“And it better be a treat, hooman.”

We’ve learned you don’t want a trick from a cat. She knows I know this. This, then, was a clear signal.
A clear signal.
“And it better be a treat, hooman.”

We’ve learned you don’t want a trick from a cat. She knows I know this. This, then, was a clear signal.
A clear signal.
Sometimes we do a news show in the morning.

Which reminded me of the five-plus years I did morning shows. They were much earlier than this, but I still had to get up early enough to be here, so that somehow counts.
This was actually a re-shoot. And a valuable lesson was learned, just as it should be, in the friendly and forgiving confines of a learning laboratory. Which means we had a good sized crew back in the studio first thing on a Friday morning for a show we’d already tried to do once.
Later in the day we spent some time in one of our fantabulous new production studios:

The engineer is the lady on the left, and she’s presiding over a software teleconference. This is going to be a radio booth, production studio and a place we do podcasts in. We’ve got a few nice production set ups on the new building. Guess that means we’ll have to produce a lot.
Hanging out with the ladies doing the hip and happening show:

You can watch the show right here. This is episode four, and we’re learning a lot in a hurry.
(They’re probably learning faster than I am.)
Sitting at a red light on the way back from the grocery store, it went like this:
“Such a long red light … Why are all of these cars in my way? Hey, cool! Neat bike! Check out that paint job! And great nose art, wow!”

And then I noticed the dog in the sidecar. And, finally, the goggles.
You figure that pooch knows the weekend is here. But then you think, maybe every day is a Saturday to that dog.
Meanwhile, as workday turns into weekend, this is the view from the recliner in my home office:

Did you ever think that maybe everyday could feel like Saturday to the rest of us, too?