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December 26-27 snowstorm December 29, 2025

Posted by Mike C. in Personal, Photography, Weather.
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Less than a week after the first snow of the season (before winter officially began), another round of snow hit the New York metro area Friday afternoon into Saturday morning (December 26 to 27).

The initial forecast of 3 to 5 inches ballooned to 6 to 9 inches and a winter storm warning. While that scenario rang true in parts of Suffolk and Westchester Counties, and throughout Connecticut, Western Long Island was spared the worst. The snow even ended much sooner than 1PM Saturday and the winter storm warning was canceled. I wouldn’t know that until I woke up around 6AM. My 12-inch ruler measured 4 inches of snow accumulation on the front lawn at 8AM, matching the initial “3 to 5” forecast.

My photographic timeline begins with three photos on Friday, December 26.

We continue on Saturday, December 27, after learning my neck of the woods, so to speak, was spared the worst.

At exactly 8AM, I stuck the 12-inch ruler in the grass (bottom left) and measured exactly 4 inches. Rather than wait for my dad to use the snow blower, I figured “less” accumulation wouldn’t take too long to shovel off the ground and clear off Mom and Dad’s cars with a snow brush. I was wrong. The strenuous solo task took one hour and 42 minutes, but I do not regret going it alone.

The remaining photos range from the immediate aftermath at 9:44 AM to early melting at 12:27 PM. My iPhone 17 Pro’s stabilization successfully countered my post-shoveling tremor in the ground-level photos.

As you’ll see, I shoveled in the usual spots: driveway, sidewalks to property lines, left side of the house to the oil burner fuel cap. I couldn’t shovel much of what I cleared off the cars.

At the time of publication on the morning of Monday, December 29, the snow is melting rapidly thanks to mild air and incoming rain. Seasonably cold weather returns tonight and beyond.

Until the next round of snow, thank you for reading. Happy New Year.

Instrumental Invasion, Christmas 2025 Edition (12/24, 5PM; 12/25, 9PM) December 25, 2025

Posted by Mike C. in Airchecks, Audio, Baseball, Bluegrass, Christmas, Classical, Comedy, Film, Internet, Jazz, Jazz Fusion, Media, Music, New Age, Personal, Radio, smooth jazz, Sports, Technology, TV, Video, Video Games, Weather.
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A special three-hour Christmas 2025 edition of Instrumental Invasion was recorded principally on December 1 with pickups recorded during quality control on the morning of the 3rd and again that afternoon in case the show didn’t only air on Christmas. Indeed, it aired Christmas Eve at 5PM and reran on Christmas at 9PM. (I use the past tense despite publishing on Christmas morning.)

Before I say more, here is the scoped aircheck:

What I said in the outro is true. WCWP/WXBA station manager Dan Cox hosted a Microsoft Teams meeting for alumni on October 27. When he opened the “floor” to questions, I had two:

  • May I contribute to the rotation of legal IDs voiced by alumni?
  • Would it be okay if I recorded a special Christmas show?

Dan said yes to both. Right after the meeting I recorded VO for the ID, which turned out this way:

I didn’t start work on the Christmas Instrumental Invasion until the following Monday, November 3, when Dan answered a follow-up email about show length. He said it could be as long as I wanted. So, I chose to make a three-hour show. The playlist, created and tweaked between November 3 and 15, was reworked from the playlist for what would have been the fourth and final Christmas show of my Wednesday night run. (2020, 2021, 2022 recaps) The renovation hiatus ended that run sooner than planned. 22 of the 23 songs from the unused playlist were incorporated into this one with minimal rearranging. 15 songs were added to pad out the three hours (all under an hour in length), and the 23rd song from the original playlist was changed due to time constraints in hour 2.

Annotations drafting began November 5, when I completed my first playlist draft, and tweaks followed along through the 15th. For the first time ever, I’m sharing the script. Work on that began when my initial annotations draft completed on November 10. Tweaks continued all the way into recording and pickups.

I had planned on doing as I did for the last two Homecoming Weekend prerecords (2024, 2025), by recording and mixing live on my Twitch channel from December 4 to 6. I even did like this year’s HCW show and preloaded the music and liners into Adobe Audition multitrack session files. However, I developed an obsession with the video game PowerWash Simulator 2, for which I have the Xbox Series X/S port. I wasn’t about to halt gameplay for three days when I was on the verge of completing the game’s career mode. (I did that on December 6 and completed the game entirely [in its initial form] two nights later.) So, I recorded and edited all 15 talk breaks (five per hour) in a three-hour span on December 1. Then, I mixed them into the preloaded sessions. All three hours were within the 58:00 to 59:59 range Dan Cox asks of show files with hour 1 skewing closer to the minimum at 58:20, which I reworked to 58:36. Hours 2 and 3 required reworking in the opposite direction to reach run times of 59:58 and 59:57.

The December 3 quality control session required a handful of pickups with truncating in the last two hours for even shorter times. I misinterpreted an email that afternoon, leading me to think the show either might not air on Christmas or wouldn’t be limited to Christmas. The resulting evergreen pickups worked in my favor as Dan chose to premiere the show Christmas Eve at 5PM and run it again on Christmas at 9PM. The end result hour by hour: 58:39, 59:52, 59:54. There was no dead air between files as legal IDs bridged the gaps. That meant the show after mine began before the top of the hour.

This paragraph was written December 9 after learning that Gordon Goodwin died of pancreatic cancer at the age of 70. His Big Phat Band were part of my show with “I Heard the Bells on Christmas Day.” It’s too late for me to redo the talk break for the set with the song as I’ve already sent Dan the show hour files. Gordon will live on through his music, not just with the Big Phat Band, but for the TV shows and films he scored.

“You wanna have a catch?” in the intro was a quote from the end of Field of Dreams where Ray gets to play catch with his father. The Colin Mochrie joke about “foreplay” (not Fourplay) is a sound command for my Twitch streams and was sourced from this Whose Line video:

“Pickup lines that would never work” (Scenes from a Hat suggestion)

And lastly, pianist Bill Evans crediting “Joe LaBarbera on drums” was from the end of a live performance of “Days of Wine and Roses” at Keystone Korner in San Francisco. It’s part of a posthumous box set called Consecration: The Final Recordings Part 2.

I’ll leave you with screenshots of each completed multitrack session on the morning of December 3 (before the evergreen revisions):

I wish you a Merry Christmas and a Happy New Year.

Smooth Jazz for Scholars 2026 dates/lineup December 18, 2025

Posted by Mike C. in Personal, smooth jazz, Travel.
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On December 5, Jay Rowe announced the lineups and dates for the 23rd anniversary of Smooth Jazz for Scholars. This annual two-night benefit in Jay’s hometown of Milford, Connecticut, benefits the Milford Public Schools music department. Each night opens with a performance by one of the schools’ jazz ensembles, followed by Jay and the headliners. There will be five headliners on Friday, May 1, and four on Saturday, May 2. Doors to the Veterans Memorial Auditorium open at 7PM, and the shows begin at 8PM.

Here was Jay’s Facebook announcement:

This will be the sixth year in a row for Marion Meadows. Timmy Maia is headlining for the third consecutive year. Althea René is making her second appearance, twice in three years. Alex Bugnon, Steve Cole, and Steve Oliver also return for the second time in three years. Alex and Jessy J are appearing for fourth time overall, Steve Cole for the fifth time. It’s Brian Simpson and Steve Oliver’s third time overall. Chieli Minucci is as much of a Smooth Jazz for Scholars mainstay as Marion and Timmy, appearing too many times to count. It will be a treat to see all of them.

Repeating the information in Jay’s announcement:

Friday, May 1
Marion Meadows
Brian Simpson
Jessy J
Steve Oliver
Timmy Maia

Saturday, May 2
Alex Bugnon
Chieli Minucci
Althea René
Steve Cole

Location:
Veterans Memorial Auditorium in the Parsons Government Center
70 W. River St.
Milford, CT 06460

Tickets: $55 for one night, $95 for both nights

General admission tickets can be bought through Eventbrite.

Reserved seating must be ordered by sending funds to Jay via apps or a check.

Venmo: John-Rowe-43
PayPal: funhouse63@aol.com
Zelle: 203-415-8878

Otherwise, send your check to:
Jay Rowe
P.O. Box 3723
Milford, CT 06460

I’ll end this promotional post with recaps of last year’s first night and second night.

December 13-14 winter storm December 16, 2025

Posted by Mike C. in Photography, Video, Weather.
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It’s been nearly five years since Long Island had a major winter storm before the winter solstice. That storm began as rain on the night of Saturday, December 13, and ended as several hours of powdery snow on Sunday, December 14. It finally ceased at noon, and contrary to my belief while watching it fall, this was not a wet snow. Wet snow doesn’t sprinkle into fluff when you toss it in the air with a shovel. More on that later.

Rightly expecting the worst, I rearranged items in the garage Friday afternoon (December 12). I moved the snow blower to the front of the garage and placed two shovels and three scrapers on the front porch.

As usual, the end result went against what was initially forecast, and what the winter weather advisory first called for. 1 to 3 inches became 2 to 5 with locally heavier pockets of 6 inches. Even that was low, at least for Nassau and Suffolk Counties. The further north and east you went, more snow accumulated on the ground. I measured 6 3/4 inches on the front yard grass with my 12″ ruler before shoveling at 11:40 AM. Adding whatever fell in my first 20 minutes outside, I estimate 7 inches of snow accumulated in my section of Wantagh. The same amount was officially reported by the National Weather Service in Levittown, East Massapequa, Bethpage, Glen Cove, and Jericho.

So, it was a good thing I planned ahead on Friday, except for bringing out a bag of rock salt.

My current sleep pattern sometimes has me going to bed in the early evening, and that was the case on Saturday. I went to sleep at 5:30 PM and was in and out of sleep until 4:30 AM. After catching up on DVR’d content, I began my photographic timeline.

From 8:17 to 8:20 AM, I took a series of videos with one of my camcorders (overcoming two system errors), and pieced them together in Adobe Premiere Pro.

I’d grown impatient by 11:30 AM. Even though the weather radar indicated the clearing line had not yet reached Eastern Nassau, I geared up to start shoveling. Within minutes, my dad Bill prepped the snow blower for use. Once the machine was working, Dad went to work.

These photos were taken between 11:59 AM and 12:07 PM on my iPhone 17 Pro (which is why I didn’t watermark them).

I shoveled by the garage and on the left side of the house. I stopped while Dad used the snow blower before shoveling further at the curb, clearing snow off Dad and Mom’s cars, and shoveling as much of what I’d cleared unless it was too packed in to move.

The after photos:

There was a brief period of snow showers after I came inside, thankfully with no accumulation.

Temperatures are below freezing as I type this last paragraph on the afternoon of Monday, December 15, but milder weather and rain are in the forecast starting Wednesday. That will go a long way in melting and washing away Sunday’s snow.

Does this storm mean we’re in for a busy winter? Only time will tell. Until I recap the next one(s), thank you for reading.