Superduper

By Steve Cichon
steve@buffalostories.com
@stevebuffalo

Super Duper Publications makes fun, practical materials for speech language pathology (SLP), autism, articulation, auditory processing, vocabulary, speech therapy. SuperDuper is a popular, powerful, and easy-to-use app for quickly creating a fully bootable backup (or 'clone') of your hard drive, whether you're recovering from a mishap or just migrating. SuperDuper is the wildly acclaimed program that makes recovery painless, because it makes creating a fully bootable backup painless. Its incredibly clear, friendly interface is understandable, easy to use, and SuperDuper's built-in scheduler makes it trivial to back up automatically. It's the perfect complement to Time Machine, allowing you to. For over 30 years, Super Duper Deli has served breakfast and lunch to the people of Edison, Metuchen, South Plainfield and Piscataway. We have dine-in and take out options, as well as catering and offer free delivery. The Super Duper Weenie in Fairfield, Connecticut redefines the classic American meal. Of course, we serve what we think are the world's best hot dogs, split and grilled, laid into a fresh-baked roll, and slathered with our own home-made relishes and high-quality toppings.

This week we’re looking at the women who were the first to make their presence felt in what has traditionally been the male-dominated broadcasting industry.

Today– the women who were the first to grace Buffalo television screens.

  1. LISTEN- Buffalo's Women TV pioneers

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Television came to Buffalo with Channel 4 in 1948, and the only women prominently featured in the ceremonial sign on of the station were the chorus girls from the Town Casino.

Some of the pioneering women in Buffalo TV were the same women who pioneered in Buffalo radio.

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Sally Work was called “the dean of women commentators” by the Buffalo Evening News. She’d already been on the radio for 15 years by the time she took her act to the new medium of TV. When Channel 2 signed on, Helen Neville took her radio act to TV as well.

Of course, there were those who made their first mark in TV as well.

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Starting in 1952, a beloved and strong woman made her debut on Channel 4.

Viewers watched Mildred Miller and her husband Bill cook and interview celebrities for 20 years on “Meet the Millers.

Doris Jones was first seen as a commercial model on Channel 4 when she was still in high school. She’d eventually host a women’s show on Channel 7, and become Buffalo’s first female staff announcer and weathercaster on Channel 2.

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Paula Drew was the spokesperson for Niagara Frontier’s dairy farmers, and as Buffalo’s milk maid, she did weather forecasts wrapped around milk commercials. She was later the voice of Tops Friendly Markets.

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While Paula Drew was at Tops, it was Joey at Super Duper in the 70s and 80s.