Local News & Commentary Since 1890.

Archive for the ‘Media’ Category

Jamestown Commercial Writing Firm Announces Re-Launch

In Business, Local News, Media, Uncategorized on December 29, 2010 at 10:39 am

GLD Enterprises Commercial Writing managing copywriter Gery L. Deer at his Jamestown office.

JAMESTOWN – After nearly a year of retooling, the management of GLD Enterprises Commercial Writing in Jamestown is looking forward, and in a new direction. Established in 1998 as a media production and talent referral agency, the company has changed names and focus to concentrate solely on business copywriting and public relations consulting services.

Freelance writer and speaker Gery L. Deer is the managing copywriter and owner of the firm. While much of his early background is in engineering and technology, he has had more than two decades of experience in freelance journalism, public relations and commercial business writing.

“We were already handling a good deal of work in the areas of business writing and public relations, so it wasn’t a difficult transition but it meant redirecting our focus, especially in the new economy,” said Deer. The company has already provided services to major players in the Dayton regional business market including accounting firms, chiropractic clinics, marketing and advertising agencies, construction firms and specialty companies.

No stranger to the business community, Deer has worked with some of the best known organizations such as Standard Register, IBM and Whirlpool Corporation. As a freelance writer, he has provided content and editorial services to every major print publication in the Dayton region and had his share of notoriety.

In 2010 Deer was nominated for the Ohio Public Image Network Award in Media and considered for a Pulitzer Prize in journalism. His weekly, self-syndicated op-ed column, Deer In Headlines, is featured in more than a dozen print and online publications. His work in the entertainment industry spans the gambit from stage to television and includes event development, script consulting, stunt work and variety performance.

“Over the years, nothing proved to be more important to the success of any business than a consistent message,” Deer said. “We work alongside marketing and public relations personnel to bring more focus to a company’s message inside and outside the business.”

Reworking the operation required some outside input, so Deer enlisted the resources available through the Small Business Development Center at Wright State University’s Raj Soin College of Business. Over three months students from the college were assigned to help analyze the company’s business plan and make adjustments where needed.

The result was a thoroughly different company, complete with a new marketing objective, updated products and a fresh website full of information and testimonials reflecting more than a decade of work in the commercial writing industry.

Thanks to an efficient network of contacts, GLD Enterprises Commercial Writing, nicknamed The Concierge Copywriter ™, will be able to assist companies located anywhere in the country. According to Deer, however, they will focus on the areas of Dayton, Columbus and Cincinnati, Ohio at first.

“The southwest central Ohio region is underestimated and underserved in the areas of business copywriting and media relations, especially the small and medium sized companies,” Deer said. “There are blossoming new industries forming in the wake of a diminishing recession and I believe we can help them grow.”

Deer also noted that the new spin-off firm will operate out of their main office in the studios of GLD Enterprises & Productions in Jamestown. For more information, contact Gery L. Deer by calling (937) 902-4857 or visit www.theconciergecopywriter.com.

Thanks For A Reader’s Kindness

In Local News, Media, Uncategorized on December 26, 2010 at 4:29 pm

DEER IN HEADLINES

By Gery L. Deer

According to the dictionary, kindness is defined as the quality of being warm-hearted and considerate and humane and sympathetic; the tendency to be kind and forgiving; or a kind act. We tend to see more examples of kindness during the Christmas holiday season, but one recent event came without prompting and I am reasonably certain it would have happened any day of the year.

A few weeks ago I was in the office of my mother’s cardiologist just after her routine checkup. As an Alzheimer’s patient, my mom has to have someone to communicate issues to the doctors, report on her condition and relay any problems so the proper care can be administered.

Fortunately, she has been doing well lately and the cardiologist was pleased with her stable condition. As we were preparing to leave, my father and I were trying to help her back into her coat, a task that is challenging enough when she is cooperating but nearly impossible when she decides she doesn’t want to help.

The long, puffy winter coat just wouldn’t go over her arms the way it was supposed to and she insisted on keeping her elbow bent and tightly tucked between the arm of her narrow wheelchair and her side. With her particular brand of dementia, all you can do is wait her out and distract her until she gives in and allows you to put the coat on.

Unlike working with an obstinate child, mom has lost her sense of reasoning so applying logic or some kind of reward system is useless. You just have to be patient. Even so, she was having nothing to do with the right arm of her coat that day.

Just then a woman walked up and asked if we needed help. Her kind, grandmotherly eyes and concerned look told me that dad and I must have looked thoroughly out of our element in dealing with the situation.

Anyone who sees me with my mom can tell you I’m somewhat overprotective. The Alzheimer’s has left her easily startled and mistrusting but she seemed to respond to the woman who bent down to talk to her as she spoke.

“Your problem is you have men doing a woman’s job here,” she said, smiling. Mom grinned back as if she got the joke. I couldn’t have agreed more at that point. As I kept mom distracted the woman managed to work the coat over the bent elbow.

As we finished getting mom bundled for the ride out to the car, the woman said, “Aren’t you the one who writes the column in the paper?” I replied that I do and she told me her name was Louise and that she reads my column in the Xenia Daily Gazette. She apparently heard my name when the nurse called us back for mom’s appointment.

Louise didn’t offer to help because she recognized me; in fact I couldn’t have looked more inept at the moment. She did it to help my mother in a totally selfless act of kindness. To some, helping an old lady in a wheelchair on with her coat on might seem a small gesture. But to me, it is a great statement of the inherent good nature of people.

We live in a coldly cynical world and to have someone step forward to offer help in such a way is more appreciated than most people can understand unless they have been in the situation. We don’t appreciate how easily we do things like put on a coat until we can no longer do them for ourselves. Louise didn’t just help keep my mother warm that day; she also helped to preserve her dignity.

So, I wanted to take this time to offer, from my father and me, the sincerest of thanks to Louise Young of Xenia and to let her know, for what it’s worth, “My mom would have liked you.” And, from my family to yours, and to all Deer In Headlines readers, please have a Merry Christmas and Happy New Year.

 

 

Hannah’s Treasure Chest Seeks Hosts for Giving Angels Trees

In Local News, Media, Uncategorized on November 17, 2010 at 8:06 am

DAYTON – Local children’s charity Hannah’s Treasure Chest, 124 Westpark Road, Centerville, Ohio, invites local businesses and churches to host Giving Angels trees and be a collection point for gifts and donations to the program.

The Giving Angels program annually provides holiday gifts and necessities to 1500 disadvantaged Miami Valley children aged newborn to 18 through partnership with over 40 agencies in four southwest Ohio counties.

Volunteers from Hannah’s Treasure Chest will collect all donations by December 5 for delivery to partner programs in time for Christmas. To host a tree or sponsor a child, call Pam Merl at Hannah’s Treasure Chest, 937-438-5039, or email info@hannahstreasure.org.

BROTHERS & CO. ENTERTAINERS OFFER TRICKS AND TREATS FOR BEGGARS NIGHT

In Local News, Media, Uncategorized on October 29, 2010 at 10:13 am
The Brothers & Co. Bus, NOAH'S ARK

The Brothers & Co. Bus will be in Jamestown and Cedarville this Saturday with candy for Beggars Night!

Jamestown/Cedarville – Jamestown music and variety group, The Brothers & Co. Entertainers, will hit the road to pass out Halloween candy during Beggars Night hours in Jamestown and Cedarville Saturday evening.

The activity is meant to provide additional entertainment and an additional safe Trick-or-Treat option for the kids and adults while encouraging family-friendly entertainment.

“Offering family-friendly entertainment is a big deal with us,” said Brothers & Co. magician and bass singer Jim Karns of Fairborn. “Bringing the bus into town gives us the opportunity to help kids have a great Halloween night and encourage family activities.”

While candy supplies last, ghosts and goblins can visit The Brothers & Co. bus, Noah’s Ark, in Jamestown between 5:30 and 6:00 PM and in Cedarville from 6:15 until 7:00 PM. The group will also be appearing in concert at the Cedarville Opera House at 7:30 PM on Saturday November 13th. For more information visit the band’s website at http://www.thebrothersandcompany.com.


Halloween: A Night for Treats, Not Tragedies

In Local News, Media, State News, Uncategorized on October 27, 2010 at 10:09 am

(Xenia, OH) – Did you know that on average, twice as many kids are killed while walking on Halloween as compared to any other day of the year?

Kids will be out this weekend trick or treating while it is dark – making it harder for drivers to see them and because they’re excited about getting candy, they may not be watching out for cars.

Parents and drivers both need to do their part to help kids stay out of the emergency room on Halloween. Emphasize safe pedestrian behaviors to kids before they go out trick-or-treating.

Parents should also remember that costumes can be both creative and safe, so look for ways to use reflective materials.

Drivers must slow down and watch out for trick-or-treaters, especially around crosswalks and driveways.

Top tips to keep your kids safe on Halloween

For parents and children:

  • Choose light-colored costumes that can be seen in the dark.
  • Decorate your children’s costumes with reflective materials.  Give them flashlights and glow sticks to carry in order to see better, as well as be seen by drivers.
  • Cross the street safely at corners, using traffic signals and crosswalks. Look left, right and left again when crossing and keep looking as you cross. Walk, don’t run, across the street.
  • Walk on sidewalks or paths. If there are no sidewalks, walk facing traffic as far to the left as possible.
  • Children should walk on direct routes with the fewest street crossings.
  • Slow down and stay alert – watch out for cars that are turning or backing up and never dart out into the street or cross in between parked cars.
  • Masks can obstruct a child’s vision, so choose non-toxic face paint, make-up, and wigs instead.

For drivers:

  • Slow down in residential neighborhoods and school zones.
  • Remember that popular trick-or-treating hours are between 5:30 and 9:30 p.m. so be sure to turn on your full headlights.
  • Be especially alert and take extra time to look for kids at intersections, on medians and on curbs. Children are excited on Halloween and may move in unpredictable ways.
  • Slowly and carefully enter and exit driveways and alleys.
  • Reduce any distractions inside your car, such as talking on the phone or eating, so you can concentrate on the road and your surroundings.

Treats:

While pedestrian safety is a main concern on Halloween, parents and kids should also be careful when dealing with candy. Remind children to only eat treats in original and unopened wrappers.

Beggars Night date and times for Greene County are as follows:

  • Beavercreek and Beavercreek Township       10/30, 6-8pm
  • Bellbrook                                                        10/30, 6-8pm
  • Cedarville                                                       10/30, 5:30-7pm
  • Fairborn                                                          10/30, 6-8pm
  • Jamestown                                                      10/30, 6-7:30pm
  • Xenia                                                              10/30, 6-8pm
  • Yellow Springs                                               10/30, 6-8pm

 

These safety tips have been provided by SafeKids USA.  Learn more at www.safekids.org.   For more information on the Greene County Safe Communities Coalition, call Laurie Fox at 937-374-5669 or email her at lfox@gcchd.org.

 

In Local News on September 20, 2010 at 1:06 pm
DAYTON, OHIO (September 15, 2010) – Comfort Keepers® franchisees across the nation are educating families to WATCH to detect the signs of malnutrition in the growing population of older Americans.
WATCH is a mnemonic that makes it easier to remember the five steps families should remember when observing their loved ones for nutrition problems:
• Watch for physical problems. Look for bruising, dental difficulties, or sudden or sustained weight gain or weight loss.
• Ask seniors about their eating habits. How have their tastes or preferences changed?
• Talk to a doctor. Discuss nutritional needs or problems specific to the loved ones’ unique needs or management of diseases.
• Check with a pharmacist. They can warn you of the potential for drug-food interactions.
• Have your visits during mealtime. This is the best time to observe eating habits first-hand.
Comfort Keepers, a national in-home caregiving network, is working to raise awareness for the growing epidemic of senior malnutrition and undernutrition through a new STOP Senior Hunger campaign. In addition to educating about WATCH, Comfort Keepers franchisees are conducting STOP Senior Hunger food drives, participating in health fairs and sponsoring educational programs.
“The implications of an inadequate diet are serious for seniors,” said Jim Booth, CEO of CK Franchising, Inc., the franchisor of Comfort Keepers. “Family and professional caregivers can help seniors stay nourished by being there to socialize during mealtime, providing transportation and assistance in grocery shopping, and helping with meal preparation.”
Booth said Comfort Keepers® – the name he gives to the thousands of in-home caregivers employed by locally owned and operated franchise office locations nationwide – see first-hand how a lack of adequate nutrition can lead to diminished independence in seniors. Proper nutrition, along with physical fitness and
maintaining an appropriate weight, can help reduce seniors’ risk for falls and diseases, and can improve energy levels, according to the Mayo Clinic.
For more information on senior nutrition, tips for healthy shopping and eating, or for how to find a STOP Senior Hunger event in your community, go to http://www.stopseniorhunger.com.

Jamestown couple still struggling two years after Wilmington DHL closing.

In Local News, Media, State News, Uncategorized on July 4, 2010 at 10:15 pm
By Gery L. Deer
Editor

 

JAMESTOWN – When DHL closed its Wilmington, Ohio operations in 2008, the company was losing an estimated $6 million a day in the United States market. The German-based transport service bought out Airborne Express, which had established one of its largest hubs at Wilmington’s abandoned air force base in 1980. More than 8,000 people worked at what became known as “the air park” and the loss of those jobs extends

Cathy Wolf shows off her silk flower packages in a home-made display on July 2nd during Xenia’s “First Friday” event.

far beyond the borders of Clinton County.

 Like the rest of the nation, Ohio’s unemployment rate continues to climb with no relief on the immediate horizon. Nearly two years after the closing of the DHL facility, many of the company’s former employees and their families are still struggling to find a new way to make a living.

 Dire enough for younger workers, the situation is even more desperate for those more seasoned employees who were displaced after many years of service. Some of the most experienced and valuable of the population is having the hardest time returning to work. 

 Cathy Wolf is about to celebrate her 55th birthday. She lived and worked in Wilmington with her 48-year-old husband Robert, until he became one of more than 7,000 employees discharged from DHL. After nearly two decades with the company, the hope of a secure retirement evaporated in an instant.

 Shortly after, Cathy also lost her job with a vending supplier that serviced the air park and surrounding area. It was fortunate that the Wolf’s three children were already grown and on their own, especially considering that the couple was forced to give up their Wilmington home to the mortgage company and file for bankruptcy.

 Their credit destroyed and living off of a cashed out retirement account, they managed to find a small house to rent in Jamestown and set to the arduous task of searching for new jobs. To complicate matters, Cathy and Robert have been doing what they can to help ailing parents and support their middle daughter who is raising a new baby after losing her husband to kidney disease in the summer of 2009.

 Now, almost twenty-four months after the layoffs, benefits are exhausted and, thanks to state cuts in job training and educational resources, Cathy and Robert have been left with few options. With rent to pay and food to buy, Cathy decided to take matters into her own hands.

 A 1974 graduate of the Greene County Career Center, then known as Greene Joint Vocational School, Cathy’s educational background was in horticulture. Over the years, she worked in nurseries, green houses and similar jobs though her skill and enjoyment was always in floral arrangement.

 Rather than lose to a lethargic economy and empty promises from the bureaucrats in Washington, Cathy chose to go into business for herself designing and selling pre-packaged silk flower arrangements for weddings. Cathy has branded her fledgling business, Cash, Carry & Get Married, marketing to smaller weddings on a limited budget.

 “I’ve made floral arrangements as wedding gifts for friends and family over the years,” she said. “And, the way things are now, many people can’t afford to pay a lot for wedding flowers but still want something nice.”

 Not to be left out, Robert has also been working to get a handyman service off the ground. A skilled maintenance worker and experienced forklift operator, Robert has taken to doing residential repair work passed along by acquaintances from their church.

 Cathy and Robert should have been looking forward to retirement in another 15 years but instead they are starting over. Armed with basic tools and supplies and a handful of home-printed business cards, the couple is determined to do for themselves that which Washington and Columbus have failed to achieve.

 As prospects for employment diminish for those older workers affected by today’s challenges it will take fortitude, faith and a little luck to make it in an economy that has all but turned its back on the elder population.

###

Welcome to The NEW Jamestown Comet

In Local News on March 1, 2010 at 8:19 pm

By Gery L. Deer

Editor / Publisher

Prototype web-based publication is a spinoff of its own history.

In 1876, just past the time of the town crier and way before MTV, Jamestown, Ohio residents were introduced to The Jamestown Journal, a four-page weekly newspaper printed by William S. Galvin, editor and publisher. The newspaper offered readers everything from local news to train schedules.

Galvin later changed the name of the paper to The Jamestown Comet, with the first verifiable issue featuring the updated masthead printed in July of 1890. The circulation of each of the paper was about 1,025 with an annual subscription cost of $1.50, in advance.

 Printed with the news were advertisements for everything from miracle tonics to glassware and from livery service (not limousines but horse boarding) to a performance of the Century Theater at the opera house. Though traveling entertainment graced the stage of opera houses in most towns, the Century Theater was the resident theater company in Jamestown and often posted advertisements for each show and parades that were held just before a performance.

 Keep in mind that one of the jobs of the Fourth Estate has always separate what seems important from what is and deliver that information to the public as quickly and clearly as possible. But what seems important in one era could seem somewhat silly later in time. Here is one of the actual news items exactly as it appeared in the Friday August 1, 1890 edition of The Jamestown Comet.

 NEW JASPER – Mr. William Lewis Levalley was thrown from a load of oats Monday and received severe injuries in the arm and limb and was also badly cut and bruised about the head. Dr. Cunningham reports him in bad condition.”

  Whatever the information, it was valuable to the people of the time, just as it is important to people today to have the latest update of the next rehab-stricken reality show star. Then again, I might like to see a good story about a guy thrown from a load of oats – it would be more interesting and less predictable.

 It is important to note also that there were no photos in The Jamestown Comet, nor most other papers of the time. Plates required to reproduce tin type photos or hand sketches were expensive and time-consuming. Local newspapers could simply not afford the equipment nor did they have the expertise to provide this kind of luxury. Editors and writers had to depend on their words to create the picture for the reader.

As larger newspapers such as the Xenia Daily Gazette and the Dayton Journal-Herald took a larger portion of the market, the days of the Comet were numbered. In 1899, Galvin sold the newspaper to the Press Publishing Company which changed the overall look of the publication and renamed it Greene County Press. The paper continued to be published until 1955 when it finally closed.

 Over all, a 79-year run for a newspaper is nothing to sneeze at, but all media has a shelf life. Today, as newspapers around the country plan more layoffs and cut back on circulation in an effort to stay afloat, it should be noted that newspapers are not dying, they are just changing. The big issue is whether or not publishers are willing to change with the times.

When the  Dayton Journal-Herald, a conservative morning paper, merged with its liberal afternoon competitor, the Dayton Daily News, in 1987 many readers were outraged. The merger came from necessity since there was simply not enough of a market in the Miami Valley for two mammoth newspapers. The choice in the changing economy was to merge, or both could go under. The decision seems to have been correct.

Twenty years later, publishers who find themselves in yet another economic transformation but are unwilling to change with the times might find themselves selling off their publications or closing them permanently. However, the solution is not as simple as making a move to an all-digital newspaper. There must be a way to make any news publication profitable amidst the flurry of instant news provided by behemoths like CNN.

Quality content is paramount and smaller publications are focusing on more locally-based content and providers and free access to the online version. Whatever the solution, the changes in the newspaper business are going to continue for some time.

 As an independent publication the staff of The NEW Jamestown Comet would like to thank you, the readers and advertisers, for having a look at this revitalized publication. From a 19th Century weekly newspaper to an online news resource for the Jamestown, Ohio region, The Jamestown Comet will grow and expand thanks to you – the reader. For information, contact editor@jamestowncomet.com.

TV’s Extreme Makeover descends on Beavercreek

In Local News on October 11, 2009 at 10:32 am

BEAVERCREEK, OH – Hollywood descended on Greene County this week as ABC’s Extreme Makeover Home Edition made another family’s dreams come true by providing them with a brand new house. The Emmy Award-winning reality show featuring host Ty Pennington is entering its 7th season.

thefamilyThe Beavercreek home of the Terpenning family, 548 Carthage Dr., was chosen for the makeover out of hundreds of applicants and they received the news early Thursday morning, July 31. After filming the famous “Door Knock” sequence, the Extreme Makeover production staff met with the family throughout the day to finalize plans for the project.

Later, hundreds of volunteers gathered up the street from the home for the “Braveheart Walk.” After a couple of takes to get the perfect shots in the can, James Terpenning and his family climbed aboard a limousine and were off to a Disney World vacation thanks to Extreme Makeover Home Edition.

Terpenning works in civilian technical support at Wright Patterson Air Force Base. He grew up in a wheelchair having been crippled by polio during infancy and abandoned by his American G.I. father in Vietnam. Growing up, he was competitive in wheelchair sports and eventually represented the United States at the Paralympics, where he earned both gold and silver medals.

Today he and his wife, Shannon, are raising their four children, Josselyn, age 6, twins Justin and Jacob, age 2, and Joshua, who is 1 year old. The couple also cares for James’ adopted brother, Peter, who is also confined to a wheelchair because of cerebral palsy. Peter was left in a group home after his mother died, but came to live with his brother three years ago. The entire family was crammed into a 1,100 square-foot home.

Terpenning may have had to deal with adversity, but he also does what he can to give back to his community. He spends much of his limited free time as a speaker, visiting schools and other civic organizations and educating children, teens and veterans about living with special challenges. The Terpenning family was nominated for the Extreme Makeover by Col. Sue Busler (Ret.), who worked with James at Wright Patterson Air Force Base for 7 years.

“He is just an all around nice guy, super honest, and has all kinds of integrity, does everything with passion and he is a wonderful family man,” Busler said. “He serves his community, he serves the military (as a civilian) and he serves his family. He is a wonderful human being.”

Before retirement, Busler worked for Lt. General John Hudson, who also knows the Terpennings well. Hudson is the commander of the aeronautical systems center at Wright Patterson Air Force Base. “More than 30 years ago the Air Force air-lifted James from Vietnam as an infant in what was called Operation Baby-Lift and brought him to the United States,” said Hudson.

“James works for us in the command section of the aeronautical systems center, there’s nothing he can’t do,” Hudson continued. “He is a fantastic person at work and is an inspiration to us all. He comes in nights and weekends and he gives much to our United States Air Force.”

The producers of Extreme Makeover Home Edition work with more than 1,500 volunteers from local builders to support staff and suppliers who donate materials and labor to the effort. The family and their belongings are removed and the original home is demolished and replaced with a new house.

In addition to providing a new home for one fortunate family, Extreme Makeover Home Edition and Coventry Fine Homes also support three local nonprofit organizations during the project. The Foodbank, Community Blood Center and Life Connection of Ohio, are each holding events in conjunction with the makeover build.

To make the project a success requires hundreds of volunteers and donations from area businesses and individuals. “We bring communities together to make a difference—not just in a family’s life—but in their own,” said Conrad Ricketts, Executive Producer for Extreme Makeover Home Edition.

“Whether you are nailing shingles on the roof, signing up to become an organ donor, donating blood or a can of food, you are making a difference for the betterment of this community and the nation as a whole,” Ricketts said.

Keeping with the local support concept, the production company makes use of as many regional resources as possible. Signs Now located at 1277 N. Fairfield Rd. in Beavercreek provided the signage for the project.

One of many Greene County area sponsors, Signs Now is owned by Roger and Cathy Peters. Tabitha Miller, is the general manager of the Beavercreek shop.  “Every sponsor involved -from the builder to the food – has been donated. It’s amazing to see how everyone comes together to do this,” Miller said.

According to Miller, Signs Now produced 154 sponsor banners for the event. The City of Beavercreek will be installing 12 street banners and two 40-foot banners over the N. Fairfield Rd. overpass. Most of the preparation work began several months ago but everything really got moving once the family left the home on Thursday.

Crews spent most of Friday July 31 removing the Terpenning’s belongings and cutting down trees around the home and surrounding lots. By late afternoon on Saturday, however, there was nothing left of the Terpenning house but a wet pile of rubble. It wasn’t a fire or tornado that destroyed the Beavercreek residence, but a crew clad in blue t-shirts sporting a gold banner on the back that read, “Extreme Makeover Home Edition.”

Hundreds of spectators gathered at the site to watch Ty Pennington, his Extreme Makeover crew, and dozens of volunteers demolish the Terpenning home in preparation for new construction. Airmen and officers of the United States Air Force got the wrecking ball rolling by ripping up the wooden wheelchair ramp and other pieces of the exterior before bringing in the heavy machinery.

American Idol star Kelly Pickler and Extreme Makeover Home Edition host Ty Pennington may have to be classified as heavy equipment as well. The pair chased around the house wielding sledge hammers, taking hunks out of walls and fixtures before the bulldozer plowed through.

As the crew worked to get various filming done for the show, there was little for the crowd to do but wait. Fortunately, medics from the Beavercreek Fire Department and other first aid experts were available to assist those overcome by the heat of the mid-day sun.

Finally, around 1:15 p.m. Saturday, the crowd cheered wildly (prompted by the show’s director) as the first backhoe cut into the front of the Terpenning home. Extreme Makeover Home Edition designer Didiayer Snyder pulled the levers that brought down the first sections of the house. Shortly after, Coventry Fine Homes, owner and president, Rob Arnold, got into the act as well, knocking down another corner of the home before a workman on a bulldozer took out the garage walls.

Once the ceremonial destruction had begun, the demolition crew went to work from three sides, bringing the home to the ground in a matter of minutes. Beavercreek Fire Department was active on the scene as well helping to contain the clouds of debris and dust with heavy sprays from two fire hoses.

Framing of the new home began on Sunday. The new home will be completed and revealed to the family during the filming of the segment known as “move that bus,” sometime on Thursday, August 6. To follow the progress of the project or learn about the various charities and sponsors involved, go to http://www.greenecountydailies.com and click on the Extreme Makeover Home Edition link.

The show airs on Sundays at 8:00 p.m. on the ABC Television Network – locally, WKEF-TV, channel 22 but there is no word yet on when this episode will be broadcast. Watch the Greene County Dailies Newspapers for further updates.