There was a lot of stammering when you were speaking with live callers. You continually repeated it's,it's,it's...and,and,and.
Once Lynn had a guest that repeated it's, ands', 5 to 7 times which made listening a painful experience. Fortunately, he never appeared again as far as I know.
I think scribes or print people are prone to stammer since stammering does not appear in their final product.
I once knew a computer programmer who had a terrible stutter. I don't believe that he stuttered in Fortran, Cobol or Basic (former programming languages)
For good speaking technique listen to Tony Kornheiser who can jabber on about sports flawlessly for hours. In fact most presenters on ESPN do not have verbal "tics".
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A comment on you radio appearance:
There was a lot of stammering when you were speaking with live callers. You continually repeated it's,it's,it's...and,and,and.
Once Lynn had a guest that repeated it's, ands', 5 to 7 times which made listening a painful experience. Fortunately, he never appeared again as far as I know.
I think scribes or print people are prone to stammer since stammering does not appear in their final product.
I once knew a computer programmer who had a terrible stutter. I don't believe that he stuttered in
Fortran, Cobol or Basic (former programming languages)
Alschk@aol.com
For good speaking technique listen to Tony Kornheiser who can jabber on about sports flawlessly for hours. In fact most presenters on ESPN do not have verbal "tics".
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