
Salon editors took note, placing her blog posts on the covers of Open Salon and Salon itself.

But she gradually began to chronicle and comment upon the times she lived in-sometimes with deep affection, sometimes with righteous indignation. She wrote of the triumphs and challenges of midlife, celebrating family, friends and the Southwestern way of life she'd grown to love.
#Keka radio free#
Over 20 years later, left free to "e just be,"e having retiring early to do precisely that, she started a blog on Open Salon to take stock of what had gone before and ponder what might come next. With a daughter to raise, children to teach and the wide turquoise skies of the Hopi reservation to gaze upon, her spirit was otherwise occupied most of the time. She continued to publish regularly in Working Mother and elsewhere, but only when spirit moved. Three years later, she married a Hopi artist and became part of his proud-and very large-family. After moving to the Southwest in the early 80's, she worked as a public relations liaison for The Hopi Tribe, and moved to their reservation where she eventually returned to her first career, teaching. And then one day.she walked away from all of it. Standing in for friend and colleague Roger Ebert, she interviewed John Travolta, Kirk Douglas, Richard Pryor and the then unknown cast of Star Wars-and dated Arnold Schwarzenegger.

She reviewed all of the top rockers of the 70s and 80s like Led Zeppelin, Traffic and Rod Stewart. For five wild years she traveled with and interviewed Kiss, Cheap Trick, Peter Frampton, Todd Rundgren, Brian Eno and members of Queen, the Who, Aerosmith, Styx. She was also the first black woman to become a rock critic for a "e major metropolitan daily,"e and her articles appeared in Rolling Stone and Creem, under the tutelage of legendary rock critic Lester Bangs. Cynthia Dagnal-Myron is an award-winning former reporter for both the Chicago Sun Times and Arizona Daily Star.
