Cheryl-Anne Millsap spins a short yarn with a leaning towards the absurdity of growing older. With raw prose she includes us in the wordplay exchanged with a dear friend "of a certain age." The puns seem to fall out of her mouth pushing her friend to the limits, but letting us understand the thier relationship just a little. We learn that Cheryl-Anne loves words, and can't help using them to cajole and cavort through this conversation.
The subject matter is generic and undated. The tone is engaging and soft, befitting a spot on a morning news broadcast, or tossed into a magazine show.
Comments for Home Planet: Trying for that 'Sun Kissed' look.
Produced by Patrick Klausen
Other pieces by Spokane Public Radio
Rating Summary
1 comment
Bill Palladino
Posted on June 08, 2005 at 06:52 AM | Permalink
Review of Trying for that 'Sun Kissed' look.
Cheryl-Anne Millsap spins a short yarn with a leaning towards the absurdity of growing older. With raw prose she includes us in the wordplay exchanged with a dear friend "of a certain age." The puns seem to fall out of her mouth pushing her friend to the limits, but letting us understand the thier relationship just a little. We learn that Cheryl-Anne loves words, and can't help using them to cajole and cavort through this conversation.
The subject matter is generic and undated. The tone is engaging and soft, befitting a spot on a morning news broadcast, or tossed into a magazine show.