Bill Maine oversees all operations at Jacobs Media and hosts the "WDUN Morning Show with Bill Maine," weekdays 5:30-9 a.m. When not on the radio, you'll find him water skiing on Lanier, running, or smoking ribs on his Green Egg. Bill has been a part of Jacobs Media since 1980. Bill is addicted to peanut M&M's with no desire to reform. Email: [email protected]. Twitter: @BillMaine
More employers are sharing how much their jobs pay. Bradley Schurman author of "The Super Age" talks about this trend and others about which managers should be aware during his visit with Bill Maine on "Mornings on Maine Street."
"Long Shadows" is the latest in David Baldacci's Memory Man series. Baldacci returned to Maine Street to share the latest adventure of Amos Decker, the man who remembers everything.
Award-winning journalist John Pruitt stopped by Maine Street to talk about his novel "Tell It True." Although a work of fiction, there's plenty of history in this thought-provoking story about race relations in the 60s.
Pennie Crockett was in an abusive relationship for some time before she realized the toll it was taking on her. Now out of the relationship, Crockett shares her story in "From Battered to Boss Lady."
Patriotism and freedom of speech are on full display in John Schneider's "To Die For." Schneider took time to visit Maine Street and share how the movie came to be and why it is so important to him.
In 2018 CNN Reporter Nora Neus stumbled across the twitter feed from Muhammad Najem, a 15-year-old Syrian using social media to tell his story in any way he could.
Congressman Buddy Carter is the only pharmacist in the Congress and represents the 1st District of Georgia. He joins Martha Zoller to talk about Mental Health packages in the Congress, Pro-life as a way of life and he got some international coverage on some comments made about Meghan Markle.
At the dawn of the pandemic, the cruise ship Zaandam was beset by COVID-19. As a result, it was not allowed to dock for nearly a month. Michael Smith and Jonathan Franklin chronicle what it was like for the passengers and crew in their book "Cabin Fever."