"1st with the Firsties" via Will 2 B

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this BLOG is a BLOG of other peoples BLOGS so in fact....it is a BLOG! a collection of BLOGS that I found around and thought u might find entertaining and interesting. don't u worry...i will BLOG from time to time as well

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Queens, New York City, United States
Will 2 B lives for the fast paced high stress action of live radio and always delivers a clean and professional product in the end. Whether he is on the air or behind the scenes he always swings for the fences. Will 2 B’s passion and knowledge for the studio equipment and technology is a great asset to any broadcasting company. Since Will 2 B is a radio personality he understands first hand the inner workings on how to deliver a content filled, uncluttered, yet entertaining show. This passion also reflects in the tight clean sound of his board operating work and production skills. Will 2 B is gifted in dealing with celebrities and his industry Rolodex reflects that. "I always knew I would end up in the music business somehow, but who knew it would be in radio?" says Will 2 B. "Someone asked me a question the other day that I couldn't answer. What song changed your life? That’s what radio is about to me, changing people’s lives through music and personality!”

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Thursday, May 8, 2008

Bees Hunt for Upper East Side Real Estate

Bees Hunt for Upper East Side Real Estate

from Gothamist by

2008_05_beeswarm.jpg

The Gothamist Newsmap indicated an "unusual incident"at 75th Street and 2nd Avenue in Manhattan yesterday. The Emergency Service Unit officers responded, but they reportedly "hung back a bit" because the unusual incident turned out to be a swarm of bees!

A witness told WNBC the bees "were swarming all around like debris, a whirlwind type of thing," around a newspaper box for the Learning Annex. Jim Fisher, who volunteers at the Bronx Zoo, arrived on the scene and, per WABC 7, managed to calm things down:

Fisher used water to wet the wings of the swarm to prevent them from flying off, then used a whisk broom to sweep the bees into a cardboard box. Once the queen bee was inside, the rest of the bees followed her pheremones into the box.

Fisher says the bees had been on the box for about an hour and likely landed in desperation, having come from a nearby hive that had split its population in two. Half flew off with the new queen bee in search of a new home, while the other half remained with the existing hive and the old queen bee. It's behavior that's not unusual this time of year, Fisher said.Awesome! There were about 5,000 bees, weighing about a pound in total, which is considered a small swarm. Fisher says there's another half of a hive out there, somewhere.

The Queens County Farm Museum has a honey bee program (where children "learn about the life-cycle of honeybees, their products, and how they help us") and there are also programs for groups of adults. And these bees do have a new home--with a beekeeper north of the city.