The Herald Sun (Sunday)

N&O Editor writes about NC State, eclipse, IKEA

- BY BILL CHURCH bchurch@newsobserv­er.com

Happy Halifax Resolves Days weekend, which is a thing.

The thing happened on Friday 248 years ago when a bunch of frat guys in wigs highfived and chest-bumped, declaring it was time to move out of the house from their boring Brit parents. Someone from the North Carolina Provincial Congress shouted “Don’t Tread on ACC basketball,” and … swish … North Carolina became the first colonial government to call for independen­ce.

Two years later, we have the Declaratio­n of Independen­ce, and now Ralph Lauren provides snazzy outfits for the U.S. Olympics teams.

This is a revisionis­t version of what happened in Halifax, NC. (I’m not a historian, but who doesn’t like finding bobblehead­s at historical-place gift shops.)

We have a lot of lifelong learners in the Triangle. Best part of my job is learning new stuff each workweek.

Here are three didn’t-knowthen-but-know-now moments from last week:

1. WE’RE TOO COOL FOR IKEA

The News & Observer’s Brian

Gordon is a former teacher who brings perpetual curiosity to his top-notch reporting. Brian likely was the kid in class who politely raised his hand again and again.

Last week, Brian’s NC Reality Check revealed why IKEA, the Swedish furniture and households giant, doesn’t have the Triangle in its expansion plans. Jeremy Petranka, an economics professor at Duke University’s Fuqua School of Business, told Brian that the Triangle might not be an ideal place to land a traditiona­l IKEA.

We may be Austin’s classicall­y cool cousin, but apparently we’re too suburban.

Ouch.

Oh, this hasn’t kept IKEA from flirting with our hearts.

They looked in Cary, but decided not to swipe right. This was the headline from a 2018 N&O story, and it still stings: “IKEA shocker: Popular furniture store is not coming to Cary after all.”

But that’s IKEA’s loss, not ours.

Y’all probably know about IKEA’s wordless how-to instructio­n sheets that have the charm of M.C. Escher illustrati­ons — if he had been uncaffeina­ted and bored.

Do a bit of math and the federal Bureau of Labor Statistics shows the Triangle has 25,126 residents in architectu­ral or engineerin­g fields and 2,676 designers or art creators. (We also have 240 floral designers, which proves our classicall­y cool rep.)

All of those right- and left-brainers, enjoying life in the ‘burbs, and available to build better instructio­n guides.

We could have helped, IKEA.

2. Y’ALL LIKED IT, Y’ALL REALLY LIKED IT

Sports coverage is tricky in the Triangle. Everyone has the right opinion on what’s wrong. And what’s too much.

The News & Observer posted 176 stories during the college basketball tournament twists, and those stories accounted for about 40% of the N&O’s overall subscriber page views during that three-week span.

Thanks for your interest. We felt it.

It’s why we’re publishing a commemorat­ive book highlighti­ng North Carolina State’s historic run to the Final Four. We’ll have 144 pages covering the tournament stories for both the Wolfpack men and women. (You’ll find ads in the N&O print edition or click the order link on digital devices.)

One of my favorite moments happened before the season started when The N&O’s Kaitlin McKeown photograph­ed NC State’s DJ Burns, being, well, DJ. His tilted sunglasses brought out that big personalit­y and inspired Raleigh-based artist Sean Kernick.

Kernick drew from Kaitlin’s image to create a mural for the Free Expression Tunnel at NC State’s Wolf Plaza. Avi Bajpai profiled Kernick and the story behind the mural as part of The N&O’s coverage.

I doubt the North Carolina Provincial Congress thought about commemorat­ive books and inspiring murals when they pushed for independen­ce and democratic freedoms 248 years ago. But you’ve got to love the back story.

3. WE’RE OVER THE MOON ABOUT THE ECLIPSE

I blame pollen head for not picking up on why our local Publix had a sale on mini MoonPies — the gooey snack that should be its own food group.

But it all made sense on Monday.

We didn’t get totality in the Triangle, but The N&O’s Travis Long captured the local joy of the classicall­y cool moon outshining its older sibling sun.

Josh Shaffer also wrote a sweet Uniquely NC profile on Johnny Horne, a retired Fayettevil­le Observer photograph­er who has witnessed six eclipses worldwide since 1970.

Horne was in Austin for No. 6: “They’re the top. They’re the Super Bowl. There’s really nothing quite like them.”

The Triangle will have its total eclipse experience on May 11, 2078.

That’s 54 years from now.

Imagine… Halifax Resolves Days celebratin­g its 302nd anniversar­y by announcing the Washington National are relocating next to the Historic Halifax State Historic Site.

The N&O offering a commemorat­ive book highlighti­ng the Wolfpack’s tourney run with star player DJ Burns IV.

And Zebulon opening its second IKEA.

Bill Church is executive editor of The News & Observer.

Bill Church: @BillChurch­Media

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 ?? KAITLIN MCKEOWN kmckeown@newsobserv­er.com ?? N.C. State’s D.J. Burns poses for a portrait during the Wolfpack men’s basketball media day on Thursday, Sept. 21, 2023, in Raleigh, N.C.
KAITLIN MCKEOWN kmckeown@newsobserv­er.com N.C. State’s D.J. Burns poses for a portrait during the Wolfpack men’s basketball media day on Thursday, Sept. 21, 2023, in Raleigh, N.C.

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