Dear Bari, important technical point now that you're a Radio Star. If you hadn't left the Times you would never have discovered you have that great voice. But when the conversation became rapid, about the time Michelle Obama's name came up, it became impossible for me to tell who was speaking, you or Sheryl. I spent 10 years at Columbia …
Dear Bari, important technical point now that you're a Radio Star. If you hadn't left the Times you would never have discovered you have that great voice. But when the conversation became rapid, about the time Michelle Obama's name came up, it became impossible for me to tell who was speaking, you or Sheryl. I spent 10 years at Columbia and Yale, and still couldn't tell. You both have melodic, youthful voices full of Ivy League pronunciations, polite classroom hesitations, which --for this Long Island Jewish boy-- were made all the more charming by a smidgen of girlish uptalk endings, and certain locutions inherited from our grandparents. Bari, I could listen to your voice all day, but please just say the other person's name from time to time?
Dear Bari, important technical point now that you're a Radio Star. If you hadn't left the Times you would never have discovered you have that great voice. But when the conversation became rapid, about the time Michelle Obama's name came up, it became impossible for me to tell who was speaking, you or Sheryl. I spent 10 years at Columbia and Yale, and still couldn't tell. You both have melodic, youthful voices full of Ivy League pronunciations, polite classroom hesitations, which --for this Long Island Jewish boy-- were made all the more charming by a smidgen of girlish uptalk endings, and certain locutions inherited from our grandparents. Bari, I could listen to your voice all day, but please just say the other person's name from time to time?