The Man Who Never Met a Stranger: Larry Metherd’s Daring Life

Not everyone makes the front page. But everyone leaves a story worth telling.

You probably walked past someone like Larry Metherd today — a friendly neighbor watering his garden, maybe sharing a quick story about his beloved Siberian Husky. Just another retiree, right?

But those gentle hands had once helped desperate war refugees climb aboard ships in foreign ports. That calm voice had once shouted “Geronimo!” while jumping from airplanes as a paratrooper. The man who never met a stranger had spent his twenties sailing the world, carrying families toward new lives after the devastation of World War II.

From riding his horse “Babe” to a one-room Colorado schoolhouse, to becoming a Merchant Marine at 17, to serving as a Corporal in the 11th Airborne division, to spending 14 years keeping Denver’s fire trucks running, Larry’s 96 years were filled with quiet heroism and extraordinary adventures that most neighbors never knew about.

This is the story of someone you might have walked past and never noticed—a real person with a remarkable life that went unnoticed by most.

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New episodes every Monday, Wednesday, and Friday.

These are stories about people like you. People with ordinary extraordinary lives and stories worth hearing.

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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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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Secret B-2 Flight Details: Potato Skins Revolutionize Building

University of Alabama researchers turn potato waste into construction materials while B-2 pilots master 44-hour missions.

Secret Flow Problems That Are Amazing to Fix in Life

A Florida surgeon performs the first FDA-approved transcontinental robotic surgery on a patient in Angola, Africa, an Indiana good Samaritan stops a drunk driver with a potentially fatal BAC of .40, and UK researchers develop tiny robots that could revolutionize water infrastructure maintenance. Steve explores three stories about intervention, medical, personal, and technological, that show how the most important work often happens where we can’t see it.

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From Shark Skin to Job Security: Three Stories That Change Everything

Three overlooked stories worth knowing: A Cary nuclear engineer’s true impact had nothing to do with his PhD or judicial career, Australian engineers copied 400-million-year-old shark skin to save airlines billions in fuel costs, and why your plumber has more job security than corporate executives in the AI age. Featuring Jeff Jeffries’ mentorship approach that touched “numerous men,” MicroTau’s biomimicry breakthrough saving 4% fuel per flight, and Lowe’s CEO Marvin Ellison’s honest assessment of which jobs AI can’t replace. Real stories from Wake Forest, North Carolina about what actually lasts versus what we think matters.

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.

From Tank’s Big Escape to Eliza’s Lasting Light: Good News Stories of Hope, Heart, and Second Chances

Today on Good Morning Wake County, we take you from a missing tortoise named Tank in Greenfield, Illinois to the streets of Raleigh, where law enforcement officers ran for the Special Olympics. Then we head west to California for the inspiring story of Trevor Turner, a former inmate turned award-winning college graduate, before coming home to Raleigh to remember Eliza Craven and the $2.5 million gift that will help other families facing childhood illness. These are stories of good, stories of heart… and the kind of feel-good news that stays with you.

🎧 Featuring:

  • Tank the Tortoise 🐢 (Greenfield, IL)

  • Wake County Special Olympics

  • Trevor Turner (Bakersfield College, CA)

  • Amanda & Lee Craven + Transitions LifeCare (Raleigh, NC)

  • Team Speedy Sloth + Eliza Alice Craven Pediatric Fund (Duke University, Durham, NC)

🔗 SOURCES & LINKS

Tank the Tortoise – First Alert 4:

https://www.firstalert4.com/2025/05/28/illinois-town-comes-together-find-missing-tortoise/

Torch Run / Special Olympics:

https://www.cbs17.com/news/local-news/wake-county-news/wake-county-law-enforcement-runs-through-rain-to-benefit-nc-special-olympics/

Trevor Turner, Bakersfield College Grad:

https://www.bakersfield.com/bakersfield-life/bakersfield-matters-bc-grad-defies-odds-earns-collegiate-recognition-with-inspiring-story/article_b47665db-424d-4ac8-8555-f5d02d1dff75.html

Eliza’s Story / Transitions Kids

https://www.dignitymemorial.com/obituaries/raleigh-nc/eliza-craven-10806995

https://www.cbs17.com/news/local-news/wake-county-news/the-whole-family-is-the-patient-childrens-hospice-program-in-raleigh-receives-2-5-million-gift/

https://www.supportdukehealth.org/site/TR/Angels/AngelsAmongUs?pg=team&fr_id=2621&team_id=30983

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