Maryland
Collectors show and tell as ‘Antiques Roadshow’ films new season at Maryland Zoo in Baltimore
The Maryland Zoo in Baltimore was abuzz Tuesday with more than mere animal activity.
Beyond the black-tailed prairie dogs, people toting paintings, silverware, and oddities of all shapes and sizes queued up to find out how much money their cherished items were worth — and whether they’d land an appearance on “Antiques Roadshow,” the long-running PBS series that was filming at the zoo for the day.
Rosalie — producers requested attendees be identified by first names only — arrived with a trio of Orioles signs from 1966, 1979 and 1983, all years she attended the team’s World Series games.
“I got them for free … with a lot of excitement,” Rosalie, a 78-year-old retired psychotherapist who lives in Locust Point, said as she recounted taking the 1966 sign from the stadium, and the other two from light poles she and her brother climbed in Federal Hill.
She learned Tuesday that they’re worth around $5,500 as a set — a value she imagined is influenced by how well the Orioles have been playing lately.
It’s the first time the show has returned to Charm City since a stop in 2007, during filming for Season 12, a spokesperson said. This year’s Baltimore visit was the last stop of the 2024 production tour, which focused on historic locations and included visits to Las Vegas, Nevada; Bentonville, Arkansas; Littleton, Colorado; and Urbandale, Iowa.
Each city visit will result in three episodes for Season 29 of “Antiques Roadshow” airing on PBS next year, producers said. Around 5 million people tune in each week for “Antiques Roadshow,” which has received 21 Emmy Award nominations over the years and is PBS’s most-watched ongoing series.
In Baltimore, 2,700 pairs of free tickets were distributed to attend the event.
The show “was due to come back to Baltimore,” said “Antiques Roadshow” executive producer Marsha Bemko, noting that Baltimore’s location made the event accessible to people from outside of the state. She joined “Antiques Roadshow” in 1999 as the series’ senior producer.
Of the more than 25,000 items brought to “Antiques Roadshow” tapings during the five-city tour, only around 150 appraisals per stop were filmed, producers said. Still, at her previous stop in Urbandale, Iowa, Bemko estimated she walked over 9 miles during filming.
“Most of the people who are coming today won’t be taped. They’re coming to an event,” Bemko said. “And they want to have a good experience and they’re excited to have this stuff looked at. Most of them will think it’s worth more than it is. So the very least they can have is a pleasant day at the zoo.”
Producers were looking for locations that could accommodate weather changes, large crowds and film crews, and the zoo agreed to host them, Bemko said.
Some, like Rosalie and her husband Ivo, didn’t have to travel far.
Ivo, a retired banker in his 70s, said the appraisal of the couple’s Orioles signs in Ikea frames was “shocking,” and that they’d hung them in their son’s bedroom when he was a kid. He added that they put the signs on display in their windows for game days when they lived in Federal Hill.
The couple attended previous “Antiques Roadshow” events in D.C., Richmond and Wilmington, and have watched the show “from day one,” Rosalie said.
Myrtis Bedolla, the founding director of Galerie Myrtis in Baltimore, joined “Antiques Roadshow” for the first time Tuesday as an appraiser. She said her expertise is primarily in works by African American artists from the 20th and 21st centuries.
But sitting at the paintings booth in the morning, she inspected works of all kinds.
“At the tables, we’re generalists,” she said.
Another appraiser, Radcliffe Jewelers’ founder Paul Winicki, said he started his work with “Antiques Roadshow” nearly two decades ago at the Baltimore Convention Center. More than 40 years ago, he opened his jewelry store, which he still owns and which has stores in Pikesville and Newark, Delaware.
On Tuesday morning, he was appraising a small lidded silver container that could have once stored sugar and bore a Bonaparte crest, engraved in 1876.
Elizabeth Patterson Bonaparte, who is buried in Baltimore, was the first wife of French emperor Napoleon Bonaparte’s brother, Jérôme Bonaparte. The silver object was owned by someone farther down the family tree, Winicki estimated, but could be valued at around $2,500, particularly for a Baltimore collector.
It was a “neat piece for a silver nut like myself,” he said. “If you were in Wisconsin, people might say ‘Who is that?’ … Bonaparte stuff would bring more money in Baltimore, generally, than anywhere else, because she resided here and she was from the Patterson family.”
Carol, a 74-year-old semi-retired nurse, came to Tuesday’s event from the Eastern Shore with her daughter, daughter-in-law and granddaughter in tow — plus multiple dolls for appraisal.
One — in a box marked “Grandma’s Doll” and made of composition and real wood, with a bisque face — dates back to the 1890s and would sell for around $200 to $300.
“I didn’t know what to expect,” Carol said. “And I wasn’t going to bring her, because I thought she was plastic.”
Sometimes, however, it’s the most unassuming items that surprise.
Larry, 63, traveled to the Antiques Roadshow set from Pennsylvania with his wife Regina, 65, and was filmed as he spoke with appraiser Ken Farmer, who counts folk art among his specialties.
The item in question: a small, wooden Shaker box that belonged to Larry’s mother.
The estimated retail value: $12,000 to $18,000.
“This is a little Shaker box made around 1851,” reads a note stored inside. “Treasure it always as I have for many years.”
The note gifting the box to someone for Christmas, plus writing on the underside of the box, accounted for about half of the box’s value, said Larry, who works for a consulting company.
“It’ll stay in the family,” and in a safe, he said. “I don’t need a grandkid playing with it.”
Maryland
Trump gains in Maryland: A trend or an aberration? – Maryland Matters
No, Maryland is not about to flip from blue to red.
Vice President Kamala Harris carried the state by more than 20 points, and Democrats held the open U.S. Senate seat and were on the way to retaining their 7-1 advantage in the state’s U.S. House delegation — their top political priorities this year. They also waded into local school board elections for the first time in recent memory and fared pretty well.
But former President Donald Trump did get a higher percentage of the vote in Maryland this year than he did in 2020, just as he did in 48 of 50 states. And he appears to have improved his numbers in all 24 of the state’s jurisdictions.
In 2020, President Biden defeated Trump 65% to 32% in Maryland and carried Baltimore City and nine counties. This year, Harris is ahead 60% to 37% and carried eight jurisdictions — though the margin is expected to widen some after more mail-in ballots are tallied.
“Maryland is not an island, so those national trends are going to come here,” said Mileah Kromer, a pollster and director of the University of Maryland, Baltimore County, Institute of Politics.
The question is whether any of the political developments that put Trump over the top will have any lasting effect nationally or in Maryland — whether there is anything for state Republicans to build on or for state Democrats to worry about.
Population centers like Baltimore City and Prince George’s and Montgomery counties are going to remain Democratic powerhouses, as they have been for decades. But politics can be a game of inches and micro trends, and Maryland does have some red and purple jurisdictions and swing-y legislative districts that political strategists fret over.
Harris easily beats Trump in Maryland; the rest of the country is still a question mark
“Maryland is bigger than the core solid blue, geographically-centric counties that Maryland Democrats have come to rely on,” said Peter E. Perini Sr., a Hagerstown City Council member and former Washington County Democratic chair.
There have been no public exit polls on the Maryland vote this week, so it isn’t clear if some of the changes in the national electorate also occurred here. The Maryland State Board of Elections will release vote statistics from congressional districts and legislative districts in a few weeks.
Sometimes a single election can transform an area for a long time.
A prime example is in legislative District 6, centered in blue-collar Dundalk in Baltimore County. Going into the 2014 election, the district had a Democratic state senator and three Democratic delegates. But the delegation flipped to all-Republican in 2014, the same year former Gov. Larry Hogan (R) was elected in a major upset, and there isn’t much talk about Democrats trying to win the district back these days.
That development, in the view of many strategists, presaged Trump’s rise in 2016, and particularly his appeal to working-class voters. The trend accelerated in this year’s White House election, not just with working-class white voters, but with working-class Black and Latino men as well — a shift that some Democratic strategists find particularly concerning.
Paul Ellington, the former executive director of the Maryland Republican Party, said the GOP should learn from and build on that development, nationally and in the state. He said that Trump, in his unconventional way, listened to the concerns of working-class Americans and crafted a message on the economy and other issues that appealed to them.
“Kind of like how Hogan became ‘every man’ in Maryland and cut into traditional Democratic constituencies, Donald Trump has done that, particularly with what we would call labor, with working men and women,” Ellington said. “For too long, Republicans have carried the water for Chamber of Commerce types, when in fact, Chamber of Commerce types in Maryland probably split their donations between the two parties.”
Throughout the U.S. electorate, economic jitters proved to be a motivating issue, even if national statistics suggested that the economy was strong and getting stronger. That attitude also accrued to Trump’s benefit.
“The economy in front of them is the only economy that matters to voters,” Kromer said. “People care most about their groceries.”
But even if Trump’s political strength this election created some opportunities that Maryland Republicans might be able to take advantage of in discrete areas, the GOP writ large is not going to succeed in this state as a Trump party. The Senate race, with the decidedly anti-Trump Hogan as the Republican nominee, “was the only race that was competitive,” Kromer noted.
Clearly really smart people will do some autopsies and have some real work to do on how the Democratic Party communicates with the people. I do think there’s definitely going to be some soul-searching.
– Maryland Democratic Party Chair Ken Ulman
Maryland Democratic Party Chair Ken Ulman acknowledged that there will soon be conversations and analysis at the national level about what Democrats did wrong and what they need to do better.
“Clearly really smart people will do some autopsies and have some real work to do on how the Democratic Party communicates with the people,” he said. “I do think there’s definitely going to be some soul-searching.”
Some of that soul-searching will invariably turn on whether the party has become too “woke” and has moved too far to the left — a topic that will consume party leaders, activists and donors and political pundits for the foreseeable future, especially at the national level. Maryland Democrats will not be immune from that debate.
But Perini said voters in outlying areas of Maryland also want to see signs that their government cares about them, suggesting that recent cuts in state transportation funding, which will kill or stall key highway projects, could hurt Democrats with rural and suburban voters.
“You’ve got to understand how people feel when they take these projects off the books,” Perini said. “And how people feel is how they vote. We just need to give the people the credit for at least what they feel.”
Although April McClain Delaney, the Democratic nominee in the open-seat 6th District congressional race, appears to be headed to a narrow victory, and many party strategists worried about her fate, Perini predicted that her approach will resonate with voters in the ideologically, economically and geographically diverse district.
“I loved her line, ‘common sense and common ground,’” he said. “From day one, that was her approach to campaigning and I believe that will be her approach to governing. So there is a road map for campaigning in areas that aren’t deep blue.”
‘I think we’re an outlier’
The good news for hand-wringing Democrats is that the 2026 election cycle has already begun, which means scores of political operatives and activists will be getting ready.
“As far as I’m concerned, the 2026 election started [Wednesday],” Perini said. “And if people aren’t strategizing, they’re already a day late.”
Alsobrooks makes history in Senate race, as Hogan cannot repeat his magic
Democrats can also take comfort knowing that the party that doesn’t control the White House often makes significant gains in the midterm elections — even though politics in the Trump era is more volatile and unpredictable than ever.
Ulman said he feels good about the infrastructure the state Democratic Party built for the 2024 election, and that it will carry over for 2026, when all statewide elected officials, all state legislators and most county officials will be on the ballot. While Democrats were caught by surprise when Hogan decided this spring to run for Senate, his high-profile candidacy forced them to put together a strong operation quickly, when presidential election years are usually sleepier in Maryland.
“Together, our coordinated campaign ran an active campaign in all 24 jurisdictions, and that’s really going to help us in 2026,” Ulman said.
The party leader also said that the issue environment in 2026 could work to Democrats’ benefit, especially if Trump moves to radically make over the federal government, which is a major employer and economic driver in Maryland.
“My gut feeling after doing politics for 30 years is ’26 will be a really good cycle for the Democrats,” Ulman said. “But you have to prepare for the worst. I do think Marylanders are going to have a lot to be frustrated about with our federal government.”
Adam Wood, the executive director of the Maryland Republican Party, did not respond to a message Thursday seeking comment on the 2024 election results and what they may portend for 2026.
Whatever small inroads Trump may have made in Maryland this year, the state has its own unique set of political trends and storylines.
“I think we’re an outlier,” said state Sen. Cory V. McCray (D-Baltimore City). “We’re standing in a state where we have a Black governor and a Black United States senator. We’re defying what the country is saying.”
But, McCray conceded, pointing to the presidential result, “The voters were saying something.”
Maryland
Charlotte police make arrest in Maryland for Uptown murder
CHARLOTTE, N.C. (WBTV) – Police arrested a man in Maryland accused of shooting and killing another person in Charlotte.
Jamario Caldwell was killed in a shooting on Tuesday, Oct. 8 near Uptown. Officers with the Charlotte-Mecklenburg Police Department said they found an empty car nearby with multiple spent shell casings.
[Previous reporting: 1 person killed in shooting reported near Uptown Charlotte]
The investigation took them to Prince George’s County in Maryland. Following an interview with police, 39-year-old Corey Livingston was arrested.
Once he’s been extradited to Charlotte, he will be charged with murder.
Copyright 2024 WBTV. All rights reserved.
Maryland
Oregon football’s 3 keys to victory vs. Maryland in Big Ten matchup
Video: Oregon football’s Dan Lanning talks matchup vs Maryland
Oregon head football coach Dan Lanning talks about the No. 1 Ducks’ upcoming home matchup against the Maryland Terrapins.
The Oregon football team will put its consensus No. 1 ranking in the country to the test once again on Saturday against an unranked Maryland team fighting for bowl eligibility.
The Ducks (9-0, 6-0 Big Ten) will play the Terrapins (4-4, 1-4 Big Ten) at 4 p.m. in Autzen Stadium.
Here are three keys to a successful outing for Oregon football at home.
Continue to roll with punches amid injuries to key players
Though the Ducks were bolstered by the returns of stars such as tight end Terrance Ferguson and edge Jordan Burch, they lost a few more key players last Saturday in leading receiver Tez Johnson and sixth-year offensive lineman Marcus Harper II.
Though it’s uncertain how long either player will be out, or if Harper, in particular, could appear this week against Maryland, the Ducks have a plan for their absences.
“I’m confident that we’ve shown there’s a lot of guys that can play winning football for us right now,” Oregon coach Dan Lanning said. “Who that’ll be come Saturday, I’ll leave that for us to figure out in-house, but we’ve got a lot of guys that can play winning football for us, and there’s gonna be some guys that step up, like we’ve had all season.”
In the immediate term, Traeshon Holden had a career day at Michigan while Johnson sat on the sidelines, hauling in six passes for 149 yards, both career highs.
With Harper sidelined late in the game, sophomore Kawika Rogers stepped up to play at right guard on the final drive that sealed the game after playing sparingly this season.
Oregon football must contain Billy Edwards Jr., Maryland passing game
Only one team in the Big Ten has a better statistical passing offense than Oregon: the Terrapins.
Maryland is the only team in the conference that accounts for over 300 passing yards per game, with quarterback Billy Edwards Jr. throwing for 2,314 yards with 13 touchdowns and six interceptions.
The Ducks’ passing defense ranks fifth in the Big Ten, giving up just 172.8 passing yards per game with opposing quarterbacks completing 55.7% of their passes.
“He’s extremely efficient,” Lanning said of Edwards. “He knows where to put the ball and when to put the ball there. I think they’ve done a good job of coaching him up. Where’s the extra hat, and how can I take advantage of advantage throws when those opportunities exist? And he’s been really accurate doing that.”
Ducks must continue to win ground game battle, control pace of game
Lanning has stressed the importance of stopping the run and outrushing opponents on a week-to-week basis throughout the season.
Despite playing a pass-heavy team, Lanning emphasized that point Monday this week.
“The best defenses in college football, consistently, are always good at stopping the run,” Lanning said. “Teams that win football games are always good at running the ball and stopping the run. So that’s an important trait. But certainly you want to be able to take away a team’s strength.”
The Ducks rank seventh in the Big Ten in rushing yards per game (168.11) to Maryland’s 14th (119), but the Terrapins’ run defense is slightly better than the Ducks, ranking sixth in the Big Ten, giving up 105.25 rushing yards per game.
Though Oregon has outrushed most of the opponents it has played this season, Saturday’s game will be a test due to Maryland’s fast and pass-heavy pace of play.
Alec Dietz covers University of Oregon football, volleyball, women’s basketball and baseball for The Register-Guard. You may reach him at adietz@registerguard.com and you can follow him on X @AlecDietz.
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