Quiet Echo: A Cedar Valley News Podcast

The Sentence They Waited a Lifetime to Hear

6 min · 23 de jun de 2026
Portada del episodio The Sentence They Waited a Lifetime to Hear

Descripción

On this Monday, Teresa Nikas remembers a man who once set a cardboard box holding his whole life on her desk, hoping a piece of it might be worth printing. She thinks of him while reading about PageTurner, a scam which phoned more than eight hundred American authors, most of them elderly, told each one their work had been chosen by a publisher or a film studio, and took tens of millions of dollars before the man who ran it pleaded guilty. Teresa finds the cruelty not in the money but in the sentence the victims were read the very words they had waited a lifetime to hear and she closes with the real thing the scam was only counterfeiting: someone who loves you, sitting down to read a page of your work out loud. The front porch is open. Readers of the Cedar Valley News are gathering on Facebook to respond to the editorials, share their own stories, and join a conversation built on respect, honesty, and no party lines. Come sit with us: https://bit.ly/40p8jKy

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The Flag a Fourteen-Year-Old Orphan Drew

On this Thursday, Chloe Papadakis remembers a flag-design contest she ran for the children of Cedar Valley, and re-sees a much older one through it. In nineteen twenty-seven, the Territory of Alaska asked its schoolchildren to design a flag, and the winner was Benny Benson, a fourteen-year-old Alaska Native orphan whose eight gold stars, the Big Dipper and the North Star, became the state flag and later flew to the moon. For the country’s two hundred and fiftieth anniversary, Alaska has sealed a copy of his design into a time capsule, to be opened in the year twenty-two seventy-six. Out of everything a vast state could send to the future, Chloe notes, it chose the drawing of an orphaned boy, and she closes with what the story asks of us: ask the children to make something. You never know whose flag you are holding. The front porch is open. Readers of the Cedar Valley News are gathering on Facebook to respond to the editorials, share their own stories, and join a conversation built on respect, honesty, and no party lines. Come sit with us: https://bit.ly/40p8jKy

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