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Monday, June 8, 2026
Good morning to you! 
Title
 
Dark green with a floral pattern. Metal. Folded up. Four of them tucked neatly into a rack against the wall in a living room we rarely used.
 
I was never quite sure why those TV trays lived there. Mom did not allow us to eat in the living room anyway. Apparently, the possibility of spaghetti sauce meeting shag carpet was a risk she was unwilling to take.
 
Once our basement was finished and became actual living space, the TV trays migrated downstairs. The basement also had shag carpet, but for some reason Mom relaxed the rules there. Even then, the trays did not see much action. The truth is that the golden age of TV trays happened before my time.
 
The first television was invented in 1926, and by the mid-1950s, about half of American homes had one. Early TVs were small, black-and-white boxes with screens that seemed barely larger than a postcard. Families gathered around them just to see what was happening. Eating dinner in front of the television was a novelty, a dramatic departure from sitting around the kitchen table discussing school, work and whose turn it was to do the dishes.
 
By the 1960s, nearly 90% of American homes had a television. Sets were bigger, heavier and finally bursting with color. Families no longer had to sit inches from the screen, but they were spending more time watching than ever. TV trays became part of the furniture, offering a front-row seat to sitcoms, westerns and the evening news.
 
Still, televisions of that era were nothing like the 60-inch screens hanging on our walls today. Homes were different, too. Kitchens had walls. Dining rooms had walls. Living rooms had walls. If someone was watching television, chances were everyone else was missing out.
 
That gave the folks at Swanson a brilliant idea. In 1954, the company introduced the TV dinner: turkey, stuffing, sweet potatoes and peas neatly packed into an aluminum tray. It was convenient, easy to prepare and perfectly suited for a nation increasingly glued to its television sets.
 
Mom bought them occasionally, and we thought they were fantastic. Salisbury steak. Mashed potatoes and gravy. A brownie tucked into one corner if you got lucky. The vegetables were there, too, although they were generally viewed as an obstacle standing between us and dessert.
 
Today, TV dinners and TV trays may seem quaint, relics from another era. But for a generation of Americans, they represented something new: convenience, entertainment and a little taste of the future.
 
Those old green trays may not have seen much use in our house, but they still remind me of a time when watching television while eating dinner felt downright revolutionary. How about you? Did your family have TV trays? Do you still? Send me a note and let me know.
 
Have a memorable Monday, and thanks for reading.
Shane Goodman

President and Publisher
Big Green Umbrella Media
shane@dmcityview.com
515-953-4822, ext. 305
www.thedailyumbrella.com 

Read more of Shane Goodman's columns here.

 
 

FROM KCCI: West Des Moines man’s body recovered from southern Iowa lake. Authorities recovered the body of a missing West Des Moines man from Sun Valley Lake in southern Iowa after a search spanning two days. The Ringgold County Sheriff's Office said they were called to the lake just before 11 a.m. Saturday following reports of a missing man. Crews from multiple agencies searched the lake throughout the day but suspended operations overnight. ... READ MORE

FROM WHO-TV: One injured, suspect in custody after shooting in Des Moines’ southside. Authorities say one person was injured and a suspect is in custody after a shooting in Des Moines’ southside. The Des Moines Police Department says shortly before 8 p.m., officers and Des Moines Fire Department first responders were called to an apartment complex in the 2100 block of Indianola Avenue on reports of a shooting. ... READ MORE

FROM WOI: Support from Des Moines nonprofit helps fuel Hoover's historic state title run. History was made in the Class 3A boys state soccer championship match when the Hoover Huskies took on the Norwalk Warriors. A second-half comeback lifted Hoover to its first-ever Iowa boys state soccer title. ... READ MORE

 

FROM AROUND THE WORLD: Israel and Iran trade strikes, threatening to drag the region back into full-scale war. Israel and Iran traded fire early Monday in their first attacks since the U.S. struck a ceasefire two months ago, threatening to drag the Middle East back into a full-scale war. The war, launched by the U.S. and Israel on Feb. 28 with strikes on Iran, has shaken the global economy, driven energy prices up around the world and made many basics, including food, more expensive. Officials have been unable to turn the ceasefire, agreed April 8, into a deal to permanently end the conflict. ... READ MORE

FROM AROUND THE NATION: 6 people hurt in stabbings at New York’s Penn Station with a suspect in custody, authorities says. Six people were injured in a stabbing inside New York’s Penn Station on Sunday evening, authorities said, less than a day before thousands of fans are expected to descend on neighboring Madison Square Garden for Game 3 of the NBA Finals. ... READ MORE

FROM AROUND THE STATE: State denies professional sharpshooting request to manage Iowa City deer population. Iowa City’s deer population is growing - with the latest data showing nearly 560 deer in just under five square miles. On May 14, the city asked the state’s Natural Resources Commission for professional sharpshooting, but that request was denied. The police department received 35 calls for deer collisions last year. According to the city’s 2026 drone survey, the population has risen 16% to about 116 deer per square mile. ... READ MORE

 
Weather forecast
Monday, June 8
 
Clouds make way for sun
High: 86
Low: 71
Rain chance: 30%
 
Tuesday, June 9
 

Partly cloudy
High: 89
Low: 73
Rain chance: 20%

Wednesday, June 10
 

PM thunderstorms possible 
High: 90
Low: 68
Rain chance: 60%

 
Allergy alert
 

Tree pollen:  None

Grass pollen:  High

Ragweed pollen:  None

Total pollen count: 78 grains per cubic meter of air

 
The 2026 results: CITYVIEW's Best of Des Moines®
 
 
Best Drake Area Store
1. Huckleberry Home
2. Nos Books
3. Shelf Love DSM
 
See all of the results
 
 

Clean food and water matter; they really matter
 
The last time Iowa witnessed a political upset on the level of last week's Republican primary for governor was 1998 when Tom Vilsack embarrassed all pollsters by beating Jim Ross Lightfoot in the gubernatorial general election. The similarities between the two upsets are quite interesting and encouraging to people on my food beat. 

Zach Lahn beat heavy favorite Randy Feenstra by running on health and cleaning up our shamefully toxic water. Feenstra, like most Iowa politicians, did not compete on the water issue. Our belief is that Farm Bureau is so powerful as a lobby that almost no Iowa pol dares to blame Des Moines carcinogenic water on toxic run-off of agricultural pesticides and herbicides — even now, when Dow, owner of the Round-up franchise, is testing new versions without the deadly glyphosate chemical, though only in Australia.

Similarly, Vilsack ran on a platform that pushed confined animal feeding operations (CAFO) into main issue status. Sadly, Vilsack failed on confining the confinements, saying they were an issue for local jurisdictions, not the state, after he won. Lightfoot ran with a strange ad campaign that emphasized he was an orphan, though a quite privileged one. Feenstra ran on President Trump's endorsement and little else, skipping debates.

In our opinion, they both lost due to laziness. Vilsack and Lahn just looked like they cared more about Iowa. It's also worth noting that both Vilsack and Lahn were outsiders, newcomers to Iowa. Neither knew that genuflecting to Big Ag’s powers-that-be was essential here.

If Lahn wins the general election, and he would be a 3-2 underdog if Kalshi started taking bets today (it won't open betting until Labor Day), he absolutely must succeed in getting glyphosate out of our water. It is killing Iowans with cancer and degrading our quality of life. That, in turn, kills the recruitment of new businesses and workers. That’s why it is the issue that matters most. Just ask Feenstra's campaign managers. 

Deals today
• Food Truck Mall Mondays, 4-7 p.m., begin at 5299 East University Ave., Pleasant Hill.
 
The Empire's (223 Fourth St., Des Moines) Monday special is spaghetti Alfredo with grilled chicken for $10.
 
Marianna's (1305 University Ave., Des Moines) offers carnitas tacos for $2 Mondays.
 
• Cowboy (1234 E Euclid Ave., Des Moines) has a Monday special fajitas lunch for $11.99.
 
The False Nine Social Club (206 Fifth St., Valley Junction) has British pies on sale Mondays for $10.
 
District 36 (1375 S.W. Vintage Parkway, Ankeny) has a Monday special $60 dinner for two. Two entrees starring sea bass and NY strip de Burgo with soup or salads, a bottle of wine and a dessert to share. 
 
• Some Hy-Vee Market Grilles offer pulled pork and baked potato specials on Mondays for $8. 
 
• It's catfish night at Waterfront stores. Dinners cooked any way you like it for $19.99.
 
• It's Meat Loaf Monday at Mickey's in Yale.
 
• Chuck's (3610 Sixth Ave., Des Moines) Monday special is three for $25 on all appetizers.
 
•  Bubba (200 10th St., Des Moines) has a Monday night sirloin dinner special for $20. 
 
• Kelly's Little Nipper (1701 E. Grand Ave., Des Moines) offers a "Monday grind" special grinder and fries basket for $9.50.
 
• Monday brings prime rib specials to both Chicago Speakeasy (1520 Euclid Ave., Des Moines) and Christopher's (2816 Beaver Ave., Des Moines).
 
• Trostel's Greenbriar (Merle Hay Road, Johnston) has a Monday burger with a side and beer deal for $14.   
 
• Beaver Tap (4050 Urbandale Ave., Des Moines) has $8 omelets and $10 hot beef sandwiches or Mexican bowls on Mondays.
 
• Johnny's Italian Steakhouses have a chicken de Burgo special on Mondays before 4 p.m., $14 including beverage.
 
Smoking Goat Pub (3015 Merle Hay Road, Des Moines) hosts Shelby Smokehouse Soul Food on Mondays, 5-9 p.m.
 
• G Mig's (126 Fifth St., Valley Junction) has $11 smashburgers today including a side.
 
• The Station on Ingersoll (3124 Ingersoll, Des Moines) has a Monday special Graziano grinder with a side for $12.
 
• The Continental (407 E. Fifth St., Des Moines) offers a Monday special double smash burger and shoestring fries, $12.
 
• Jethro's have a Monday chicken tenders and fries special $9.95 in Altoona and West Des Moines.
 
Angry Goldfish (2301 S.W. Ninth St., Des Moines) has specials on chicken Parmesan and lasagna today, $15 with garlic bread and salad.
 
Eastside Eddie’s (3517 E. 26th St., Des Moines) Monday special is a burger with domestic beer, soft drink or well drink for $10.  
 
 Centro (1003 Locust St., Des Moines) offers half-price pizza and Peronis on Monday.
 
• Pelican Post (265 50th St., West Des Moines) has a special today on hot beef sandwiches, $10.95 all day. 
 
• Tito’s Lounge (3916 Urbandale Drive, Urbandale) offers all-you-can-eat wings Mondays. 
 
• Johnny's Hall of Fame (302 Court Ave., Des Moines) has $12 burger baskets on Mondays and Fridays.
 
• Urban Cellars (640 S. 50th St., West Des Moines) offers $60 wine dinners for two on Mondays including two entrees with soup or salad, a dessert and a bottle of wine. 
 
• Club 2000 (422 Indianola Road, Des Moines) has a burger basket with fries deal Mondays for $9. 
 
• Red Lobster's Monday special is lobster and shrimp scampi with a side for $20. 
 
• Paula's (524 Elm St., Valley Junction) has a Monday special loaded chicken on a croissant sandwich for $14. 
 
• Destination Grille (2491 E. First St., Grimes) has a Monday steak night special, sirloins and truffle fries for $18.
 
• Price Chopper delis offer two-piece, bone-in fried chicken dinners with two sides and a roll for $8 on Mondays. 
 
Fareways have specials through Saturday on chicken hindquarters at $.99/pound and asparagus for $1.99/pound.
 
— Jim Duncan, jd91446@aol.com

 
 
Featured in the current issue of CITYVIEW  Living magazine.
 

Pick up the latest issue of CITYVIEW!

FEATURE STORY
Fireworks, family and farm memories

By John Busbee

Fireworks were an annual point of contention on our three-generation family farm. Grandma was agin’em. Grandpa was for’em, as were the four grandkids. Mom was Switzerland on this black powder issue. It was a standoff. Grandma’s vote weighed heavily against all others, but the deciding factor was beyond question: This was all in honor of the celebration of our nation’s independence, our freedom from an oppressive monarchy. Since all the explosive, ear-ringing pyrotechnic extravaganza was to honor our country, Grandma begrudgingly became an abstaining member of the voting forum. Fireworks did happen, albeit on a small scale, on that little farmstead ‘tween Winfield and Mount Union, Iowa. ...

 
Read more
 
Featured home for sale
 
Post listings here for only $50. Contact jolene@iowalivingmagazines.com for details.
 
$535,000
5509 149th St.
Urbandale, IA 50323
 
Impressive 5-bedroom walkout ranch offering more than 3,200 square feet of finished living space in Urbandale’s desirable Coyote Ridge neighborhood! Built in 2016, this well-designed home combines an open layout, generous room sizes and flexible living areas ideal for everyday life and entertaining. ...
  
See the listing here.
 
See more homes for sale
 
SOLD: Featured commercial real estate transaction
 
3600 E. 14TH ST., DES MOINES
SALE DATE: 2025-12-12
SALE PRICE: $960,000
SELLER: JDS REAL ESTATE INVESTMENTS LLC
BUYER: MAGALLANES, MANUEL
ACRES: 0.682
SQUARE FEET: 4,925
 
More transactions
 
 
Sports headlines
FROM ESPN: Nelly Korda wins U.S. Women's Open as last putt just falls in. Nelly Korda won the 81st U.S. Women's Open on Sunday for her second consecutive major victory, holding off Charley Hull and Gaby Lopez by one shot when her final 2 1/2-foot par putt curled perilously around the cup and finally dropped in. ... READ MORE
 
FROM SPORTS ILLUSTRATED: Knicks Announce TSA-Like Security Measures at MSG for President Trump’s NBA Finals Game 3 Attendance. The Knicks have put new security procedures in place at Madison Square Garden ahead of President Trump’s attendance for Game 3 of the NBA Finals against the Spurs. On Saturday the team released a memo stating that The Garden is ramping up its security measures and will be working in tandem with the United States Secret Service to ensure a “safe and enjoyable” experience for all ticket holders. ... READ MORE
 
FROM YAHOO SPORTS: 5 players creating early MLB trade buzz. We are less than two months away from the MLB trade deadline, and as June gets underway, there are several players who have shined throughout the first half. For some of those players, given the teams they play for, their performances could pique the interest of potential buyers at this year's trade deadline. Here are five players buyers should be keeping their eyes on. ... READ MORE
 
 

1948: First Porsche completed. On June 8, 1948, a hand-built aluminum prototype labeled “No. 1″ becomes the first vehicle to bear the name of one of the world’s leading luxury car manufacturers: Porsche. … READ MORE

1949: George Orwell’s “1984” is published. George Orwell's novel of a dystopian future, 1984, is published on June 8, 1949. The novel’s all-seeing leader, known as “Big Brother,” becomes a universal symbol for intrusive government and oppressive bureaucracy. … READ MORE

1967: Israel attacks USS Liberty. During the Six-Day War, Israeli aircraft and torpedo boats attack the USS Liberty in international waters off Egypt’s Gaza Strip. The intelligence ship, well-marked as an American vessel and only lightly armed, was attacked first by Israeli aircraft that fired napalm and rockets at the ship. The Liberty attempted to radio for assistance, but the Israeli aircraft blocked the transmissions. Eventually, the ship was able to make contact with the U.S. carrier Saratoga, and 12 fighter jets and four tanker planes were dispatched to defend the Liberty. When word of their deployment reached Washington, however, Secretary of Defense Robert McNamara ordered them recalled to the carrier, and they never reached the Liberty. The reason for the recall remains unclear. … READ MORE

www.history.com

 
Birthdays and notables
 
Happy birthday, Beckham Miller!
 
These celebrities were born on this date: Boz Scaggs, Sonia Braga, Kathy Baker, Griffin Dunne, Mick Hucknall, Julianna Margulies, David Sutcliffe, Mark Feuerstein, Lindsay Davenport, Kanye West, Maria Menounos, Sturgill Simpson, Derek Trucks and Kim Clijsters
 
Morning chuckle

The answer to the last riddle: What did the gingerbread man put on his bed? COOKIE SHEETS! - Gail Tomlinson. Or A SPREAD!  - Rex Post. Or a BREAD SPREAD! - Carolyn Rogers.

Today's riddle: What do you call a bee that can't make up its mind?

Have a guess? Email tammy@iowalivingmagazines.com

 

To advertise in the Daily Umbrella or the Grimes/Dallas Center, North Polk or Adel Living magazines, contact:

Dan Juffer
Senior Account Executive
Office: 515-953-4822 ext. 303
Mobile: 515-371-2290
dan.juffer@dmcityview.com

 

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