[msb-alumni] Re: Long-Time Radio Legend and Talking Book Narrator Milton Metz Dead at 95

  • From: "Mark Martin" <mbmartin1984@xxxxxxxxxxx>
  • To: <msb-alumni@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
  • Date: Tue, 24 Jan 2017 21:40:53 -0500

Lucy, it was the second book in the series but I didn't know that when Dave Hoban told me about Stowaway so I read it. When I saw that there was actually a previous book I downloaded it and have listened. I got it backwards after all these years, but I now know how the boys built there first spaceship, and made their first trip to the Mushroom planet. I don't remember the name of the woman who read it but she did a good job. I was just hoping to find the Milton Metz recording.
Mark Martin, 73.
----- Original Message ----- From: "Lucy Edmonds" <lucyjean11@xxxxxxxxx>
To: <msb-alumni@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
Sent: Tuesday, January 24, 2017 7:06 PM
Subject: [msb-alumni] Re: Long-Time Radio Legend and Talking Book Narrator Milton Metz Dead at 95


Hey Mark, I remember that book called stole way to the mushroom planet. Wasn't there another book in that series 2, I'm not sure if it was after that book or before. I loved it. There was a character in that book named professor Horatio Peabody. I remember laughing at that name when I was a little kid, LOL!

Sent from my iPhone

On Jan 23, 2017, at 12:12 PM, Mark Martin <mbmartin1984@xxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:

I'm not doubting you at all Marcia. I was just pointing out the available titles from NLS BARD at this time. They have updated several titles over the decades which in many cases the marrator we remember reading a book is no longer available. I have looked for titles that I would like to read again by the narrator I remember and have only found it updated by a different reader. They are constantly adding digitized books from the past, so hopefully more of these originals will become available. As concerning Milton Metz, I remember reading a book of his called Stowaway To The Mushroom Planet, so imagine my excitement when the book appeared recently on an updates page, which soon turned to disappointment when the narrator was a woman whose name I don't recall just now. I don't know how many Metz narrations are available right now but you can find out by placing his name in the search box. This is kind of interesting to do sometimes as a for instance, I searched for Mitzy Fried
lander a while back and found over 200 titles.  I hope this clears it up.

Mark Martin, 73.

----- Original Message ----- From: "Marcia Moses" <mgmoses@xxxxxxxxxxx>
To: <msb-alumni@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
Sent: Sunday, January 22, 2017 10:32 PM
Subject: [msb-alumni] Re: Long-Time Radio Legend and Talking Book Narrator Milton Metz Dead at 95


Hi Mark,
The original talking book was read by Milton Metz. I remember reading it in
MRS.  Baldwin's room in
first grade, in 1960.
He did a great job by the way.  Toni, can you back me up?
Marcia

-----Original Message-----
From: msb-alumni-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
[mailto:msb-alumni-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx] On Behalf Of Mark Martin
Sent: Sunday, January 22, 2017 9:37 PM
To: msb-alumni@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
Subject: [msb-alumni] Re: Long-Time Radio Legend and Talking Book Narrator
Milton Metz Dead at 95

Marcia, the author was James B. Garfield, and BARD has 2 copies of the book
but neither narration is from Milton Metz. John Polk reads one copy and the
other is read by Erik Sandvold.

Mark Martin, 73.
----- Original Message -----
From: "Marcia Moses" <mgmoses@xxxxxxxxxxx>
To: <msb-alumni@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
Sent: Sunday, January 22, 2017 12:59 AM
Subject: [msb-alumni] Re: Long-Time Radio Legend and Talking Book Narrator
Milton Metz Dead at 95


I was honored to meet MR. Metz for a few minutes in the summer of 1969.
I read a few of the talking books he read, as well as listening to his
radio  show on WHAS.
It was a very hot day in Louisville.  He said something llike, "It's a
hell  of a hot day, why are you driving around?"
We were visiting family in Louisville, and somehow, my older cousin
had  his  phone number.
The first book I remember reading he narrated was Follow My Leader,
back  in  first grade.  I have no idea who the author was.
Can anybody help?
Marcia

-----Original Message-----
From: msb-alumni-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
[mailto:msb-alumni-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx] On Behalf Of Steve
Sent: Saturday, January 21, 2017 10:19 PM
To: msb-alumni@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
Subject: [msb-alumni] Long-Time Radio Legend and Talking Book Narrator
Milton Metz Dead at 95

BlankLocal radio legend Milton Metz dead at 95 Andrew Wolfson ,
@adwolfson Published 9:26 p.m. ET Jan. 12, 2017 | Updated
12:04 p.m. ET Jan. 13, 2017
WHAS radio's Milton Metz signed off his show after 34 years last night.
He'll be doing a 90-second commentary that will air twice a day. but
it can't quite compare to three hours a night of "Metz Here."(Photo:
SAM RICHE, THE COURIER-JOURNAL)Buy Photo

Milton Metz, a pioneer in broadcasting in Louisville and the longtime
host of the talk show  "Metz Here" on WHAS Radio, died Thursday,
according to former colleagues Wayne Perkey and Terry Meiners.
He was 95 and died at Magnolia Springs, a senior living facility,
Perkey said.

"El Metzo," as he was affectionately known, began at the station in 1946.
"Metz Here" debuted July 30, 1959, with the title "Juniper 5-2385,"
after its phone number, and ended on June 10, 1993.

"Every time Milton Metz clicked on the mic, people across middle
America were guaranteed wit, wisdom, and balance," Meiners said.
"On or off the air, Milton was first and foremost a gentleman,
bringing grace and intellect into a sometimes inelegant media
landscape," Meiners said. "Rest easy, brother.  You blazed a beautiful
trail and we shall follow."

Perkey said Metz was a role model and father figure for a younger
generation of broadcasters that included Meiners, Perkey and Jack Fox.

"He was not afraid to ask difficult questions, but he tried to be fair,"
Perkey said. "He had a great wit and he showed it. I loved him because
he was Milton."

Bob Johnson, a retired political reporter on WHAS Radio and TV, said
that unlike contemporary talk radio, his show never featured "talking
heads shouting at each other."
"He had a sweet, gentle nature and his graciousness carried over into
his work on the air," said Johnson, later a Courier-Journal reporter.
"I was very fond of him."

Perry Metz said his father enjoyed "a good joke, a long conversation
and listening to different points of view.
"If civility is old-fashioned, you could say he was old-fashioned,"
said the younger Metz, who followed in his father's footsteps and now
runs public radio and TV stations at Indiana University in
Bloomington.

Metz could be serious on the air but at a roast held when he retired
he recalled how a publicity agent had called plugging his client's
appearance.
"She's written `Why Diets Don't Work,' " the agent said. "But if that
doesn't appeal to you, we could talk about her new book, `The One-Hour
Orgasm.' "

He also carefully guarded his age.


In an interview with Courier-Journal columnist Tom Dorsey in 1993, he
would only say, "Let's just say I'm older than Diane Sawyer and
younger than Mike Wallace." Wallace was 75 at the time.

Sportscasting legend Cawood Ledford, who spent 22 years at WHAS with
Metz, once recalled that when Metz started his program back in the
1950s the dial was full of talk shows.
Ledford joked that he would like to say that Metz's popularity drove
the other shows off the air, but the truth was that Metz simply
outlived them all.

He was born in Cleveland to a Russian-born father and English-born
mother and started his radio career in the 1930s in Cleveland after
graduating from Ohio State University.

LOUISVILLE, Ky. (WHAS11) -- It is with great sadness that we report
the death of WHAS TV and Radio legend, Milton Metz. He died peacefully
in Louisville at the age of 95.
Milton became one of this area's most recognized personalities, first
heard on WHAS Radio in 1946. He helped put Channel 11 on the air. In
fact, he was one of the first faces you saw on Channel 11 in 1950.
Milton just celebrated his 95th birthday in September in rehab. The
WHAS Crusade for Children staff brought him a cake. More than 300
viewers mailed get well cards to him after he had fallen and broken
his shoulder in the summer and was in recovery last August. He loved
every card and letter, and along the way, he always told me that he
was getting wonderful care.
His trailblazing nighttime radio show called "Metz Here" was one of
the first nighttime talk shows in the United States. It ran from 1959 to
1993.
He also hosted "Omelet" on WHAS-TV, an interview program that aired
before the Noon News on WHAS-TV. He picked Faith Lyles as his co-host.
He retired from WHAS AM in 1993 but kept doing ads for TV and Radio.
He came to Louisville from Columbus, Ohio and married his beloved wife
Mimi whom he met in Louisville. She died last April. He is survived by
his son Perry Metz.
Memorial services for Milton Metz will be held Sunday, January 22 at 2
p.m.
at The Temple on Brownsboro Road.

You can see a link of some of his broadcasts at:
http://www.whas11.com/news/local/whas-legend-milton-metz-dies-at-95/38
566075
8

Steve
Class of '72

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