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MORE ABOUT MONEY PIT

The Program

Every weekend the Money Pit team broadcasts their two-hour show to affiliate radio stations across the country. Tom and Leslie have a unique relationship with their listeners who respect and trust them. Their audience knows that they can do it themselves…but they don't have to do it alone.
The Money Pit Home Improvement Radio Show also offers affiliates and advertisers, many unequaled opportunities for exposure that go far beyond the program. Through a high traffic Website, commercial-free short form features, and frequent appearances on national and local television, Tom and Leslie encompass the ENTIRE media package.

Tom also writes a nationally syndicated weekly column covering home improvement, safety, consumer protection, and real estate. The columns are featured each week on MSNBC.com, the nation's #1 news site, where the team also hosts weekly chat sessions.  Request Information   Back to Money Pit

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Leslie Segrete

Welcome to the All Access Music Group News/Talk/Sports Section.
10 Questions With...

Leslie Segrete NAME: Leslie Segrete
TITLE: co host, The Money Pit Home Improvement Radio Show; Carpenter on TLC's >"While You Were Out"
MARKET: National
COMPANY:The Money Pit Home Improvement Radio Show
BORN: Bethpage, New York
RAISED: Long Island
BRIEF CAREER SYNOPSIS: Set Designer and on air personality
WEBSITE:lesliesegrete.com





1. From designer to media star- how did that come about?

I was head of set design for the Oxygen Network out of the New York studios and also designed the sets for the new pilots being proposed. When we would work on the pilots, myself and a producer, Brian Neshel, would build them over the weekend and then strike them for regular production on Monday mornings. He had friends at the BBC who were starting up "While You Were Out" and heard they were looking for a girl who was fun and could build, and thought I would be a good fit. They called me up and, a few days later, I was filming episodes 4 and 5 in Connecticut, and that was three years and 140 episodes ago. As for "The Money Pit," another friend, this time Hank Mendheim (also an Oxygen connection who is now at NBC), forwarded me the job listing. I sent in my reel and materials, and the rest is near history. All of these opportunities- even these 10 questions- when they come my way are such a dream, because I never imagined having a career like this.

2. What are you passionate about?

That is a toughie. I love the fact that my jobs allow me to be creative and always challenge my hands. The part that makes it all worth while for me is the fact that I am educating my audience while entertaining. I love that, if you wanted to, you could walk away and actually create these projects yourself. That is what does it for me. I am, however, most passionate about providing a loving relationship for my family and making sure they never feel left out.

3. So far, what about doing the radio show has surprised you the most? What's the best thing about having added "The Money Pit" to your duties?

Working on the radio show has been great. Tom Kraeutler has taught me so much about what goes on within the walls and the foundation of your home. He really does know everything about everything. While the new knowledge is fantastic, it has also made me a very paranoid home owner, because I now know of all of the possible pitfalls lurking within. Most surprising has been really trying to let my personality shine through while essentially talking to my office wall at home. And even more surprising is how the tongue has the ability to form a giant knot as the result of overtiredness.

4. Of all the projects you've done for "While You Were Out" and the various shows you've done, which was the most rewarding and why?

We have just added the element on "While You Were Out" of there sometimes being only one carpenter on the show, and I just had my trial by fire. The room was to be a kitchen. Gutted completely, with only the connections for the appliances remaining. There was so much to be done, and I just was thrilled with the turnout. We did not get to grout the countertops or do the floor, but, man, did we ever get a lot completed. It just really proved to me that I am capable.

5. What are some of the biggest design faux pas you commonly see? What things do people do with their homes that make you wince?

Lack of organization. This is so common everywhere we travel, and it is a killer. All things need to have a home and go there when finished with them. Maybe this is part of cleaning OCD, but it can really change a room. Home owners really just need to pick a design style and go with it. Try not to mix and match too many different ideas or themes-it just won't work in large quantities. Bring in small and eclectic collections of items to get that style point across with out over whelming the room.

6. What's your favorite recipe?

I make a banana bread that will melt your heart and go straight to you thighs but it is sooooo worth it.

7. Of what are you most proud?

I am most proud of the relationship I have with my parents. Especially my dad, who passed away last year. Dominick Segrete was an amazing architect who opened my eyes to design, and I only wish that I could have learned more from him.

8. What do you do for fun?

Unfornuately, right now, it has been making a super-hero costume for my best friend Lara's comedy troupe. It is very metallic and futuristic, but totally rocks. My husband I love to go bowling, as lame as that is. He is great, and I am just terrible, and for some reason always manage to pull a muscle, bowling! When we can, we love to travel and we have an obsession with the ocean. We love to see the fish- I am a snorkeler, a top dweller, and he is a diver. But the view is almost the same.

9. Fill in the blank: I can't make it through the day without ______________.

...laughing with my husband.

10. What's the best advice you ever got? The worst?

Best: From my dad, when I was faced with finding a new job- not my choice, mind you- he said "Any monkey can drive a car, but if it can make turns, that is a smart monkey." I think that is how I live my life. I am the turn-making monkey. I embrace all opportunities with enthusiasm and try to always do my best. I know it sounds like silly advice, but it works for me.

Worst: I only ask the people I trust most for advice, so it is always the right bit for me.


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The Mike Kinosian Interview: "Money Pit" co-host Leslie Segrete.

Les Has More If your television remote has a tendency to frequently land on TLC, there's an excellent chance you've seen Leslie Segrete on one of that cable channel's most popular "Life Unscripted" offerings - the Emmy-nominated "While You Were Out."

A fascination to create and craft things has underscored the life of the former Art Director of "The Rikki Lake Show" from literally her earliest recollections.

While most people's area of expertise is limited to one or two areas, it seems this zestful and instantly likeable New Yorker's skills are borderless.

Leslie Segrete
Radio was added to her expansive resume three months ago (2-12-2005), when she joined Tom Kraeutler as co-host of "The Money Pit Home Improvement Radio Show."

Intriguing Opportunity
Approximately 150 terrestrial stations and the two satcasters carry the Squeaky Door Productions' two-hour weekend program, which has proven to be a great education in radio production for Segrete. "Tom is such a great guy and has established an amazing team," she states. "I've learned from people calling in about ventilation and cracked foundations and am now the most paranoid homeowner in America. My background is aesthetics and furniture construction - not what's going on behind drywall. He's opened my eyes to this in a good way - as well as in a very bad way."

An NBC-TV producer friend of Segrete's, Hank Mendheim, constantly monitors different media-related websites. "He came across an ad that said a company was looking for someone for a lifestyle program for all types of media," she recounts. "He e-mailed me the clipping and I thought it seemed like an interesting idea."

But the decorator/designer/carpenter/seamstress was on the road at the time and her press materials and show reels were at home. "I called my husband [Ed] and the two of us were on the phone forever," the incessantly upbeat Segrete recalls. "We finally put everything together and he had my materials [sent by messenger] the next day. I heard from Tom that evening. It seemed like it was kismet."

No Exceptions
It's understandable if someone were to think "The Money Pit" was a show about finances rather than home improvement, but as Segrete explains, "Tom makes it very clear in all intros that a person's home is an absorption of funds. There are problems or design/decoration issues that you want to keep changing and it ends up sucking up every dime."

Even the show's new co-host isn't immune to the high cost of home ownership. "My husband and I recently crossed the first year threshold of being in our home," notes Segrete, who in 1999 designed and maintained window and in-store displays at Giorgio Armani/New York City. "As I was going over receipts to do our taxes, I was dumbfounded at the amount of money we've put into this house. Just because I work in this industry doesn't mean everything in my house is touched by gold and works perfectly. It's almost the opposite."

Workingwomen constitute a significant percentage of the labor force, of course, but there are also many cases where females are at home throughout the day. "They're aware of problems and become a little more paranoid about what they see," contends Segrete, who succeeds Debby Robinson as "Money Pit" co-host. "I encourage them to call and take part in the experience so we can all learn about something together."

Constant Learning Experience
A home inspector by trade, Kraeutler possesses a vast amount of home improvement knowledge and Segrete proudly proclaims, "No matter what someone calls in about, he'll have an answer. If he doesn't, hopefully, I will. Listeners end [their calls] by saying they love us and we're helping them. We have dedicated listeners who constantly learn something new."

Callers thus far haven't generally mentioned Segrete's TLC credits, giving the 2000 French Culinary Institute graduate reason to speculate, "I'm still not so sure if they're familiar with who I am. If they don't know my name, they might put it together by [seeing my picture] on the website and in the newsletter."

Show's Foundation
Rather than wanting to know how to do something, "Money Pit" listeners usually prefer product recommendations or how to deal with their contractor. "The two of us offer an experience and intelligence that makes it easily understandable and encourages the audience to take part in it," Segrete remarks.

Many queries are fielded regarding foundation problems, which she explains is moisture-related. "That's what happens when gutters aren't draining properly," Segrete points out. "We've received many questions about tile work and roof damage from [hurricane-ravaged] Florida. We're surprised when we get a flooring question from Florida that involves hardwood because it's so out of character for the region. You get tossed a few surprises, but most of the time, people tend to call about seasonal issues. But even if it's a similar question, there's a different answer because of unique conditions."

Early Reluctance
There's much fondness and respect in Segrete's heart for her father, Dominick, who passed away in May 2004. Although Leslie wasn't particularly drawn to the medium, Dominick was a big Talk radio fan.

The week before Leslie got married (about four years ago), she and Dominick were at a little clam bar on the East end of Long Island, where a local radio station was doing a remote. "My father wanted so much for me to talk on this radio show," remarks Segrete, who was Art Director for the Oxygen Network at the time, but wasn't on camera then as she is now on TLC. "I was behind-the-scenes and a little shy. When the guy put the microphone in my hand, I realized the show was his livelihood and I better be `on.' I know somewhere my dad is listening to `The Money Pit' and is enjoying it greatly."

Radio hadn't been something three-year "While You Were Out" veteran Segrete thought about, largely because she was unaware there were home improvement-themed talk shows. "When this [opportunity] came my way, it seemed like a good fit," she remarks. "It's almost like establishing myself as a brand and I'm glad to have it. There are so many different television programs on home improvement and home design. We have no idea where this is all going."

Basement Bantering
Friendly, cohesive on-air bantering and interaction exists between Kraeutler and Segrete, which is noteworthy because he's in New Jersey and she's in New York and the two don't see each other. "We don't want to step on each other's words or [be redundant] with the same advice," she remarks. "While we're on the ISDN line, we're Online with each other and with the producer in the studio. If someone has a point they want to make, we have to pay attention to all these different screens. It's kind of strange to sit in my office and talk to nobody. I have to stifle the Italian in me. As I speak, I gesture with my hands and slap the microphone a lot."

Having never heard "The Money Pit" before being named the show's co-host, Segrete had no pre-conceived notions about it or what to expect with her partner. "He's a genuinely nice guy who really cares about his business and wants everyone to feel comfortable and perform to his or her best abilities," she says glowingly of Kraeutler, who's done the show the past nine years. "He really has it down to a [science].

Designing Woman
There's considerable yearly travel associated with the "While You Were Out" grind, which consists of doing four shows in 15 different locations. "The people who drive the truck and trailer across the country get home half as much as we do," Segrete explains. "I enjoy [doing that show] because we make a difference. Sometimes it's as small as changing aesthetics to as big as reuniting families or doing something for charity. It's not going to be forever, so it's something to take advantage of right now. Thank goodness supportive people surround me and are willing to take this ride with me."

If you were to ask Segrete three years ago to name her greatest professional love, the answer would've been set design. Today's reply would most likely be theater and television. "I enjoy nothing more than creating an environment for the audience to partake in, whether it's conveying a scene or emotion that a playwright has written or encouraging a conversation area for a talk show," she comments. "First and foremost - I consider myself a designer."

Fearless Female
The next career step for Segrete is writing "Fear Not! You Can Reupholster Anything," a "How To" book that's due out the end of this year. "It's daunting because it's a tremendous amount of textual pages," says the author, who also contributes as a "House Beautiful" writer. "I'm not professionally trained as an upholsterer, but have done it the past 12 years. I've figured out how to do it from a regular person's standpoint - not someone who does it as their trade. I'm a creative person who is thrilled to have a job that allows me to use my hands every day. When I was growing up, I always said I wanted to make things. It amazes me that, in my 30 years of life, I've figured it out and am doing it."

A longtime fan of the writing process, she hints more books may be in the offing. "I'm hoping that, in the next few years, I won't travel as much so my husband and I can have a family of our own," Segrete notes. "All these opportunities coming my way are things I've never thought about or dreamed of. The future is mine and I'm glad to [seize] it."

WHO: Leslie Segrete
WHAT: Co-Host "The Money Pit"
WHERE: Squeaky Door Productions
WHEN: Various weekend times (two hours)
HOW MANY AFFILIATES: Approximately 150 terrestrial stations; also Sirius and XM
HOW LONG: Since February 12, 2005
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