine and Lindsey are long-time "pals" and Ernie had come back to the Festival to put world attention on the Shoals. In 1992, "Current Affair" went to Jasper, Alabama, to give us a lasting video history of the friendship between Goober and Ernie. Borgnine is best known for his talented work in "Marty", "The Dirty Dozen", and "McHale's Navy", but he has starred in hundreds of other films and television shows and won many awards for his work, including a legendary Academy Award for "Marty".

The "MARK AND BRIAN SHOW" has been syndicated live from (95.5) KLOS-FM, a Disney station, to several cities, including Birmingham, Portland, Sacramento, and Seattle during last few years. The Walt Disney Company announced in 2006 a merger of ABC Radio with Citadel Broadcasting Corporation of Las Vegas. The MARK & BRIAN program's distribution continues to change after the merger with Citadel affected the station line-up. The completion of the merger agreement gave Disney shareholders 52 per cent majority of Citadel Broadcasting stock. And, as broadband use grows, KLOS on-demand streaming of MARK &  BRIAN expands, while other KLOS personalities are holding local fundraising events -- such as one in Pasadena last month (Nov 08) -- with sister station KABC.

On any given day, the top names in music, sports and entertainment frequently join Mark and Brian live in the studio or make call-ins to the show. Among those who have visited their digs are Scott Bakula, David Spade, Michael York, and Billy Idol. Such star power as Tim Allen, Billy Crystal, Tom Cruise, Sir Anthony Hopkins, Mel Brooks, Jason Priestley, Stone Temple Pilots, Graham Nash, Dick Van Dyke, Mike Piazza, Walter Payton, Jack Palance, Anne Rice, Martin Landau, Pete Townshend, Charlie Sheen, Tina Turner, Black Crowes, Luc Robitaille, Tony Bennett, Marilu Henner and Chris Isaak to name a few that have signed their guest book in the KLOS studios.

Every morning, the show takes on a shape of its own. Often, Mark and Brian's spontaneity leads them to outrageous man-on-the-street skits, episodes of "Freeway Love Connection," remote broadcasts, comic "bits" by the duo and other members of the morning program team, "Miniature Theatre" bits and listener call-ins offering various unique, peculiar and humorous talents. The fellows even allow for more serious moments including a call from a brother confessing his homosexuality to his sister, a child wanting to reunite with an estranged parent or a nervous young man proposing marriage to his girlfriend. Because Mark and Brian are open with their feelings and personal lives, listeners are made to feel as though they are part of the "Mark and Brian Show" family.

Mark and Brian don't limit their exposure to the four hours they share with the audience on the air. The duo provides listeners with a myriad of events, including "Mark and Brian Drive-Ins," the "Mark and Brian Day Before Thanksgiving Day Parade," "Mark and Brian's: What Would You Do For Superbowl Tickets?" and their biggest show of the year, "The Mark and Brian Christmas Show," in addition to various advance private film screenings and listener appreciation events, such as "Chic Night" and "Dude Night." They encourage listener participation and involve themselves in scores of charity benefits including their own "Mark and Brian Pet Adoption Day" and the "Annual KLOS Christmas Tree Drive." The team put together a charity CD of "favorite moments" from the show, titled, "Mark and Brian: All of Me," which benefits the Mark and Brian Scholarship Fund and the KLOS Food Bank.

Their daily encounters with listeners and staff, coupled with their own ambition came in handy during the production of their short-lived, prime-time series for NBC, "The Adventures of Mark & Brian." Juggling both radio and television proved to be very chaotic. However, Mark and Brian still maintained their high radio ratings throughout the experience.

Mark Thompson, originally from Florence, Alabama, attended the University of North Alabama and claims he gravitated to radio by starting at North Alabama's WSHF in the Shoals, (Huntsville-Decatur-Florence DMA), because he "couldn't do anything else." As a high school senior Mark worked for Richard Biddle at WOWL Radio. Rick Shayne was WOWL Radio's Program Director during Mark's employment and later a famous country-music programming consultant with Rusty Walker,
CMA publicist wrote of
Rusty Walker,
" . . . the
late Buddy Bain, let
a destitute poor boy.
flip a switch to start
a record on his radio
show."
Rusty Walker
2008 CMA
Director-At-Large
whose firm has home offices in Burnsville and Iuka in Tishomingo County, Mississippi and a secondary company location in Phoenix, Arizona. It is probably because of Walker's company -- Rusty (in picture) is a Director-At-Large of the Country Music Association -- that Joel and Ethan Coen put the local Tishomingo County radio station in "O Brother, Where Art Thou?" at Burnsville and included Pickwick Lake flooding north of Iuka in the movie's plot. Billboard Magazine, which bestowed honors on Mark & Brian, has named Walker "country music consultant of year" seven times. Did that information from Billboard motivate the Coens to choose northeast Mississippi for the station's fictitious location? We know they decided to shoot the scenes, including station exteriors, elsewhere in the state to give the movie's Burnsville area a realistic but disturbing, flat Mississippi Delta appearance. But, the 400 local families who live in Burnsville Bottom, extending east along Norfolk and Southern Railway from downtown to Walker Switch, already knew Burnsville "is flatter than a flivver" even though Woodall and Turnpike Mountains are only a few minutes away by auto (See promotion art from O Brother Concert for movie's flat-out look of road and railroad. During the publicity buildup for the movie's release, the Coens using T-Bone Burnett as producer, backed the benefit Concert in May 2000 at Nashville's Ryman Auditorium to feature bluegrass, country music stars from the soundtrack.) Walker's business address in Burnsville has been listed as 190 Gross Avenue, 38833.

  
This flivver is appearing to turn right toward Walker
Switch to avoid Turnpike Mountain straight ahead to
north.
  
A "flivver" is poor-condition, Model T or Model A
Ford with smoking exhaust that won't pull steep
mountain roads.
  
Flivver with smoking exhaust pauses before
turning toward Walker Switch rather than
face stalling on grade of Turnpike Mountain.


Shayne could remember personal "escapades" by Mark during his "OWL Radio" years. Shayne said that Dick Biddle, who hired Shayne in 1971 right off of Sand Mountain, considered Mark's professional attitudes outrageous, but Dick changed his assessment after Mark's great success in Birmingham radio. Mark and his wife Lynda have three grown children in Malibu, Burbank and Pasadena -- Matthew, Amy, and Katie. In his spare time he enjoys baseball, tennis, and riding his Harley Davidson.

[2007 comment from Eddie Foote (born 1937 in Soggy Burnsville Bottom): Rick Biddle, son of Dick, put his family's flagship WOWL Radio on an FCC educational radio FM channel assignment at Burnsville. Biddle's "Fun 91" is on 91.9. Since his commercial stations originate from offices and studios in Iuka, overlooking old Jaybird Park on Front Street, he should be,
Stephen Root plays
1937 Tishomingo Radio
Manager in movie
"O Brother  .  .  .  ."
Stephen Root
at UNA, April 2000
Stars as Radio Station Mgr.
not actor Stephen Root, the real manager of the Tishomingo station in "O Brother, Where Art Thou?" As he did later with Rusty Walker, Buddy Bain sparked my interest in radio when he put me on-the-air at WCMA, Corinth, to announce a record he was about to play in 1951. I was 14. My own pirate radio transmissions started in 1954 - 1955 school year, using mailorder Progressive Radio Edu-Kit gear, ordered from a "Science and Mechanics" magazine advertisement. Power increases for wide-range coverage of several miles in Iuka was the first AM broadcasting in county of Tishomingo. I had tried earlier shorter-range, legal AM transmissions with the Microvox Wireless Microphone ordered from Johnson Smith Company, Chicago, before building Edu-Kit circuits and a Realistic regenerative radio from Radio Shack modeled after Lee de Forest's invention. Several improvements and other electronic devices were purchased during college study in Electrical Engineering/Electronic Physics, starting at Starkville in summer 1955. Knight Kits from Allied Radio had just introduced their own wireless device in May. Classmate Lynda Lee Edmondson (who married Charles Kay) was my experimental station's number one fan, giving me regular reports on the strength and quality of the signal. Testing ended forever in 1958 after I became alarmed that the Federal Communications Commission might learn of my pirate station testing. My two UNA Cuban roommates -- Frank de los Reyes and Guillermo "Titi" Rodriguez -- had begun asking technical questions about radio broadcasting in the US after Titi visited in my parent's home on North Wilmuth Street in Iuka and got to know some of my friends. Judy Holtsford, daughter of the local newspaper publisher/editor who also had an interest in radio development for Tishomingo County, was one of those friends. I knew Titi's brother-in-law was with Castro's forces
George Lindsey with
Garry Warren, UNA Dean,
at Film Festival in 2000
George Lindsey
at UNA, April 2000
with Dr. Garry Warren
in the mountains of Cuba, and I was unsure of his motives for needing to know. To see Stephen Root -- the Tishomingo Radio Station Manager at Burnsville Bottom in "O Brother, Where Art Thou?", released in 2000 -- CLICK for more University Film Festival Photos by Eddie Foote of Root; Jay KLOS, Huntsville and Florence, Alabama, businessman; Tonya Holly, Cypress Moon Productions; George Lindsey; "Lindsey Junior"; Garry Warren, UNA Dean; and others including Alabama Film Office officials at Film Festival in April 2000.]



Chotank Gives Tishomingo Radio Station Recording Clip from Movie
-- Click HERE for large window with YouTube stream of Soggy Bottom Boys at Burnsville --


I'm lookin' for some old-timey material.
People can't seem to get enough since
we started broadcasting it on the Pappy
O'Daniel Flour Hour. (Radio Station Manager, "O Brother, . . . ")


[Mark Thompson and Greg Privett]

Disney's Mark Thompson receives an Honorary Lifetime Membership
in the
University of North Alabama Broadcasting Society
from UNA'S Greg Privett, chapter president,
who later served as Clinton White House intern. Greg Privett works in TV news for the CBS affiliate in Huntsville, WHNT,
The New York Times station for North Alabama until 2006. When a student of Foote's at UNA, Privett produced Roar Radio News and wrote news headlines for this BBC Networking Club website, which celebrates the start of its
14th year on 16 November 2008.

Brian Phelps went to Illinois State University where he toured with a comedy group for three years which guided him into writing and producing humor. Brian is single and enjoys skydiving and cruising on his Harley Davidson.

Daily, Mark and Brian remain loyal to their long time fans while continuing to gain a newer and broader following.

Listen to Mark and Brian from KLOS, Disney's FM station in Los Angeles. KLOS is sister station of News-Talk KABC (790 AM).

The information on Mark and Brian was first prepared at Disney's Los Angeles station and reviewed by Dr. Foote with Mary and Luther, Mark Thompson's parents of Florence, in the Pine Street MultiMedia Lab, Communications Building,LA billboard promoted
Mark & Brian
with childhood photos! University of North Alabama before their deaths. Since that important Florence meeting by Dr. Foote with Mark's parents, Mark's friend and WOWL Radio program director -- Rick Shayne -- has been inducted into the Alabama Music Hall of Fame in Muscle Shoals, and Mark's parents -- Mary and Luther -- have become characters in his movie, "Mother Ghost". The historic Disney station information on Mark Thompson has been revised frequently since first appearing on Chotank.com, but his associates' connections to the Coen films were not added until 2008. Thornwood þublishers claims British origins for Chotank.com because it launched in November 1995 as a BBC Networking Club member site on the Worldserver, operated by Pipex, Cambridge, England.

In time for Foote's May 2006 visit to London, the Science Museum, Exhibition Road, London, placed historic 1994-95 BBCNC E-mail documents sent to Foote at unaalpha.una.edu by BBC Education into Museum digital and vertical file collections. Shortly before Dr. Tilly Blyth, Curator of Computing and Information for the Museum, commenced correspondence with Foote in September 2005, she had told an interviewer, "I'm in the enviable position of being able to identify and acquire significant computing items for the National Collection, but that also means you have to develop a strong sense of items that are culturally and socially important, not just technological firsts or breakthroughs. It is fascinating to try and identify contemporary items . . . that will engage our audiences and evoke meaning and stories from them in the future." She wrote Foote that she believes the BBC E-mails to him will be "of interest to future generations". [You can find the complete interview with Blyth in the Autumn 2005 issue of the Museum of Computing Magazine in PDF format from UK. Lead article in this issue is "Computers in Film".] The documents donated by Foote are kept in the same building in England where exhibits of the Fleming Diode valve, the de Forest Audion tube, and Baird's mechanical television receiver are on public view. The Science Museum is situated near the Victoria and Albert in a famous museum complex.

During Foote's trip, he attended the Science Museum's special exhibition, "Pixar: 20 Years of Animation", organized by the MOMA from the archives of the Pixar Animation Studios. Disney had announced in January 2006, that it was buying Pixar, and Disney under Michael Eisner had released all the films highlighted in the 2006 New York and London exhibitions. Steve Jobs relinquished his leadership of Pixar in May 2006 after heading the animation company for 15 years, and a new Disney CEO then announced that Jobs was becoming a board member of the parent Disney. During this time, Foote sat-in on London lectures by famous BBC, ITV and British movie animators at the Science Museum, London. One educational talk featured the underwater animation team for "Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire". The film's lead London artist and the London-based producer of the Potter film segment participated in the presentation, that the Science Museum titled, "Walking with Monsters to Harry Potter". Mike Milne, head of computer animation for Framestar CFC, with help from animator Max Soloman, explained that as Europe's largest animation company, CFC employs around 250 animators on its largest film contracts. The Milne/Soloman lead team, responsible the underwater action scenes from the 3rd-annual, Potter film worked first on a Discovery Network/BBC joint series, "Walking with Dinosaurs". This internationally famous series included exterior footage that Framestore CFC shot in North Alabama at Dismals Canyon using students from UNA. Framestore CFC has won "an unprecedented 11 Emmy awards in the United States", according to Science Museum promotion literature. The Discovery Network -- founded by John S. Hendricks, history graduate of University of Alabama, Huntsville -- offers a "Walking with Dinosaurs" DVD set with the North Alabama footage. The DVD set from Discovery features Milne's explanations about production on disc two. The two-disc pack is available from the Discovery website store for $29.95. The New York Times reported, 4 March 2007, in the Arts & Leisure section on plans for Pixar as Disney purchase of its rival reached a first-year anniversary.

Foote also visited Ealing Studios during his trip to London. He photographed exteriors of older sound stages and new construction to revitalize the studio. "The Queen", nominated for an Academy Award in 2007, was filmed at Ealing and other locations in England, Scotland, and France. According to Sky News, tonight's ceremony [this sentence is being written on 25 February 2007] is expected to bring deserved recognition to Helen Mirren who plays Her Majesty, Queen Elizabeth II. On his visit to Ealing, Eddie Foote toured the new 11.5 million GBP digital film Institute next door at Ealing, Hammersmith and West London College. He talked of opportunities for educational cooperation with The Ealing Institute of Media / EHWLC administrators and faculty during his May 2006 visit to London with Dr. Dorothy Gargis Foote. Administrators and faculty explained the BBC's participation in the Institute approvals process. Facilities design makes it a designated, state-of-the-art Centre for Media Excellence. The famous Studio and the BBC-affiliated Ealing Institute overlook historic Ealing Green. The Coens shot a second movie in Mississippi in 2004, when they remade "The Ladykillers" with a new Deep South plot and African-American music, selected by T-Bone Burnett, who helped the Coens with the music in "Oh Brother, Where Art Thou?". Ealing Studios had produced the film in 1955 as part of its famous Ealing comedy series of movies.




Foote/Foot Note for readers interested in the BBC history of chotank.com : Until a few years ago, the GOOGLE "Groups" archive had a Monday, December 11, 1995, 12:00 am, E-mail to uk.announce from Avon Edward Foote, the University of North Alabama, who is also known to answer to "Eddie" among friends and family. The UNA posting at GOOGLE "Groups", that is no longer available, described Chotankers as "U.S. news from an University station, Disney material never before circulated, and family history." Two earlier E-mail messages, dated 19 November 1995 and 27 November 1995 and sent from a.foote@bbcnc.org.uk, have also been deleted from the GOOGLE groups archive. On 16 December 1995, Russ Corey of TimesDaily, the Muscle Shoals' paper that is owned and operated by The New York Times, reported startup of Chotank web site on the Pipex server in Cambridge, England. Corey wrote, "Foote believes it is the first [UNA] site . . . ."


 
Use the Thornwood
logo below to get
to Disney pages
for attempts to 
build theme park
in Virginia. Dr.
Foote & Family are
part of record on
Disney failure.
Mark & Brian worked
for Disney during
the scrabble.
  



Britain's Windsor Castle
has family history secrets
to engage and enrageUNA Highway takes
all to Jesse Owens
Birthplace & MuseumChotank.com history of
Disney's America defeat
in Virginia by Rudy A. --
child of North Alabama  
 Take a giant footstep. 
  
"Disney [in Virginia]",
"Jesse Owens" & 
"Go Home" --  
  take you there.
  
Buttons above in THORNWOOD logo are Clickable

New Material (c) Copyright 1996 -- 2008
Avon Edward Foote
chotank@aol.com

WHNT -- Channel 19, the CBS network affiliate
for North Alabama, owned and operated by The New York Times until 2006,
transferred the station's Huntsville area news film archive to Dr. Avon Edward
Foote in 1994 for instructional distribution and research.
The WHNT Newsfilm Archive will remain with Dr. Foote
after his retirement in September 2008 for research and production.

Mass Media Bureau Call Sign Actions (Report #367) for 15 October 1999 show
that the Federal Communications Commission assigned WOWL-FM to
Southern Cultural Foundation, Burnsville, Mississippi on 12 October 1999,
after granting new tower height and moving the tower location toward Corinth.
On 15 November 2008, FCC official records show that the Southern
Cultural Foundation has current radio station applications pending
in Anderson and Moulton, Alabama, and in Pine Ridge, South Dakota. The
current address for the Foundation given on the Anderson application is
Huntsville-Brown's Ferry Road, Tanner, Alabama.

Dick Biddle's radio team hired Rusty Walker at WOWL in 1972 -- a year after
Rick Shayne had arrived for his own air shift with the station. And,
twelve years later Mark Thompson and Rusty Walker barely missed competing
head to head in Birmingham radio. By 1983 Walker had become nationally
famous for his exceptional country music ratings at Birmingham's WZZK.

Buddy Bain and wife Kay would be hired by Frank Kyle Spain at his
television station in Tupelo after Spain returned to NE Mississippi from
his job in New York's Radio City and built TV station WTVA. Buddy Bain had
contributed significantly to early successes of Muscle Shoals music by
joining Blue Seal Flour Pals on network from WJOI, Florence, & WSM, Nashville.
More at Chotank.com on Spain and his support of Comcast Cable start-up in Tupelo
in 1963 -- the very same year that Spain himself became a co-founder of MCI.
Go to subject page (http://chotank.com/una2.html) to get details of Frank
Kyle Spain in Tupelo and his marriage into Richard (Dick) Biddle's family.

Moffitt Library, UC-Berkeley, has a comprehensive bibliography
on the Coens including a special section devoted to "Oh Brother
Where Art Thou?". One 2007 entry is titled: Homer in Tishomingo.

Chotank Presents Tribute to Major Edwin H. Armstrong
by the Radio Club of America

-- Click "play" arrow for salute and final broadcast of KE2XCC --

CHOTANK TITLE: Armstrong is remembered for inventing FM radio technology and
using its earnings to promote and research applications for military and domestic settings.

  

Blue Seal Flour, Columbia, Tennessee
promotion poster from WSM, Nashville.

Quinton Claunch, born in Tishomingo in 1922, is associated with
Sam Phillips in Memphis after moving to Muscle Shoals in 1940s.
Claunch played with Carl Perkins on early demo records cut at
Phillips' Sun Records. Dexter Johnson came to Muscle Shoals from
Iuka with his brother Ray just a few years after Claunch arrived.
Buddy Bain was born at Glen near Burnsville. Buddy, wife Kay,
and their children were frequently in Iuka after he and Kay joined
WTVA. Sam Phillips' home near Eastport marina in Tishomingo
County is where Jerry, his son, lives in 2009.



Reviewed  .  Revised  .  Refreshed   31 January 2009 Our 14th Year