Friday, January 15, 2010

THE SCRANTON/W-B SKINNY


News from the home of the Scranton Wilkes-Barre Yankees...

• Some famous Scranton ladies (pictured at right) plan a community theater production of the notorious television shocker The View:
"I'm definitely looking forward to joining the crew for a fun night," said Froggy 101's Selena, who will be joined by The Times-Tribune's Lifestyles reporter Patrice Wilding, WNEP-TV's Laurie LaMaster, restaurateur Brenda Bistocchi, and Lackawanna County Recorder of Deeds Evie Rafalko McNulty.
• Some judge will decide whether Scranton teens (not pictured at right) should be killed for sexting:
The three teenage girls and their parents brought the case to federal court after the Wyoming County district attorney, George Skumanick Jr., threatened to charge them with child pornography if they did not attend an after-school course and write an essay on why "sexting" is wrong.
• Some newspaper in Wilkes-Barre joins other newspapers around America in piling an insane amount of work on two remaining employees:
Rachel Pugh, 32, the general manager of The Weekender, has been named vice president of marketing for the publishing company. She will continue her duties at the weekly entertainment newspaper.
Shelley McCann, 32, has been named production director. In her new duty, she will be responsible for all the manufacturing, facilities and commercial operations of the company, which publishes The Times Leader, The Times Leader Scranton Edition and several weeklies.
[...]
“Rachel Pugh and Shelley McCann are doing the work of several persons and doing it single-handedly,” said Richard L. Connor, editor, publisher and CEO of the Wilkes-Barre Publishing Co. “They are not just terrific leaders. They are good people, dedicated, and loyal to our employees, our customers, our industry and our community.

2 comments:

dadlak said...

Rather than death, I think the sexting children should be sentenced to watching The View, both the national and Scranton versions.

el duque said...

I think Shelley Duncan used to date the Recorder of Deeds.