accessAtlanta

City & State or ZIP Tonight, this weekend, May 5th...
City & State or ZIP
City & State or ZIP Tonight, this weekend, May 5th...
City & State or ZIP
New url for Peach Buzz

Bookmark this new url for Peach Buzz.. We have moved to Wordpress!

Access Atlanta > Blog > Archives > 2008 > November > 14 > Entry

At Press Club, Ted Turner lets loose on GM, President Bush

Aside from a not-entirely-unfounded fear of lodging a luncheon roll in one’s windpipe, CNN founder and memoirist Ted Turner delighted and entertained a sold-out crowd of admirers Friday at the Atlanta Press Club luncheon at the Commerce Club downtown.

Introduced by former CNN chairman and old pal Tom Johnson as “a hero and the only genius I’ve ever known,” Turner, the author of “Call Me Ted,” strode to the podium for a wide-ranging series of remarks and questions from the audience.

With apologies to Atlanta Press Club sponsor General Motors and their employees in the room, the co-founder of Ted’s Montana Grill said he’d rather bail out the U.S. restaurant industry than auto workers.

“They deserve what they’ve done,” Turner said. “Toyota will take them over at some point. Giving the auto industry $25 million might get them through Christmas!”

Calling President George W. Bush “one of the dumbest people in the country,” Turner expressed hope for the incoming Barack Obama administration. “We need to have smart people instead of dumb people running things,” he explained.

When Buzz asked him to finish his thoughts on the economy that he started to explain this week on “The Late Show with David Letterman,” Turner told us: “It’s simple: you shouldn’t spend more money than you make. You don’t buy more than you can afford. That’s how you get rich. We need to start saving money. This could be as bad as The Great Depression.”

And Turner reminded the audience that no one is immune from corporate changes.

“I would loved to have kept my job at Time-Warner, but I was let go. And I was Time’s Man of the Year! I’m proof that anybody can be let go. Don’t think you have job security.”

Georgia State journalism major Heath Croft asked the question of the luncheon, however.

When the college senior asked Turner what he thought of the current CNN Headline News, Turner made a gagging noise.

Said Turner: “How many people think I like Nancy Grace?! And that other guy whose name was bigger than the [CNN] logo? That guy who went to Fox [News], thank God? Glenn Beck. I can’t watch it anymore.”

Staton has ‘Praise’ for her choir

For “I Will Sing My Praise to You,” her brand new praise and worship album, R&B and gospel legend Candi Staton shares the spotlight with Snellville’s Hope & Life Fellowship choir and its music director John Brockman.

“I’m so blessed to have them on this record with me,” the Stone Mountain resident told Buzz. So how did Staton find the talented singers? She’s a member of Hope & Life Fellowship. A nonsinging member at that.

“I just love sitting there listening to other people praise the Lord,” she explained. “It’s never ‘Candi, did you bring a track?’ They don’t do that to me. I can go there and just be a worshipper. You have to have a moment, you know?”

Saturday, Staton performed numbers from “Praise” and signed copies for fans at the Stonecrest Mall Borders Books & Music in Lithonia.

Staton performs her R&B and disco hits annually in Europe in concerts before 50,000. The singer says it’s those old R&B fans who are more likely to check out her gospel offerings. But not the other way around.

“A lot of folks still think if you sing secular, you’re going to hell. But I look at Jesus’ life. He didn’t hang out with the religious folk too much. He went where he was needed. Instead of taking water to the ocean, he was taking it to the desert,” she said.

Celebrating 50 with the ASO

When the Atlanta Community Symphony Orchestra celebrates its 50th anniversary Saturday night in Symphony Hall, there will be a special guest more than twice as old as the orchestra itself.

Ruth Allen, 101, was one of the orchestra founders. She taught violin in Atlanta for over 70 years. Former students can be found in professional symphonies in London, Boston, Baltimore, Atlanta and other cities.

Buzz recently caught up with the lively Mrs. Allen at Lenbrook retirement home on Peachtree Road in Buckhead. She no longer plays music, but reads voraciously. She had a copy of “Audacity of Hope,” by Barack Obama, and cast her absentee ballot for the president-elect.

Allen said began playing violin when she was 8 — a late start these days — and studied under legendary Hungarian violinist Leopold Auer shortly after he moved to the U.S. in 1918.

She said aspiring musicians should start “as early as possible to get their muscles used to play and to train their ear.”

“She was a wonderful teacher,” said former student Raymond Page of Raleigh, who teaches music and played with the Alard Quartet for many years.

“She’s basically a sweet person, and I never saw her get angry, but you knew when you disappointed her.”

CELEBRITY BIRTHDAYS

Saturday: “People’s Court” judge Joseph Wapner is 89. Actor Ed Asner is 79. Actor John Kerr (“South Pacific”) is 77. Singer Petula Clark is 76. Actor Sam Waterston (“Law and Order”) is 68. Bandleader Kevin Eubanks (“The Tonight Show with Jay Leno”) is 51.

Sunday: Actress Marg Helgenberger (“CSI”) is 50. Jazz singer Diana Krall is 44. Actress Maggie Gyllenhaal is 31.

OVERSCENE

Professional race car driver Danica Patrick dining on an apple walnut salad prior to greeting 200 awaiting fans at ESPN Zone in Buckhead. Patrick challenged fans on a racing simulator for a pair of round-trip AirTran tickets. The racing star was doing well until the final turn of the last lap when a finalist put her virtual car into a wall. She finished third.

Contributing: Kirsten Tagami and news services.

If you have a tip, call 404-526-2749. Or fax 404-526-5509. Or e-mail: buzz@ajc.com.

Permalink | Comments (0) | Post your comment |

Comments

Commenting is open from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. M-F

Post a comment



Remember me?

You may use the following formatting:
Bold: **this text will be bolded** = this text will be bolded
Italic: *this text will be italic* = this text will be italic
Link: [text to be linked](http://www.ajc.com) = text to be linked



There will be a delay of up to 5 minutes before your comment appears.


*HTML not allowed in comments. Your e-mail address is required.

 

Sign up for our weekend events newsletter »

Become a fan of accessAtlanta on Facebook »