Monday, June 15, 2026

From Liquid Paper to MTV!

A divorced single mom got fired from her bank secretary job in 1958.  Twenty-one years later she sold her side hustle for $47.5 million — and her teenage helper went on to invent MTV.

Her name was Bette Nesmith Graham.

Born in Dallas in 1924, Bette was a high school dropout. She married a soldier named Warren Nesmith at 19, gave birth to a son named Michael in 1942, and watched her marriage collapse when her husband came back from World War II.  By 1946 she was a 22-year-old single mother with no diploma, no career, and no plan.

She earned her GED in night school.  She took a typing job.  By 1951, she was the executive secretary to the chairman of the board of the Texas Bank and Trust in Dallas, earning about $300 a month.  She was good at her job.  She was also a terrible typist.

The Texas Bank had just installed brand new IBM electric typewriters.  The keys were sensitive.  Carbon-film ribbons left ink that could not be erased cleanly. A single typo could mean retyping an entire page from scratch.  Her son Michael later remembered watching his mother sit at the kitchen table in the evenings, trying to fix mistakes, sometimes bursting into "tears of panic" over the fear of being fired.

Bette had one side hustle that saved her: she earned extra money painting holiday window displays at the bank.

One day, watching herself paint over a mistake on a window — calmly, with a little brush, no eraser needed — she had a thought.

"An artist never corrects by erasing," she said later.  "They paint over the error."

That night she went to the public library, looked up a recipe for tempera paint, and went home to her kitchen blender.  She mixed up a thin white liquid. She poured it into an empty nail polish bottle.  She tinted it to match her bank's stationery.  She brought it to work the next morning with a small watercolor brush.

When she made a typo, she dabbed a little white paint over it, let it dry, and typed right over the spot.

Her boss never noticed.  For five years.

But her fellow secretaries did.  They asked her for some.  Then their friends asked.  Then strangers from other offices started showing up.  By 1956 she was making batches in her kitchen and selling them out of nail polish bottles.  She called it Mistake Out.  Her son Michael — by then 14 years old — and his friends filled the bottles in the garage for a dollar an hour.

In 1958, she got fired.

She had absent-mindedly typed her own company's name — Mistake Out Co. — onto a letter for her boss.  He sent her packing.

It turned out to be the best thing that ever happened to her.

She renamed the product Liquid Paper, patented it, and devoted herself to it full time.  A 1958 mention in a trade magazine called The Office brought in 500 inquiries from across the country.  General Electric placed an order for 400 bottles in three colors — four times her entire monthly production.  By 1968 she was selling a million bottles a year. By the mid-1970s, 25 million bottles a year.

She built her headquarters in Dallas and ran it the way she wished her old bosses had run things.  The Liquid Paper Corporation had an on-site library.  An on-site child care center for her employees' kids.  She filled management with women.  She integrated her staff. She hired employees with disabilities, including blind workers and wheelchair users.  She drew her org chart as a circle, not a pyramid.  She paid for 75% of any employee's continuing education.  She let employee committees vote on company decisions.

It was the late 1970s. Most of corporate America was decades behind her.

Then in 1975, her second husband, Robert Graham — whom she had married in 1962 and brought into the business — divorced her and tried to push her out of her own company.  He changed her formula.  He cut off her royalties.  Bette, sick and exhausted, fought back and held onto a 49% stake.

In 1979, with her health failing, Bette sold Liquid Paper to Gillette for $47.5 million in stock — about $173 million in today's money — plus a royalty on every single bottle sold for the next twenty years.

Six months later, on May 12, 1980, she had a stroke and died.  She was 56 years old.

Half of her fortune went to two foundations she had built to support women in business and women in the arts.  The other half went to her son.

That son had spent his teenage years filling Liquid Paper bottles in her garage.  By the time of his mother's death, he was already famous — but for something else entirely. His name was Michael Nesmith.  He was the wool-cap-wearing guitarist of The Monkees, one of the biggest pop groups of the 1960s.

What happened next is the part nobody tells.

Michael took his Liquid Paper royalties and used them to fund a small experimental TV show he had dreamed up — a show that played short promotional films set to popular songs.  He called it PopClips.  It aired in 1980 and 1981 on a cable network called Nickelodeon.

PopClips was the direct prototype for MTV, which launched in August 1981.  Industry historians credit Michael Nesmith's work with helping invent the modern music video format that would transform pop music for the next thirty years.

So the next time you see an old Liquid Paper bottle in a desk drawer, remember:

A divorced single mother who got fired from her secretary job for being a bad typist invented a kitchen-blender solution, built one of the most progressive workplaces in 1970s America, sold her company for nearly fifty million dollars — and her son used the money to help invent MTV.

Bette Graham proved something her old boss had failed to notice for five years.

The mistakes weren't the problem. They were the opportunity.
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Sunday, June 14, 2026

FIFA Vancouver 2026

 

The 2026 FIFA games in Vancouver have started.  The first game was last night.  We heard downtown was very busy but we never went near it.  I loved seeing all the Australians who flew to Vancouver to watch their team they call the Socceroos!  There are also a lot of Turkiye fans.

Let's hope there is no problems and all the fans have a great time.  

There are watch parties for those who didn't get tickets in many areas around Vancouver.  We went to a pub for dinner and it was busy!  It's great for all the restaurants and bars!






Saturday, June 13, 2026

The Dollar Store

I know three Dollar Stores near me have been closed because of a rat infestations!  Someone put on Facebook, "when you go to the Dollar Store, look at the bread, if it has been chewed on, don't buy it!"  That kept me away for months!  I've never bought any food at the Dollar Store!   I knew about electronics and safety concerns but the other items are interesting.  I usually just purchase stationery and greeting cards.

Dollar stores in Canada can be convenient for inexpensive items, but it's not worth the risk or repeated replacement.  By avoiding these items, you can prevent safety hazards, reduce repeated spending, and ensure better quality for essential products.  For safer alternatives, consider reputable brands or specialty stores for electronics, health products, and durable household items.

Here are 13 items to avoid:

  1. Batteries – Off-brand batteries often wear out quickly, leak, and can damage electronics, especially in cold Canadian winter.  
  2. Phone chargers and cables – Low-quality wiring and insulation can overheat, fail, or even pose fire hazards.
  3. Medications and supplements – Storage conditions may degrade potency, and labels may lack clear dosage or allergy information.
  4. Electronics – Earbuds, radios, clocks, and Bluetooth devices often break quickly due to poor soldering and fragile components. 
  5. Knives and cutting tools – Cheap steel loses sharpness fast, increasing the risk of injury.
  6. Toys for young children – Small parts, poor construction, and choking hazards make some dollar store toys unsafe.

  7. School supplies like pencils, scissors, and markers – Low durability means they may not last the school yea 
    .
  8. Canned or packaged food – Items may be near expiration or improperly stored, affecting quality and safety.
  9. Chocolate and temperature-sensitive snacks – Heat exposure can cause spoilage or staleness .
  10. Holiday lights and electrical decorations – Poor insulation and low-quality wiring increase fire risk 
  11. Cheap kitchen utensils – Rubber spatulas, plastic tools, and other utensils may break quickly, making them a false economy 
  12. Cosmetics and nail polish – Low-quality ingredients can cause skin irritation or degrade quickly 
  13. Party favors and small plastic toys – Often break easily and may contain unsafe materials, especially for children 

Friday, June 12, 2026

FIFA World Cup Opening Ceremonies

Vancouver, BC 

I didn't see on television yesterday but I found it on You Tube.  If you want to see a spectacular colourful event held in Mexico yesterday, here it is:


 This makes me proud to be Canadian:




Thursday, June 11, 2026

Cruising to Alaska

We haven't booked a cruise to Alaska this year.  We usually go every year, sometimes more than once.  If someone asks me about what to do in Alaska, my favorite shore excursion in Ketchikan is a Crab Feast.  You can book it through the ship or on your own.  The ship's excursion usually charters a boat to get to a lodge.

We always go to George Inlet Lodge and book directly through them.  They pick you up by the rock statue right at the pier in a van.  The people who work there are all students and very friendly.  To get a spot in the van you need to book very early.  It's about a 30 minute drive and the scenery is wonderful.  We've done this on our the last four trips to Alaska and it is delicious.  The meal starts with a nice green salad, it includes a drink, blueberry cheesecake and you get a lot of crab.  I have to tell them to stop as they give you so much!  Two years ago we paid US $75.00 a person.  This year it's increased to $109.95.  I realize prices have increased.  

https://catchcrabs.com/

A cruiser posted a picture of the menu at Ketchikan Crab & Go.  That makes the $109.95 crab feast at George Inlet Lodge a real deal!




Wednesday, June 10, 2026

We will not walk away

Every so often, a journalist comes along who doesn’t just report the news — they help you understand the world. For me, Ali Velshi has always been one of those rare voices.

Though he’s now a well‑known Canadian journalist working with MSNBC (now rebranded as MS Now), his story began far from our borders. Born in Kenya to a family with deep roots in East Africa and South Asia, Velshi eventually made his way to Canada, where he built the foundation of a remarkable career. That global perspective has always shaped the way he tells a story — with context, clarity, and a deep respect for the truth.

I’ve watched his Sunday show for years and genuinely enjoyed it. There was something steadying about the way he approached complicated issues: no theatrics, no shortcuts, just thoughtful journalism that treated viewers like adults capable of understanding nuance.

Recently, he stepped down from his weekend program and will now be hosting a nightly show on MS Now. For many of us who appreciated his weekend presence, it feels like a shift — but also an opportunity. A nightly platform means more space for the kind of reporting he does best: connecting the dots, challenging misinformation, and reminding us why journalism still matters.

What I’ve always found most compelling about Velshi is his insistence on explaining why the news matters. He talks openly about the erosion of rights, the fragility of democratic norms, and the importance of protecting a free press. Not in a sensational way — but in a way that makes you stop and think about the world we’re building for the next generation.

In a time when trust in institutions is shaky and misinformation spreads faster than facts, voices like his feel essential. Journalism isn’t just about headlines; it’s about accountability, transparency, and the courage to speak plainly when it counts.

Ali Velshi has never shied away from that responsibility. And as he moves into this new chapter on MS Now, I’m looking forward to seeing how he continues to shape the conversation — one thoughtful, steady broadcast at a time.

Here is the last report he did on Sunday:



Tuesday, June 9, 2026

Happy Anniversary

 

Some moments arrive softly, almost shyly, yet change the course of a lifetime.

For our daughter Cheryl, that moment came at 12:01 AM on January 1, 2000 — the very first minute of a brand‑new century. As fireworks lit the sky and the world celebrated a new beginning, Dave chose that perfect, symbolic instant to ask her the most important question of his life. She said yes, and with that, their new century truly began.

What followed was a year filled with planning, dreaming, and building a future together. On June 9, 2001, surrounded by family and friends, Cheryl and Dave were married. It was a day full of joy, hope, and the unmistakable feeling that these two were meant to walk through life side by side.

For their honeymoon, they received a wedding gift — a cruise to Alaska. The glaciers, the quiet majesty of the Inside Passage, the sense of adventure… it all suited them perfectly. That trip became one of their most cherished memories, a beginning that set the tone for the years to come.

Now, 25 years later, they are returning to Alaska once again — this time to celebrate their 25th wedding anniversary.  And in true Cheryl-and-Dave fashion, they’re doing it with intention.  They are sailing on the brand‑new Star Princess, a ship that represents fresh beginnings and new chapters — just like that first minute of the year 2000.  

We are so proud of both of you and wish you many more years of your life together.

From Liquid Paper to MTV!

A divorced single mom got fired from her bank secretary job in 1958.  Twenty-one years later she sold her side hustle for $47.5 million — an...