Tuesday, March 1, 2011

THE NEW MEXICO BROADCASTER ASSOCIATION
DJ OF THE YEAR

DON DIEGO

Your Family Friendly Hometown Country
Morning Show


Living here, playing here, and working here, it’s Don Diego in Southern New Mexico!!!

Celebrity Spotlight

Lee Brice will step into the kitchen with CMT.com contributor and host Hazel Smith during this weekend’s Southern Fried Flicks episode. Hazel will do all of the cooking this time but Lee has few signature recipes of his own. He’s known for his chicken rollups and just like his latest song, Luke jokes they’re “Beautiful Every Time.” (Audio) “They are a hit every time. They are beautiful every time. It’s basically just a little chuck of chicken wrapped up in bacon with a little slice of jalapeno, parsley, and ranch dressing. But it’s perfect when you have it. So I got a couple little specialties I do.” The Dukes of Hazzard: The Beginning will be the film shown during Southern Fried Flicks which airs tomorrow at 9 PM Eastern, only on CMT.


RIDDLE ME THIS

How far can a dog run into the woods?

Halfway, any farther and he would be running out



HOMETOWN HERO’S

HOMETOWN HERO’S are people who serve other people, their community, and take pride in honoring, restoring, preserving, or celebrating an aspect of American hometown life, be it their work, passion, or pastime. Thus, the truest meaning of “HOMETOWN HERO ” is people protecting, defending, caring for or serving others. With that as the background, WHO is a “HOMETOWN HERO ” in your life or the life of others ? E-mail me, dondiego@kgrt.com and let me know who they are. Or call me at 523-KGRT and we can discuss the detials of your HOMETOWN HERO. Some of the greatest “HOMETOWN HERO’S ” in our lives are unknown to the outside world and garner very little, if any, attention. Call today 523-KGRT.

Our Hometown Hero(’s) Today is/are Emilio Martin

Emilio Martin is in Afghanistan right now serving his first duty as a private first class in the 1st platoon, 10th mountain, 4th infantry.

Emilio Martin is/are our Hometown Hero Today and we salute you.



This Is Nuts


Last night, in an attempt to make the Oscarcast hipper and more
relevant to young viewers, James Franco and Anne Hathaway hosted it. Critics agreed, it was one of the most boring Oscarcasts in history. The audience's excitement level leaped halfway through when Billy Crystal suddenly appeared, but he stayed for only a couple of minutes to introduce a tribute to the greatest Oscar host ever, Bob Hope, who also appeared for only a minute.

* Next year's Oscars will be co-hosted by Billy Crystal and a digitally-created Bob
Hope.



HEALTH MOMENT

Women who have hot flashes and night sweats at the start of menopause may be less likely to have a heart attack later in life, U.S. researchers said.
But women who develop these symptoms later in menopause may have higher heart disease risks, the team reported in the journal Menopause.
"Our study provides reassurance that the classic symptoms of early menopause, experienced by the majority of women at mid-life, are not a marker of an increased risk of heart attack or stroke in the future," Dr. JoAnn Manson of Brigham and Women's Hospital, who worked on the study, said in a statement.
The findings come from a new analysis of the large clinical trial called the Women's Health Initiative in 2002 that showed hormone replacement therapy raised the risk of breast and ovarian cancers and strokes in older women, and doctors now prescribe it sparingly.
Mason and colleagues found that women with hot flashes or night sweats at the start of menopause were no more likely to have a heart attack, stroke or to die during the study period than women who did not have these symptoms.
Women who developed hot flashes or night sweats later on in menopause, however, had a 32 percent higher risk of heart attack and a 29 percent higher risk of death compared with women who got these symptoms early on.
About three out of four menopausal women experience hot flashes or night sweats early in menopause, the team said.

BREAK TIME CHATTER

Charlie Sheen allowed a Radar Online reporter to watch as he gave a urine sample for a drug test. They even posted photos of his urine sample online. To the shock of everyone involved, the home test was negative. It can detect seven different drugs, including marijuana use in the past 40 days and coke, meth and ecstasy for four days, and it showed Sheen was clean.

* So the good news that he doesn't need drugs, he's just naturally crazy.



And I leave you with this thought.

"Courage is contagious. When a brave man takes a stand, the spines of others are often stiffened."

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