
Jonathan Mattise
Reporter at Associated Press
Reporter at Associated Press Nashville
@AP reporter in Nashville, formerly in West Virginia. @TCPalm and @VillanovaU alum, Scranton, Pa. native, Philly sports fan. Email: [email protected]
Articles
-
2 weeks ago |
timesfreepress.com | Bruce Schreiner |Jonathan Mattise
FRANKFORT, Ky. (AP) — After days of deluges overfilled rivers to near-record levels across Kentucky, residents were anxious Tuesday to return to their flooded homes and assess what's salvageable, even as stubbornly high waters kept some of them waiting even longer. Susan Williams returned to her rural Franklin County home with her four dogs and three cats. She left Sunday while the waters kept rising. Now, her house and a neighbor's looked like they were on an island in brown waters.
-
2 weeks ago |
hammondstar.com | Jonathan Mattise
It has been nearly two decades since the workplace mockumentary “The Office” first set an episode inside a Chili’s, where Michael Scott handed out Dundie awards to his ever-tolerant employees, including trophies for the whitest sneakers and for stinking up the bathroom. Over nine seasons, “The Office” regularly name-dropped real places and products associated with Scranton, where the Emmy-winning show was set.
-
2 weeks ago |
hastingstribune.com | Bruce Schreiner |Jonathan Mattise
By BRUCE SCHREINER, KRISTIN M. HALL and JONATHAN MATTISE Associated Press FRANKFORT, Ky. - After days of deluges overfilled rivers to near-record levels across Kentucky, residents were anxious Tuesday to return to their flooded homes and assess what's salvageable, even as stubbornly high waters kept some of them waiting even longer.
-
2 weeks ago |
ottumwacourier.com | Bruce Schreiner |Jonathan Mattise
FRANKFORT, Ky. (AP) - After days of deluges overfilled rivers to near-record levels across Kentucky, residents were anxious Tuesday to return to their flooded homes and assess what's salvageable, even as stubbornly high waters kept some of them waiting even longer. Susan Williams returned to her rural Franklin County home with her four dogs and three cats. She left Sunday while the waters kept rising. Now, her house and a neighbor's looked like they were on an island in brown waters.
-
2 weeks ago |
pressdemocrat.com | Bruce Schreiner |Jonathan Mattise
FRANKFORT, Ky. — After days of deluges overfilled rivers to near-record levels across Kentucky, residents were anxious on Tuesday to return to their flooded homes and assess what would be salvageable, even as stubbornly high waters kept some of them waiting even longer. Susan Williams returned to her rural Franklin County home near Frankfort with her four dogs and three cats. She left on Sunday while the waters kept rising.
Try JournoFinder For Free
Search and contact over 1M+ journalist profiles, browse 100M+ articles, and unlock powerful PR tools.
Start Your 7-Day Free Trial →X (formerly Twitter)
- Followers
- 3K
- Tweets
- 13K
- DMs Open
- No

RT @AP: At least 16 people are dead following another round of torrential rain and flash flooding in parts of the South and Midwest. https:…

RT @timelywriter: The promise of newer, cheaper nuclear power is on the horizon and filling up the federal government’s regulatory pipeline…

Villanova hires Maryland's Kevin Willard as basketball coach https://t.co/q6zdJgn5EZ