I've highlighted a lot of interesting people on The Last Word doing a lot of interesting things. I hear from viewers who ask me if those people are still doing those interesting things. They want an update. So, let's do it. Let's check in on two people from the Last Word Hall of Fame.

Remember Tony Sobina from Oil City? We first met him in late March 2023. He had gone fishing for 1,086 days in a row and we joined him on Elk Creek in Girard as he continued his streak. Today, that streak still continues. We're joining Tony on Oil Creek at Drake Well State Park in Titusville. It's now the 1,845th day in a row that Tony has gone fishing. The streak now extends over five years.  Hey, why end such a great thing?

"That's been it,” says Tony. “I really haven't had a reason to stop. So, I just kind of keep going every day somewhere. And yeah, it's been fun."

Tony's streak made it though this past winter when some days it was bitter cold and some streams were iced over. The streak survived a few months ago when Tony came down with COVID. He felt like sleeping rather than fishing.

"So, I'd go out and fish and as soon as I started to feel a little bit like I shouldn't be here, I'd go back to the house. But I fished through the COVID deal, and I caught some nice fish too actually,” says Tony with a laugh.

By the way, Tony has caught 4,803 fish during his streak. He still is a catch and release fisherman.

It was fun joining Tony on Oil Creek. It’s now time to head to Edinboro and visit with another old friend.

Remember Bob Davis, the man affectionately called Mister Bob? We first met him in June 2022. He's the man who just about every day, rain or shine, summer or winter, goes out to the end of his driveway, or out to his porch, and he waves to the drivers who pass by his house on Fry Road.  Since we first talked with Mister Bob, he lost his youngest son to cancer. His beloved wife also passed away.

"So I had two funerals in a short time. And boy, I was hurting. I was hurting all over,” says Mister Bob.

However, an amazing thing happened. This 89-year old gentleman who started waving to drivers to make them feel good realized something great. The waves and beeps he heard back from the drivers were making him feel better.

"It was like medicine,” says Mister Bob. “It was a therapy that you didn't have to go to the hospital to get. And I was getting it right out here on my driveway."

The best time of day to get a wave from Mister Bob is between 3:30 and 4:30 pm Monday through Friday. He lives on Fry Road about 1 ½ miles south of Route 6N.