Profile_bird

Hey there! danielsbaum is using Twitter.

Twitter is a free service that lets you keep in touch with people through the exchange of quick, frequent answers to one simple question: What's happening? Join today to start receiving danielsbaum's tweets.

Already using Twitter
from your phone? Click here.

danielsbaum

  1. Just saw a great PBS POV film about the International Criminal Court. Bush refused it. Where's Obama on this?
  2. Here's an idea: Let's replace Baucus as committee chair with Jay Rockefeller. Baucus failed. He should lose his job.
  3. christ almighty. my last little twitterthon cost me about thirty followers. to be expected, i suppose....
  4. @aaronharnly Your 64-bit version seems to work just fine. Fabulous little piece of software. I donated. Thank you!
  5. My seven week old buff orpingtons seem to need a heat lamp at night. the bigger chickens are fine. maybe i should find some writing work.
  6. @wintersparrow look at the bottom of www.danbaum.com for the light blue rectange, "how we launched our freelance careers in Africa"
  7. Why are we who support the public option ceding the Washington Mall to the notopians?
  8. @seantabb sorry about that. some like it, some don't. i won't do it again. (for a while)
  9. That is all.
  10. I’ll post this, in proper order, at www.danbaum.com.
  11. I hope this is helpful.
  12. It was the stroke that began our careers, and I’m constantly amazed that more don’t do it.
  13. We raised our profile above the pack. We broke into magazines for the first time.
  14. More than that, though, we became somebody in journalism.
  15. We broke even on our three years: We left with $20k and came home with $20k.
  16. Then we flew. We ended up staying in Africa three years. We traveled everywhere.
  17. In 1987, we collected about a dozen newspaper and radio editors willing to let us call collect.
  18. Back then, the technology was impossible. Now it’s childishly simple.
  19. If we could have been doing television as well as print and radio, we’d have cleaned up.
  20. (We once asked a National Geographic photographer the secret of NatGeo photography.