I'll bet he's a local conversation piece. I can hear it now: 'Who let that foreigner on our local TV station??' For that matter, I wonder if he's actually physically in Yakiscratch, or coming in from another location. My money is he's somewhere else.We're still getting used to our new British anchor at KIMA...John Kennedy O'Connor. Who would have thought?
Yakiratchet is a small town. Has anyone actually seen him around town? Like at the local fish n' chips place? (Kidding) He could literally be somewhere else reading a story about the crispy former Union Gap Sea Galley. Doesn't have to be in town at the God forsaken Terrace Heights location.Yes, physically in Yakima. I'm a substitute teacher, and last week at lunch time/prep, the 4th grade teachers were talking about the recent fire at the abandoned Sea Galley restaurant in Union Gap, and two of them had no idea because they don't watch TV news! There was a comment made about "that British guy on the local news", from the one full-time teacher who saw the story on TV.
Yikes, Eureka, CA to Yakima? Not very big market jumps. Kind of feel sorry for the guy..He originally came from KIEM Eureka, and had done a whole bunch of work for the Eurovision Song Contest prior to that, also occasional reports to BBC and Channel 5 in the UK.
That building is a dump that should have been torn down years ago. Each time I visited, I felt the need to get back to the hotel and take a shower. It's leaky, with old wood paneling from the 60's. Believe there was old shag carpet in some offices too.Lots of heritage in that old building, Uncle Jimmy's Clubhouse especially, but that was 50 years ago, and it looks more worn out day by day.
Great. Sounds like a dining paradise.Oh, the only seafood restaurant left in Yakima is Red Lobster. It's on skid row, also known as North 1st Street near the Union Gospel Mission.
And like Yakima, Fresno has raisins along with gangs and drugs. Between hops and dried grapes, neither would be enough to entice me to live in either town.It may be the only Red Lobster in the U.S. where the XXX adult store is a short walk away. I'm not kidding. That, and tons of sleazy motels, prostitutes, and gangs. The vintage shag carpet in the news bureau doesn't surprise me either. It's probably so old that Jimmy Nolan himself walked on the same carpet.
If not for the hops, breweries, and wineries, Yakima's tourism dollars wouldn't even show up. We do have amazing beer here!!
Jumping from market 195 to market 116 in one leap is not a very big jump? I doubt he needs your sympathy.Yakiratchet is a small town. Has anyone actually seen him around town? Like at the local fish n' chips place? (Kidding) He could literally be somewhere else reading a story about the crispy former Union Gap Sea Galley. Doesn't have to be in town at the God forsaken Terrace Heights location.
Yikes, Eureka, CA to Yakima? Not very big market jumps. Kind of feel sorry for the guy..
Pity you didn't put real money on it. You'd have lost, big time.I'll bet he's a local conversation piece. I can hear it now: 'Who let that foreigner on our local TV station??' For that matter, I wonder if he's actually physically in Yakiscratch, or coming in from another location. My money is he's somewhere else.
It will be interesting to see once the curiosity dies down whether they keep using him for there.
So has anybody found out why he moved the U.S.? Not a problem with me, I really enjoyed him (and KIMA in general) when I was in Yakima this Christmas, but it does seem bizarre for a name UK broadcaster doing small market American stations.Of course John Kennedy O'Connor is based in Yakima. Ludicrous to suggest or assume otherwise. We see him around a lot. A LOT. He is at many, many community events. If you had any doubts, dispelled surely when he was broadcasting live at the Yakima Turkey Trot on Thanksgiving morning. You thought he was sitting in London? Jeez.