One of those angry coaches decided to follow me up to the
newsroom; side note: most newsrooms are wide open workplaces with little to no privacy, so the night staff that night witnessed this whole thing. I didn’t have my own desk at the time, of course, but this guy
thought it would be prudent to look over my shoulder as I wrote the story in
the middle of the mostly deserted newsroom -- again, except for the night editors. I felt a bit intimidated, as you
could imagine. I decided to summon my sports editor, a brilliant but “out-there” kind
of guy from whom I learned a lot early in my career. My editor, Lou, was an
intimidating dude. He looked a bit like Donald Sutherland. He was pretty tall,
like 6-foot-3, with big bug eyes. He wore cowboy boots, cowboy jeans, a leather
vest and he chain-smoked unfiltered Camel cigarettes (remember, this is the
mid-1980s … way before smoke-free workplaces). Lou strolled over slowly, his boots
clicking on the tile floor, taking deep drags from his Camels. He asked the
coach what he thought he was doing. “Just makin’ sure the kid gets the facts
right in his story,’’ he said. Lou suggested that the coach best be on his way
(that’s probably how he said it, Clint Eastwood style). The guy didn’t move. I
didn’t move. Lou got closer, his smoky breath and bug eyes peering down on the
guy, and emphatically told him to get out of the newsroom. We had no security
guards back then, but the guy eventually did leave after that. Lou looked at me,
emotionless, big bug eyes, and gave me my marching orders: “Colaizzo, 12
inches, by 11 o’clock.” With trembling hands, I wrote the story. And that was
that. I don't recall any feedback from that story, which is good. In journalism, you only get called when you screw up. No one ever calls to say "hey man, you got it right, good job." Journalists and "the media," especially these days, are punching bags. Comes with the territory.
Newsrooms are not supposed to be unsafe workplaces, but like
everything else in our society they very much can be, and last week in Annapolis, Maryland, a newsroom was shot up with casualties and injuries and
well, you know the deal by now: Thoughts and prayers have been offered (and
will be offered). How nice. Thoughts and prayers. These days, there is such a
hostile attitude among many toward the “media” … but I’m certain no one would
wish this on any newsroom anywhere. The suspect who most likely did this – the
armed coward was found hiding under a desk in the building – had a long history
of being pissed off at this particular newspaper. These days, it seems like
everybody’s pissed off about something or at someone, always. Arm a pissed-off
person and you get what we got in Annapolis. Or Vegas. Or San Bernadino. Or
that church in Texas. Or Sandy Hook. You get the idea.
Memo to elected officials: Enough with the thoughts and
prayers. Really. You all have the power to effect change. Do something.
Thoughts and prayers sound nice and in fact they are nice. But they’re not all
that effective when the smoke clears. Here’s my hope: I hope that we can all
stop being so angry all the time – at each other, at each other’s “tribe,” at
the media, at all of it. Let’s play nice every once in a while, OK? And maybe
once in a while we can offer thoughts and prayers before we actually have to offer thoughts and prayers.
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