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Friday “Yellow Sheet” – Metropolis and Massac County News – July 13, 2023

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Friday "Yellow Sheet" - Metropolis and Massac County News - July 13, 2023


In Today’s WMOK News Check

  • Mostly Sunny with a high of 94 – Elevated Heat Index today 100-105
  • The Massac County Youth Fair Begins Today
  • Sheriff Kaylor – A July Update on Massac County Church Thefts – WMOK Coffee Break
  • COPE Food Pantry Distribution Today
  • Massac County Farmers Market on Saturday – Dorothy Miller Park – 7a to Noon
  • The Sam & Rhonda Show tonight at Washington Park – CNB Summer Concert Series at the Gazebo – Tonight – 6-8pm
  • Saturday at 1pm – Fort Massac – Take a Hike with Shawn Gossman
  • Sunday at 5pm – Eastland Life Church Recovery Meetings

Hear Today's WMOK News Check

Subscribe Via Text – Text Yellow Sheet to 618-524-9209

A word from the WMOK News Room:

(WMOK) Metropolis, IL –

Good afternoon –

There is A LOT happening in Massac County this weekend – you’ll have to plan carefully to get it all in!  Get all the events, times and details further down in the “Yellow Sheet” and listen for the WMOK Community Events Listing on your radio at 93.7FM 920AM and streaming worldwide at 920wmok.com



We’re gearing up for Massac County Sports at WMOK! We plan to be out in Metropolis next week with opportunities for businesses to sponsor Massac County Sports on WMOK – if you want to learn more about sponsoring Massac County Sports on WMOK – text sports to 618-524-9209

In perusing the Twitter feeds we see that support is needed for a young man by the name of Kaleb Jenkins and family to assist in his fight against Cancer. A basketball skills development camp will be held at Massac High on Thursday July 20th from 1-3p.   Payment for the camp will be your donation and all proceeds will go to Kaleb and his family.  The camp will be taught by MCHS Boys Basketball Players and Coaches and is for all children – grades 3rd thru 8th.



Next week on Coffee Break:

On Tuesday we expect to air our interview which was recorded earlier this week. WMOK’s Kim Comer sat down for a visit with Polly Ragland of Metropolis who is 103 years old and was born in Metropolis in 1920.

On Wednesday Metropolis Animal Control and Abatement Officer John Roman will join us for Coffee Break

On Thursday Metropolis Mayor Don Canada

Keep in mind you can always text us questions for our Coffee Break guests. Text 618-524-9209 and include your question and to which guest it’s being directed.

We also invite you to use the text line to suggest coffee break guests that you would like for us to include on the program.

You can listen to Coffee Breaks you may have missed in our Coffee Break Archive

Massac County Youth Fair Begins Today – Continues Through Next Weekend

(WMOK) Metropolis, IL – Tammie Wiseman Obermark joined us at WMOK this week to give us to the details surrounding the Massac County Youth Fair which begins today at the Massac County Fairgrounds.  The Massac County Fairgrounds are located on Korte Road in Massac County – between Massac High School and North Avenue.

Sew It, Grow It Show It

The fun will begin with the 35th Annual Toy Show on Friday Evening (5:30-8:30).  The Toy Show will continue on Saturday (9a-1:30p) The Toy Show includes vendors of antique toys – many farm related from around the region.  Obermark said there are new toys as well as materials for the hobby.

The Pedal Tractor Pull for ages 12 and under will take place on Saturday.  Participants should be onsite by 12:30pm on Saturday to register.

Also on Saturday the Tractor Show will take place – a new Car Show has been added to the event this year as well.  This portion of the event will take place from 9a – 2p.  There will be a Peoples’ Choice Award.  The tractors will be on display Saturday and Sunday.  A tractor parade will take place in Metropolis on Saturday – beginning from the fairgrounds at approximately 6pm.  On Sunday a tractor parade is held on the grounds.

The Horse Show will take place on Saturday evening beginning at 6pm.

Obermark advised that Sunday is a bit of a slow day – however it’s a great day to come out for a Ribeye Sandwich from the Illinois Beef Producers and look at the tractors.

Hear our conversation with Tammie Obermark below – Touch “listen in browser” on the Soundcloud player:

 

Westbound Exit & Entry Ramp Closures Underway at I-24/KY 305 Paducah Exit 3 fot

PADUCAH, Ky. — As a reminder, the Kentucky Transportation Cabinet (KYTC) closed the westbound entry and exit ramps at the Interstate 24/KY 305 Paducah Exit 3 interchange 6 a.m., CDT, on Monday, July 10, 2023.

The westbound exit and entry ramps at I-24 Exit 3 are closed to allow old pavement to be removed and 10 inches of new concrete pavement to be poured at the ramp ends – extending about 200 ft. up each ramp. The work is expected to take about two weeks to complete, weather permitting.

During this westbound ramp closure at Exit 3, westbound motorists should self-detour via I-24 Exit 4 to U.S. 60, then connect to KY 305/Cairo Road via KY 998/Olivet Church Road.

Motorists on KY 305/Cairo Road at Exit 3 who wish to enter the westbound lanes of I-24 should travel I-24 eastbound to Exit 4, then loop through the interchange to reach the westbound Exit 4 entry ramp.

Motorists should be alert for portable message boards indicating the westbound ramps at Exit 3 will close starting July 10.

KY 305/Cairo Road will continue to have near-normal traffic flow in the work zone.  Both eastbound ramps will remain open at Exit 3.  Work on the eastbound ramps will be scheduled once the westbound ramp work is completed.

The traffic control in this work zone is set up to assure the safety of workers, the safety of the driving public, and maintain access to businesses around the I-24 Paducah Exit 3 Interchange.

The target completion date for all pavement work at Exit 3 is July 31, 2023.

Get the WMOK Yellow Sheet Via Text –
Text Yellow Sheet to 618-524-9209

Get the WMOK Yellow Sheet Via Email –
Email WMOKnews@frontier.com – subject line –> Yellow Sheet

WMOK Community Events Listing

We would love to include your event in the WMOK Community Event listing

 

Beau Dodson Weather - Keeping you and your family safe from the storm - WMOK Metropolis

Beau Dodson Weather – Keeping you and your family safe from the storm – Learn More and Subscribe –> weathertalk.com/welcome

How to Submit Your Event:

 

Via email to WMOKnews@frontier.com with the words “upcoming event” in the subject line

Via Facebook Messenger on the WMOK Facebook page

Via Text – 618-524-9209

Via Walk-In – Lobby Hours 8am to 10:30

Via Mail – 339 Fairgrounds Road, Metropolis IL 62960

Friday, July 14-23, 2023 – Massac County Youth Fair

Friday, July 14

5:30-8:30 – Farm Toy Show – Massac County Youth Fair and Community Center, 4476 Korte Rd.


6-8P – City National Bank presents Summer Concerts at the Gazebo! The Sam and Rhonda Show will play in Washington Park in Metropolis. There will be food, music, and kids activities. This is a free event.


Saturday, July 15

7A-12P – Massac County Farmer’s Market – Dorothy Miller Park


9A-2P –  Farm Toy Show – Massac County Youth Fair and Community Center, 4476 Korte Rd

 

1P – Fort Massac State Park Summer Events – Take A Hike – Come develop your imagination and sense of adventure by exploring the outdoors with avid outdoorsman, Shawn Gossman. Please Do Not wear sandals or flip flops. Snacks will be provided.


Sunday, July 16

10A – 10:30P – Golconda Shrimp Festival – Main Street Golconda –  Golconda Shrimp Fest is back! Head on down for what National Geographic Traveler magazine recognized as the #1 food festival in Illinois! Come join the celebration for one fun-filled day of delicious food, music, crafts, live entertainment and much, much more! This event is the main fundraiser for their community organization, Main Street Golconda, that works to promote and revive Golconda and  surrounding county.

11:30 AM – Pastor Keith’s Retirement Celebration – First Christian Church located at 420 Catherine St- Pastor Keith is retiring and today will be his last sermon. He has been such a blessing to all  for the past 8 years. They will have a special potluck following worship service on Sunday, July 16th. Everyone please come and bring a side dish for the potluck luncheon. The meat, dessert and drinks will be provided. They want to show appreciation for Pastor Keith and Norma and wish them the best in their next season of life.

5P – Eastland Life Church 3D Life Recovery Meetings are held at 716 East 3rd St. Meal and child care provided.

WMOK Community Events Listing
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You Still Have Time

to Work a Trip to

Holiday World & Splashin Safari

Into Your Summer

 

Let’s Begin our Next Give-A-Way … Shall We?

As many of you are aware – we began building our WMOK Yellow Sheet Text Subscription list in June.  We are approaching 100 text subscribers.  The 100th Subscriber will win a pair of tickets to Holiday World and Splashin’ Safari

Subscribe Now – Text “Yellow Sheet” to 618-524-9209

A winner will be announced Monday on the WMOK Morning Show

Illinois News

A Little Something Extra from the WMOK Morning Show

If you were with us this morning on the WMOK Morning Show you may have heard us mention an interesting tidbit about Hoyt Axton that was a shock to some of our listeners.

Hoyt Axton – who wrote and recorded “Never Been to Spain” (released in 1971) portrayed Randall Peltzer on Gremlins in 1984.  He was in fact the character who bought Gizmo for his son thusly unfolding a chaotic chain of events.  Axton was born in 1938.  He passed away on October 26, 1999 at the age of 61.

Read more – Gremlins cast ages: How old were the actors then (and now)?

View the Trailer for Gremlins below:

Many of you spend your mornings with us on the WMOK Morning Show and we appreciate you!

The WMOK Morning Show airs live on weekdays from Fairgrounds Road in Massac County from 6am to 10am

A Great Opportunity to Assist Area Teachers in Fulfilling Their Back to School Wish Lists

(WMOK) Metropolis, IL – It was called to our attention on Monday morning by one of our regular listeners that Amazon prime is a wonderful time for folks to assist our area teachers in fulfilling their wish lists for the coming year.

WMOK has shared with you before the shocking amounts that most teachers spend in preparation for the school year. They do so from their own pockets as often funding does not allow for the materials they need.

We invite teachers in Massac, Johnson and Pope counties to send us the link to your Amazon wish list so that we can include it on our website.

Text the link to your Amazon wish list to 618-524-9209. Please include your school and grade

Share with your friends in the field of education and help spread the word – We expect to publish our article on Monday with all of the links included so that our listeners who choose do so may help with specific needs for the classrooms in our community.

From Mental Floss

How Long Does It Really Take for a Plastic Bag to Decompose?

Having a positive environmental impact can seem daunting—until you realize that even small changes in behavior can offer a benefit. One of the most common suggestions is to eliminate or reduce single-use plastic bags from your shopping errands. That’s because the bags decompose slowly, causing them to linger in landfills. But how long does a plastic bag really stick around?

According to the Center for Biological Diversity, it takes about 1000 years (10 centuries) for a bag to “decompose.” But that’s a bit of a misnomer. Because most microorganisms can’t eat plastic, it winds up photodegrading from ultraviolet radiation. And even when bags disintegrate, they leave behind microplastics that can continue to have an adverse effect on the environment.

Read more here

Give us your feedback -

WMOK Yellow Sheet Reader Poll #1 - WMOK News Listening Habits

The WMOK News Check has been covering Metropolis and Massac County news for decades.

In the beginning – 1951 – folks listened on 920am

In what we estimate to be the 1980s the WMOK Yellow Sheet was first produced.  The “Yellow Sheet” was a sheet that could be picked up throughout Metropolis at area businesses.  It contained Metropolis and Massac County News.

As technology allowed – an email subscription list was developed for the “Yellow Sheet”.  That list continued to grow from the 1990s when it first began and though we are in a transition phase with that list – we continue to take subscribers – email wmoknews@frontier.com and put “Yellow Sheet” in the subject line.

We added a “text subscription” option in June of this year.  We invite to you to text “Yellow Sheet” to 618-524-9209 to subscribe.

Entering a new era – now nearly 72 years after our station first took to the airwaves in Massac County, we want to get a vibe on how our current consumers gather news from WMOK so that we can continue to improve your experience.

We’ve included a few options below with which we hope to learn how you “most often” get your WMOK News – Please pick any options that apply to you.

 

I hear the WMOK News Check on air at some point during the morning show
I hear the WMOK News Check on air at Noon
I visit the WMOK website to hear the news at some point during the day
I visit the WMOK website to hear the news early in the morning
I visit the WMOK website to hear the news late in the day
I get it all on the "Yellow Sheet"
Voting Ends: Never

Hollywood’s actors are joining screenwriters on strike. Here’s why and what happens next

LOS ANGELES (AP) — Hollywood actors are joining screenwriters in the first dual strike from the two unions in more than six decades, with huge consequences for the film and television industry. Here is a look at how it has played out, why it’s happening, and what could come next.

WHAT LED TO THE ACTORS STRIKE?

More than a month of talks on a new three-year contract between the Screen Actors Guild-American Federation of Television and Radio Artists and the studios, streaming services and production companies that employ them led to little progress, and the tone became openly hostile in the days before union leaders voted to begin a strike on Friday. A last minute intervention from a federal mediator didn’t bridge the gap.

Union leaders say the streaming model that has taken over the industry in recent years has cheated actors of their share of income and funneled money to executives, and proposals of the Alliance of Motion Picture and Television Producers, which represents the studios, streamers and production companies in negotiations, did not even begin to meet their needs.

A 12-day extension of the contract and the talks shortly before an initial deadline in late June brought some hope a deal would be reached, but the hostility only grew. “The Nanny” star Fran Drescher, who heads the union said it made them “feel like we’d been duped, like maybe it was just to let studios promote their summer movies for another 12 days.”

Before the talks began, the 65,000 actors who cast ballots voted overwhelmingly for union leaders to send them into a strike, as the Writers Guild of America did when their deal expired more than two months ago.

WHAT DO THE ACTORS WANT?

For decades, an actor who appeared on a popular TV show like “Seinfeld” or “The Office” even once could count on getting royalty checks when the show appeared in reruns, bringing pay even at times they were unable to find work.

The streaming model has largely dried up that income, with residual payments untethered from a show or movie’s popularity. Actors want a long-term share of that revenue.

The issue is one of many the actors have in common with writers. For both scribes and performers, the move to streaming and its ripple effects have also meant shorter seasons of shows with longer gaps between them, and therefore less work. They say inflation is outpacing the scheduled pay bumps in their contracts.

And both writers and actors fear the threat of unregulated use of artificial intelligence. The actors say studios want to be able to use their likenesses without having to hire them, or pay them.

Actors also say they’re contending with the new and increasing burden of self-taped auditions — the cost of which used to be the responsibility of casting and productions.

The AMPTP said it presented actors a generous deal that included the biggest bump in minimum pay in 35 years and “a groundbreaking AI proposal that protects actors’ digital likenesses.” They say the union has “regrettably chosen a path that will lead to financial hardship for countless thousands of people who depend on the industry.”

WHAT WILL STRIKING MEAN FOR ACTORS?

Union rules say actors are not to do any part of their jobs, which go far beyond actually shooting films and TV shows.

They are not allowed to make personal appearances or promote their work on podcasts or at premieres. They are barred from doing any production work including auditions, readings, rehearsals, voiceovers or wardrobe fittings.

Newly minted Emmy nominees can’t publicly make their case for votes, nor appear at the ceremony, which is planned for September but is likely to be seriously scaled back or delayed.

They are instead expected to spend their days on picket lines, outside the corporate headquarters and production hubs of studios.

While big names including Matt Damon, Jamie Lee Curtis and Jessica Chastain have spoken out in favor of the strike and are likely to be the face of the picketing, SAG also includes tens of thousands of actors who struggle to find work and maintain income. More serious financial hardship likely lies ahead for them.

WHAT EFFECT WILL THE COMBINED STRIKES HAVE FOR VIEWERS?

Actors joining writers on strike will force nearly every U.S.-based show or film that hasn’t already been shut down into hiatus. Forthcoming seasons of television shows are likely to be delayed indefinitely, and some movie releases will pushed back. (Don’t worry, the July 21 box-office showdown between “Barbie” and “Oppenheimer” is still on.)

The writers’ strike had an almost instant effect on late-night network talk shows, including NBC’s “The Tonight Show Starring Jimmy Fallon,” ABC’s “ Jimmy Kimmel Live!” and CBS’s “The Late Show With Stephen Colbert,” which all went on hiatus immediately. “Saturday Night Live” axed its last three episodes of the season.

In the two months since, many scripted television series have also shut down, including Netflix’s “Stranger Things,” Max’s “Hacks,” Showtime’s “Yellow Jackets,” and Apple TV+’s “Severance.”

It may take longer to notice the actors’ strike on the streaming menus on Netflix or Amazon Prime Video, though lovers of those outlets’ original series will eventually have to wait longer than usual for their favorites to return.

Shoots outside the U.S., where different unions and contracts operate, can continue, as the British-based “House of the Dragon” will for HBO, though the strike is likely to have a secondary drag on those too.

And reality shows, game shows and most daytime talk shows will likely be unaffected.

HOW LONG MIGHT ALL THIS GO ON?

It’s anyone’s guess. After two months, there are no talks planned or imminent for the Writers Guild.

The longest previous writers’ strike, in 1988, lasted five months. The most recent one, in 2007 and 2008, went on for about three months, as did the most recent actors’ strike in 1980.

With both sides on strike together for the first time since 1960, and both facing so many of the same issues, they might find themselves jointly out of work for a long time.

 

 

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