John Dunning Quote

The premise of Heart’s Desire was simple: people wrote in asking for things; the better the cause, the better their chances of getting it. Up to 50,000 letters a week came in, to be read and judged by staff. The goal was, first of all, entertainment: letters that would make good air copy. This usually meant a tug at the heartstrings, a hearty laugh, or something bizarre (one woman wanted a washing machine so she wouldn’t have to wash her husband’s pants in the creek—he had refused to speak to her since finding a frog in his pocket).

John Dunning

The premise of Heart’s Desire was simple: people wrote in asking for things; the better the cause, the better their chances of getting it. Up to 50,000 letters a week came in, to be read and judged by staff. The goal was, first of all, entertainment: letters that would make good air copy. This usually meant a tug at the heartstrings, a hearty laugh, or something bizarre (one woman wanted a washing machine so she wouldn’t have to wash her husband’s pants in the creek—he had refused to speak to her since finding a frog in his pocket).

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About John Dunning

John Dunning may refer to:

John Dunning (businessman) (born 1934), British businessman, founder of Westmorland Motorway Services
John Dunning (detective fiction author) (1942–2023), American writer of detective fiction
John Dunning (true crime author) (1918–1990), true crime author
John Dunning (snooker player) (1927–2009), English professional snooker player
John Harry Dunning (1927–2009), British economist
John Dunning (film editor) (1916–1991), American film editor
John Dunning (film producer) (1927–2011), Canadian film producer
John R. Dunning (1907–1975), American physicist
Jack Dunning (John Angus Dunning, 1903–1971), New Zealand Test cricketer
John Dunning, 1st Baron Ashburton (1731–1783), English lawyer and politician
John Dunning (volleyball) (born 1950), American volleyball coach