Media activity
Just as the real estate market is showing signs of recovery, Jay Lamont says next Sunday will be his last All About Real Estate call-in show on WPEN (950) after 30 years and 10 months. "It was not my call," Lamont told me. "They were pretty honest. They couldn't afford me." Lamont had been with WPEN through various formats (rock, oldies, nostalgia, oldies again, now sports talk) and said he had no hard feelings.
Tuesday will mark five years since WPEN dropped the "Station of the Stars" nostalgia format. Alumnus Andy Kortman will assemble a bunch of the personalities - Dean Tyler, Jerry Stevens, Tom Moran, Ed Hurst, Bill Kimble, Andy Hopkins, Elaine Soncini, Bill Kimble, Ed Klein, Charlie Mills, Ruth Weisberg, Walt McDonald, and John Carlton - for a flashback show from 7 a.m. to noon at the Penrose Diner in South Philly. (Some will call in.) The show can be heard on WFYL-AM (1180), WNJC-AM (1360), and WIFI-AM (1180) and at andykortman.com.
Tom Ridge, the former governor and the first homeland security secretary, will be out with the book The Test of Our Times after Labor Day. He'll talk about it at 10 p.m. Thursday on a special edition of Larry Kane's Voice of Reason on the Comcast Network.
Barnes story on screen
The decades-long tug-of-war over the art collection of Albert C. Barnes is the subject of a documentary getting its world premiere in two weeks at the prestigious Toronto International Film Festival.
But don't assume just from the name - The Art of the Steal - that the piece condemns those who acted against Barnes' will to get the $30 billion collection moved from Merion to a new home on the Parkway.