Letters

Tess Vigeland Oct 31, 2008
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Mailbag iStockPhoto

Letters

Tess Vigeland Oct 31, 2008
Mailbag iStockPhoto
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TEXT OF LETTERS SEGMENT

Tess Vigeland: As we’ve been saying for weeks our inbox has been flooded with your questions about the financial crisis and how to navigate it, but you’ve also written in with your thoughts about our coverage. Time for your comments, compliments and complaints.

Several of you chided us on the title of our special show two weeks ago. We called it “Who can you trust?” Grammar 101, wrote Aaron Hoiland from St. Peter, Minnesota. “You” is the subject, he says. “Can trust” is the verb phrase. “Who/whom” should then be in the objective case. So we should have asked “Whom do you trust?” We were going for what you might call common usage, but consider our knuckles rapped.

Economist Chris Thornberg made an appearance on the show recently and guest host Scott Jagow asked him when might be a good time to buy a house:

Chris Thornberg: It’s the right place, it’s the right time, it’s the right school district, because your wife won’t shut up…

Oh no he didn’t! Well, to be fair — which apparently we weren’t in the editing process — he did say “or husband” right after that. But Betsey Levin of San Francisco had something to say about what went on the air:

Betsey Levin: I personally cringed, and then went straight to the computer. In my opinion, it was a huge gaffe on the part of the show to leave that comment in.

Valli Power of Trinity Center, California, had props for our conversation with three small business owners on last week’s program. She says of our panel: “They reminded me that if everybody would disconnect themselves from the hysterical mode and begin to think creatively about what they really need as opposed to what some advertiser tells them they need … then we can find our way out of the Wal-Mart/credit card morass and get through this. We’ll come back smarter and stronger.” Let’s hope so.

And finally, cue the ukelele! In my recent feature about a high school econ class, teacher Ron Settle reminded his students that if he could predict the future of the financial world, he wouldn’t be in the classroom; he’d be on a beach sipping Mai Tais.

Well, Neva Keres of Honolulu, Hawaii, called in with an offer.

Neva Keres: They wouldn’t need a crystal ball to get to our beach and our Mai Tais, so come on down! Our tourism is off big time. Should we be handing out crystal balls with directions to Waikiki Beach?

Um… yes!

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