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Podcast No. 288: Jim Larson

Jim Larson is a Great Falls Russell graduate who made his way to the Mining City by way of Bozeman, Billings and Anaconda.
He is a bit of a jack of all trades, especially in his role with ButteNews.net, which he serves as editor along with his wife, Diane. Jim is also a camera man, writer and advertisement salesman.
Before starting up ButteNews.net, Jim worked at The Billings Outpost and The Butte Weekly. At the Weekly, he worked with legendary reporter Rick Foote, and he says he learned some of his cantankerous ways from the man who introduced us to Milo The Miner.
Jim grew up in a blue-collar Great Falls, where his father worked on the railroad. Jim even worked on the railroad for a short time, building muscle while pounding in railroad spikes. Then he went to Montana State University, where he spent six years taking all kinds of history classes.
He said he was always drawn to the Mining City, and his love of history definitely played a role in that. While working at the Outpost, he said he was always the one assigned to do a review whenever a new book about Butte was released.
At 70, Jim is still working hard at bringing us the news. ButteNews.net is a news site where readers can follow local, state and national news. For free. Jim also works to put out a monthly print publication that can be found in most restaurants and many offices around town.
If you need the jail roster, the police reports or a roundup of national news, ButteNews.net is the place to go. It is also the place to get introduced to local candidates and some feature stories on important people and issues.
Listen in to this episode as Jim talks about his long road to the Mining City. Listen as he talks about his days at MSU, where so many of his friends were from Butte. Listen as he talks about getting into the newspaper business and why he is still going.
Listen in to hear what you are missing if you do not regularly visit ButteNews.net.
Today’s podcast is presented by Leskovar Honda, home of the 20-year, 200,000-mile warranty.
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Podcast No. 287: Mark Durham

Nobody on the planet has more fun living life than Mark Durham. Nobody is more positive, either.
Durham grew up in Three Forks excelling at sports and idolizing his big brother, Mick. Mark still holds the pole vault record at Three Forks, where he describes his football days as being the “best non-tackling safety in the state.”
While Mick played and coached at Montana State University, Mark played and coached at Montana Western, which was called Western Montana College in his playing days. He took over as the third head coach in the history of the Western men’s basketball program, replacing the legendary Casey Keltz.
After a long, successful run with the Bulldogs, Durham moved to the role as the school’s athletic director. It was a move he made to try to help the Bulldogs compete with Montana Tech and Carroll College. With Joe McClafferty at Tech and Bruce Parker at Carroll, Western was behind the 8-ball trying to keep up with the Joneses. In that role, Durham hired Steve Keller and Lindsay Woolley as basketball coaches and Ryan Nourse as football coach. So, his legacy is a lasting one with the Dawgs.
After moving to Bozeman to work in the insurance industry, Mark learned of his cancer diagnosis on Jan. 1, 2018. Mark, of course, tackled the battle with cancer they way everyone expected he would. And, like we knew he would, Mark beat it.
Today, at 60 but going on 36, Mark is the director of Name, Image and Likeness for the Montana State men’s basketball program. What he does for the Bobcats would have had him portrayed as a villain in a sports movie years ago. He does not always like it, but it is such an instrumental job to help the Bobcats compete.
Mark is also close to his two daughters, and he is now a grandpa. Well, he doesn’t call himself that. Instead, he is the “G-Dawg,” and he is still living life to the fullest every day.
Listen in to this episode as Durham talks about his job as the NIL guy for the Bobcats. Listen as he talks about his playing and coaching days and the relationships he still has with his former teammates and players.
Listen in as he talks about fighting cancer and how he kept that positive attitude through it all.
This is one you do not want to miss, and Mark swears that most of what he said is true.
Today’s episode of the ButteCast is presented by the Jewelry Design Center. Let Brian Toone and Co. be your jewelers for life.
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Podcast No. 286: Jim McBride

Lt. Col. James McBride recently retired after a 25-year career in the Marine Corps. Of course, in Butte, we call him Jim or Jimmy.
McBride is a 1992 graduate of Butte Central High School. He attended the Hawthorne and Hillcrest elementary schools in Butte before going to Butte Central Junior High and then Butte Central High School.
Six days after graduating from BC, he began boot camp in San Diego.
By becoming a Marine, Jim followed in the footsteps of this father, Bill, and older brother, Sean. He said he reluctantly became a Marine after his plans for the Naval Academy fell through. In high school, though, we all assumed Jim would be a Marine. He just always looked like one.
Jim played football at Butte Central, wearing No. 72 as he played both ways on the line for the Maroons. As a senior, he earned first-team all-conference and second-team All-State honors.
While enlisted in the Marines, Jim earned a degree in economics from Tulane University in New Orleans. Later, he earned a pair of master’s degrees.
Jim served in many different countries around the world, including Iraq and Afghanistan, before retiring.
Today, Jim is a member of the city council, representing Johns Island in Charleston, South Carolina, where he lives with his wife, Lynn.
Listen in to this episode as Jim as he talks about his days in the Marines, which includes a bit of mentoring to fellow BC graduate Rob O’Neill.
Listen as he talks about why he decided to run for city council and how he never even paid attention to local politics until he retired. Listen as he talks about some of his friends from high school and why he was reluctant to join the Marine Corps in the first place.
Listen in to hear that boot camp turned out to be just like the movies.
Today’s podcast is presented by Casagranda’s Steakhouse. Eat where the local’s eat.






















