When you understand how a person thinks, speaks, acts, and sees the world, you feel like you know that person.
This is true whether you have spent time with them, or if you have spent time with them through the magic of modern media.
Television, radio, and social media can be used to make sure that people know about you, or they can be used to make people feel like they know you.
The story arc is the same for all 3 poems.
The 4-verse, 4 stanza structure is the same.
The rhyming conventions are very similar.
The only real difference is that these short poems reveal the hearts of 3 different people; their perspectives, their attitudes, their personalities.
My partner Gene Naftulyev directed the singers who turned these poems into blues songs.
You can read the song lyrics in the text of the Monday Morning Memo, or you can listen to the songs in the audio version of the memo.
These are the words to the first poem, and the song that was created from it:
The singer of this song seems to be lamenting the loss of leisure. We perceive that he is troubled by the spiraling tyranny of the merely urgent. He doesn’t want to be unkind. His questions about the red-light runners being “colorblind,” or “having their panties in a bind” reveals a comedic wit. We sympathize with him. We agree with him. We like him.
Now let’s tell that same story two more times using exactly the same structure, rhyming scheme, and storytelling devices. The only difference between that first poem and the next two poems will be the differing perspectives of the storytellers.
That singer has a slightly more antagonistic attitude. His references to Moses and the Law reveal him to be more legalistic than the first singer. His additional comments about “counselor-at-law,” “nation of laws,” “resurrection” and “perfection” reveal the kind of black-and-white clarity that can result from a strict religious upbringing. We cannot be certain of these things, but we suspect them. He also has a little bit of a fixation on sexuality. “Do you look good in-the-raw?” “Sex appeal that makes ice thaw?” “Do people look at you with awe?” This cat is one complicated character!
Are you ready for that same story to be told by a third singer whose perspective and personality is distinctly different from the first two?
Obviously, that guy is angry as hell and is predisposed toward violence. He sees red. “You’ll soon be dead.” This singer doesn’t joke around about “colorblind.” He says “Green and red, you cannot switch.” He doesn’t laugh about “panties in a bind.” This guy suggests that you’re not having sex because your wife left you, even though you are “filthy rich.”
Your ads let people know how you think, speak, act, and see the world.
And you thought ads were just about delivering information and a call-to-action.
Roy H. Williams
© Roy H. Williams and Gene Naftulyev, Oct 21, 2025
Rodney Dangerfield joked about it.
Jackie Robinson said he’d earned it.
Aretha Franklin sang about it:
R.E.S.P.E.C.T.
Respect is a virtue too often sacrificed in public discourse, online exchanges, and everyday interactions. Robert L. Dilenschneider wants to change that. Respect, Bob says, deserves, well … more respect. “Never take another man’s dignity. It’s worth nothing to you and everything to him.” Respect, Bob says, deserves, well … more respect. On this week’s episode of Monday Morning Radio, Dilenschneider shares his brilliant formula for healing the divisions in our country and restoring a culture of respect. Roving reporter Rotbart and deputy rover Maxwell and Bob Dilenschneider himself are waiting for you to arrive at MondayMorningRadio.com