Wednesday, October 26, 2022

Ep 77 From Hollywood to Holy Weird! From Broadway to Oddway: Actor, Writer and NH Icon Richard “Dick” Backus takes his shot at Public office.

From Hollywood to Holy Weird! From Broadway to Oddway: Actor, Writer and NH Icon Richard “Dick” Backus takes his shot at Public office.


If you saw a photograph of Dick Backus and you thought - "I think I know him!" it may be because you are of a certain age when you watched daytime soaps like Ryan's Hope or went to see Eugene O'Neill's "Ah Wilderness" at the Ogunquit Playhouse, or you even went to see "Butterflies are Free" on Broadway. These are just a few of the gems that Richard Backus, born, and still living, right here in New Hampshire, has to his credit.


Today, however, you are more likely to find him going door to door in his hometown of New Boston or one of the other towns in Hillsborough District 42 running for the NH Legislature. 


This was not how Dick saw himself spending time in his golden years, but his deep concern for the loss of community among our citizens and our elected officials has drawn him into the fray. I caught up with Dick recently over Zoom and we chatted about running for the legislature, always with the thread of rebuilding community running through the discussion and how rebuilding impacts and is impacted by so many of the challenges we face in our lives. How do we rebuild a sense of community when our commitment to public education is under fire? How do we restore community when more than 50% of our population are denied bodily autonomy? These and other issues compelled Dick to do something he never expected to do, to run for public office.



Listen here:


Back when I was a student at UNH in the 70's I spent a good deal of time at the Memorial Union Building where I was running the photo school for MUSO and eventually Photo Editor of the New Hampshire, our student newspaper.

 

I'll never forget one of the first times that I walked into the MUB at midday to find hundreds of students crowded around every available TV watching the day's episodes of their favorite soap opera. The General Hospital crowd was in one room and Guiding Light fans in another, etc.

 

I had no idea that so many of my fellow students were so invested in the day-to-day drama's of what were TV's hottest and most profitable productions in that era.

 


Panted Skies over Lake Umbagog

  

New Hampshire's roots in the acting and performing community run deep and Dick Backus has been an important part of that legacy over the years. 

 

Though his first love has always been the stage, Dick is An Emmy-nominated soap actor ("Ryan's Hope"), he eventually went behind the scenes as a daytime serial writer. In fact He has been nominated for four Daytime Emmy Awards for writing and one for acting.

 

In 1972 he won the Theatre World and Clarence Derwent Awards for his multiple roles in the Broadway comedy "Promenade, All!".

 

He also understudied Keir Dullea on Broadway in the original "Butterflies Are Free" (1969) and eventually took over the role.

 

 

Richard Backus was born on March 28, 1945 in Goffstown, New Hampshire, USA. Where

His dad was a local physician.

 

He discovered his love for acting, the theatre and writing at a relatively early age and made his Broadway theatre debut at the Booth Theatre in the Theatre District of Manhattan in the original production of Butterflies Are Free. The production began in October 1969 with Backus cast as the understudy for Keir Dullea in the role of Don Baker. He was first appeared in the role, which we would later take over, in 1971.

Since then, he has appeared in several other Broadway productions, including Ah, Wilderness!, Camelot, and most recently You Never Can Tell.[5] Other venues at which Backus has appeared include the American Shakespeare Theatre, the Ensemble Studio Theatre, and the Brooklyn Academy of Music.[3]

 


Wind on the Rails at Livermore

Backus has also acted in film and television. In the seventies, Backus was in Deathdream a movie that today is considered a cult classic in the horror genre. He also portrayed scheming but well-meaning Jason Saxton on Lovers and Friends. Closer to home, he appeared in several episodes of Spencer for Hire with the late Robert Urich.

 

On the Soap Opera circuit He replaced Eric Roberts in the role of Ted Bancroft on Another World. From 1980 through 1981, and portrayed Barry Ryan on the soap opera Ryan's Hope, a performance for which he was nominated for the 1981 Daytime Emmy Award for Outstanding Actor in a Supporting Role in a Daytime Drama Series



Reaching into the Past at the Powwow

 

 

He married his wife Sharon Romeyko in 1985.

 

In 1989 he turned his talents toward screenwriting and has not looked back. Richard Backus has been a screenwriter since early 1989. He has worked on three television shows: As the World Turns, One Life to Live, and Days of Our Lives. As the World Turns and One Life to Live have each earned Backus two nominations for the Daytime Emmy Award for Outstanding Drama Series Writing Team.[2] The writing team behind One Life to Live was also nominated for the 2004 Writers Guild of America Award for Daytime Serials.[6]

 







Willing Workers Red White and Blue - Study No 2








Tuesday, October 18, 2022

Ep 76 James Bradbury: Climate Change Policies that Look to the Future

 



James Bradbury

Climate Change Policies that Look to the Future


Listen here:

https://feeds.podetize.com/DLEf-NL4Z.mp3

From his position at the Georgetown University Climate Center James Bradbury takes the science that he has learned over the years, beginning here in New Hampshire and later at Colorado College (BS), the University of New Hampshire (MS) and UMass Amherst (PhD) and turns it into policy and strategy to help the states address the many challenges of Climate Change. 


James attributes his love of the natural environment to his years at Mowglis, School of the Open, the summer camp on Newfound Lake he attended as a boy where he developed skills that have paved the way for a life of purpose bringing him to today when he is a leader in environmental policy around the challenges of Climate Change. 



Links and notes:


https://www.linkedin.com/in/james-bradbury-729a0b4/


Buy a beautiful piece of signed art for your home or business and we’ll make a 50% contribution in your name to InDepthNH.org, the NH Center for Public Interest Journalism. 


 

Keywords:

James Bradbury, Jamie, Dr. James Bradbury, New Hampshire, Dover, UNH, UMass, Climate, geology, hydrology, climate change, mitigation, sea-level



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Tuesday, October 11, 2022

EP 45 Adam Finkel: In the Wake of Dobbs

 


In the Wake of Dobbs

Is IVF the Next Target for the Morality Police?


Listen here:

https://feeds.podetize.com/Fpj0-FsfF.mp3


Dr. Adam Finkel


Adam Finkel is a resident of Dalton, NH and Princeton, NJ. He served in leadership positions in both the Clinton and George W. Bush Administrations aimed at promulgating and evaluating risk-based regulations to protect the nation’s workers from chemical, radiological, and biological hazards. He has a Master's Degree in public policy from the JFK School of Government at Harvard and a Doctorate in Environmental Health Science from Harvard as well. In the past few years, he has jumped into important New Hampshire issues including the efforts to stop the placement of a landfill in the area adjacent to Forest Lake in Dalton as well as other local efforts to protect the NH environment. 


His concern over the ramifications of the Dobbs decision of the US Supreme Court regarding In Vitro Fertilization has started to consume additional attention of his time because he is concerned that it may be the next target of the fundamentalist forces that have gained control of the Court.



Dr. Adam M. Finkel is a Clinical Professor of Environmental Health Sciences at the

University of Michigan School of Public Health, and is also an independent consultant

specializing in plaintiffs’ exposure to toxicants in the workplace and general environment.

From 2008 to 2017, he was Executive Director of the Penn Program on Regulation, where

he was also a Senior Fellow at the Penn Law School. From 2004 to 2008, he was a Visiting

Professor of Public and International Affairs at the Woodrow Wilson School at Princeton

University, and Professor of Environmental and Occupational Health at the UMDNJ School

of Public Health. From 2000 to 2003, Dr. Finkel was Regional Administrator for the U.S.

Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA) in Denver, Colorado, responsible

for OSHA’s regulatory enforcement, compliance assistance, and outreach activities in the

six-state Rocky Mountain region (Region VIII). Prior to that (1995-2000), he was Director

of Health Standards Programs at OSHA headquarters, and was responsible for

promulgating and evaluating risk-based regulations to protect the nation’s workers from

chemical, radiological, and biological hazards.


Dr. Finkel holds an Sc.D. in environmental health sciences from the Harvard School

of Public Health, a master’s degree in public policy from Harvard’s John F. Kennedy School

of Government, an A.B. in biology from Harvard College, and is a Certified Industrial

Hygienist. Dr. Finkel has pioneered methodological improvements in human health risk

assessment and cost-benefit analysis for the past 30 years, primarily in the areas of

quantitative uncertainty analysis, accounting for interindividual variability in

susceptibility, and designing regulatory processes to maximize stakeholder input and shed

light on inequitable health, economic, and employment impacts. He is one of three scholars

who served on both the “Blue Book” (1994) and “Silver Book” (2009) committees of the

National Academy of Sciences convened to evaluate EPA’s risk assessment methods. He is

co-author of four books, including the 2014 volume Does Regulation Kill Jobs? (Univ. of

Pennsylvania Press). In 2006, he received the David P. Rall Award for Advocacy in Public

Health from the American Public Health Association, for “a career in advancing science in

the service of public health protection.” In 2013, he received the Alumni Leadership in

Public Health Practice award from the Harvard School of Public Health. He lives in

Pennington, New Jersey, with his wife (a clinical psychologist) and 21-year-old daughter;

he is also a professional singer and choral conductor.


Links and Notes


https://indepthnh.org/2022/09/16/landfill-setback-legislation-re-filed-day-after-veto-override-failed-in-n-h-senate/


https://sph.umich.edu/faculty-profiles/finkel-adam.html


Preview attachment AFinkel op-ed concord NH 82820 OSHA.pdf


https://nhsecrets.blogspot.com/2022/10/in-wake-of-dobbs-is-ivf-next-target-for.html


https://centristchange.blogspot.com/2022/10/ep-75-adam-finkel-in-wake-of-dobbs.html