

james andrew miller
7.7K posts

@JimMiller
#1 NYT Best selling author...Books on @HBO, @espn @nbcsnl @caa @USSenate + “Origins" Podcast https://t.co/NUMKUShMrP + Consultant



By popular Demand from The X/Twitter Beano Cook #FanClub 💜🙏





Every GameDay, for the last 29 years, one choice has risen above the rest. Not because of the match ups, but because of the man. @KirkHerbstreit honors his colleague and friend, Lee Corso ❤️


The Larry Sanders Show premiered on this day in 1992. Garry Shandling's innovative, behind the curtain cringe-fest might just be the greatest comedy TV show ever. It's hilarious and tragic in equal measure. It's a work of absolute genius.

Bill Moyers, the former White House press secretary turned broadcast journalist who became a mainstay on PBS, has died at the age of 91. Moyers’ son, William, said his father died after a “long illness” at Memorial Sloan Kettering in New York. Born in Hugo, Oklahoma, in 1934, Moyers started working for Lyndon B. Johnson during the then-senator’s 1954 re-election campaign. In 1956, he graduated from the University of Texas and would become Johnson’s assistant and eventually deputy director. After the assassination of John F. Kennedy, he became a key official for then-President Lyndon B. Johnson and in 1965 became White House press secretary. Moyers left the White House in 1966 as the Johnson administration was increasingly consumed by the Vietnam War. He became the publisher of Newsday, a Long Island newspaper. In the early 1970s, Moyers turned to television, where he would spend more than 40 years as a broadcast journalist for PBS and CBS. For PBS, Moyers hosted, wrote and/or produced a variety of programs, including, “Bill Moyers Journal,” “Now,” “Moyers & Company” and “Joseph Campbell and The Power of the Myth.” Marking his passing, PBS President Paula Kerger released a statement calling Moyers a “giant of public media” who “fought for excellence and honesty in our public discourse.” Throughout his career, Moyers earned more than 30 Emmys, including a lifetime achievement award in 2006.



John Feinstein, a Washington Post sportswriter who became the best-selling author of more than 40 books, died March 13 at his brother’s home in McLean, Virginia. He was 68. wapo.st/4huvjh7






Very sad about the passing of the great Rudy Martzke. A friend, great sense of humor, bulldog reporter, fellow Badger (and a huge fan), sports media industry legend. Helped many a PR person (definitely me) and others across the industry with their careers…hurt a few, too.