Apex Entrepreneur’s Secret + Hidden Park Upgrades Amazing Wake County

North Carolina news podcast, Wake County, local news, daily news update, no doom or drama, morning news, Tap Your News.

From a high school side hustle to Downtown Apex’s beloved Bella + Mauve boutique, Gabrielle Carlin’s journey proves that some dreams are worth the wait. Plus, Wake County’s $9.5 million park upgrades at Harris Lake and Blue Jay Point are bringing accessible trails, expanded playgrounds, and new educational spaces to our community. Join our community at https://TapYourNews.com for show email alerts and to suggest stories you think we should cover. The best local reporting often starts with neighbors who know where to look.

Melvin Klayman’s Story — The Man Who Saw You

You might have walked past Mel on a Boston street and never looked twice. Just another guy in a button-down shirt heading to work. But behind his front door was one of New England’s most significant private art collections — and a man who spent forty years seeing potential in people before they saw it themselves.

From buying unknown artists’ work for twenty dollars to making homeless strangers laugh over coffee at Dunkin Donuts, Mel practiced the art of really seeing people. His story will change how you look at the “ordinary” people around you.

Real people. Real lives. Never ordinary.

Crisis at Raleigh Cheesy: When Scary Vulnerability Saves the Day

When the AC died at Courtney Bowman’s Raleigh Cheesy shop during the summer heat, she did something that required real courage – she got vulnerable on Instagram. No script, no polish, just honest desperation. The community’s response was immediate and overwhelming: over $15,000 in orders within days. Meanwhile, Jared Haworth of Lightship Neon is fighting Raleigh’s 1970s signage rules that keep creative neon signs from adding personality to our neighborhoods. His hot-pink neon chicken at Little Rey doesn’t just advertise – it winks at you, saying “something good is happening here.” Both stories ask the same question: What happens when we let people see who we really are? From struggling businesses to city character, these Wake County stories show that authenticity creates stronger community bonds than polished perfection. Sometimes the best moments happen when we stop hiding and let our real selves – and our neighborhoods – glow.

Join our community at https://TapYourNews.com for show email alerts and to suggest stories you think we should cover. The best local reporting often starts with neighbors who know where to look.

Rose Montali’s Story — The Grandma Who Made Everyone Feel Special

Picture this: A woman is dying, and her family knows exactly what will comfort her. Not music. Not prayers. The voice of Cleveland baseball calling one last game.

Meet Rose Montali — a 67-year-old grandmother from Cleveland whose kitchen was a sanctuary and whose love made everyone feel extraordinary. For 60 years, she was the mom who showed up at every swim meet, the neighbor who remembered birthdays, and the grandmother who convinced seven grandchildren that her house was the happiest place on earth.

From her legendary Italian pizzelles to her unwavering loyalty to Cleveland sports, Rose’s story reminds us that some of the most remarkable people never make headlines — they just make everyone around them feel like they matter.

This is the story of someone you might have walked past a thousand times, never knowing the extraordinary life hidden behind a quiet smile.

Real people. Real lives. Never ordinary.

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The Pedestrian Mayor of Elizabethtown: How Stanley Crawford Became a Most Beloved Walker

In this episode, we explore the life of Stanley Crawford, an extraordinary ordinary person who transformed Elizabethtown, Kentucky through fifty years of faithful walking. Known as “Stan the Man,” he wasn’t just a familiar face—he was the heartbeat of his community. This is the story of how one man’s simple presence created lasting change, and why people like Stan represent the forgotten heroes walking past us every day.

Journey with me as I uncover what happens when we truly see the remarkable people we’ve been overlooking.

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When Technology Gets Too Smart For Its Own Good

When the same Raleigh rideshare trip costs $14 on one app and $84 on another, you know something’s broken. Steve explores how algorithmic pricing is turning getting home into a high-stakes gamble, then discovers a local Wake County startup using AI to actually make government services work better for residents. From surge pricing mysteries to multilingual government support, these overlooked stories reveal what happens when technology gets too smart—and when it gets smart in the right direction.

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Teddy Golubowski’s Story — The Academy Leader Who Dressed for Honor

At 27, Teddy Golubowski was excelling as Class Leader at the Ocean County Police Academy when he received devastating news. Despite debilitating pain, he still planned to drive to the Academy to be properly dismissed — because that’s what you do when you’ve made a commitment.

This is the story of a young man who spent his life serving others: from a 5-year-old Toms River Raider to a college football player, from public works employee to police academy cadet. Teddy understood that how you show up matters more than how long you stay.

Real people. Real lives. Remembered.

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Same Choice, Different Roads: A Teacher, A Fire, and the Power of Showing Up

Two strangers. Two different places. But the same decision — to show up when no one was watching.

In Raleigh, a retired Enloe High School theater teacher named Koko Thornton just won a national award, thanks to a former student who decided she deserved recognition. For 24 years, Thornton focused not just on theater skills but on helping students “see their own potential inside of them.” Connor Kruger, now studying acting at USC, nominated his former teacher for the 2025 Inspiring Teacher Award at the Jimmy Awards.

Meanwhile, on a Nebraska highway, a pregnant woman made a split-second decision to help a stranger whose pickup truck caught fire. She was hospitalized after being overcome by smoke and heat, but her instinct to help rather than drive past reveals something worth noting about human nature.

Both stories share the same thread: people who see what needs doing and just do it, whether it’s recognizing potential in students for decades or stopping to help someone in danger on a Sunday afternoon. Plus, a skeleton joke that might shake you to your bones.

Good Morning Wake County brings you authentic conversations about overlooked stories that matter, delivered from Wake Forest, North Carolina, for people who want to know what’s really happening without being told how to feel about it.

Join our community at https://tapyournews.com/podcast for show reminders and to suggest stories you think we should cover. The best reporting often starts with neighbors who know where to look.

Colonel Maynard Caudill – A True Story Worth Remembering

“Colonel Maynard Caudill, 86, of Cary, North Carolina, peacefully passed away at his home.” Just a line you might scroll past. But behind those words lies the story of a man who seemed to collect lives — gospel singer, Air Force veteran, long-haul trucker, decorated state trooper, and business owner. From the Blue Ridge Mountains … Read more

Jumping In, Looking Up: Courage, Currents, and Commuter Whales

You ever have that moment where your brain blanks and your body just moves? Today we’ve got two stories about exactly that kind of decision-making.

First: Eddie Hunnell, a 57-year-old software engineer from Holly Springs, was at his son’s wedding rehearsal when Hurricane Helene hit North Carolina. When he saw 66-year-old Leslie Worth swept into the flooded North Fork New River, his Plan A with a canoe didn’t work. So he jumped in himself. Now he’s receiving the Carnegie Medal—North America’s highest honor for civilian heroism.

Then: Sydney commuters are discovering that sharing their morning ferry rides with 40,000 migrating humpback whales is just part of life now. These school bus-sized creatures are turning one of the world’s busiest harbors into the gentlest traffic jam you’ve ever seen. It’s a conservation success story happening in real-time, complete with whales who seem genuinely curious about the humans they’re meeting.

Both stories reveal something about what happens when the unexpected shows up and people—or whales—decide to engage instead of look away.

Plus: a dad joke that might actually make you groan out loud.

From Wake Forest, North Carolina, this is Good Morning Wake County—where we find stories that remind you what’s possible when ordinary people decide to jump in.

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