Tuesday, May 2, 2023

Some good news

 I have had many people doing prayers to St. Joseph on my behalf, to aid me in my job search.

So I am happy to say that on day of the Catholic feast of St. Joseph the Worker, I have had the first conversation with my new employers. I have accepted a similar position to the one I left, and it's actually a return of sorts.

I will be doing sports page design for Lee Enterprises. It's a remote position.

It is a return because Lee Enterprises took over management of BH Media after I left, and then bought BH Media a short time after that.

So I will be dealing with the same BH Media footprint, plus additional Lee Enterprises properties.

When I left, there were a bunch of us who were telling BH Media they ought to offer remote work, but corporate thought it was inconceivable.

I don't know if it was my leaving in 2019 or some pandemic thing in 2020, but the Lee management company embraced the remote possibilities since, and most of their designers are remote.

It's not 100 percent official. I have to pass a drug test.

But I should start May 16.

Thanks to everyone who prayed or had good thoughts. It was most appreciated.

I was looking at a column I wrote for The Gamecock way back in 1989.

I wrote, in part, "I want to be a journalist –— for the rest of my life, I want to be a journalist. I want to write about sports and about government. I want to sit in the slot on the night desk and pound away at the wire copy coming in for tomorrow's bulldog edition."

That guy is still getting what he wants.

But things he could not foresee have changed the business. I am pretty positive this is my last newspaper job. So I am going to make the best of it.

I wish, however, I could go back and tell that kid in 1989 what's coming.

Thanks and love to all.

Saturday, March 25, 2023

Some bad news

Telling bad news is sometimes harder than the bad news itself. 
So I said in my bad day Facebook post about Wednesday, there were two things. 
Second, I detailed, was my car suddenly wouldn't start. My son and I went down a checklist of some things, for about 20 minutes, and got it to start. 
But the other thing happened first, and there's no 20-minute fix for it. 
It was inevitable, but still cuts to the quick. 
I was laid off from my job designing sports pages for Gannett newspapers on Wednesday. 
I had finished and was about to send my first Wednesday assignments to the press when I got a message to come to an "urgent" meeting. When I logged in to the meeting in Teams, there was my Team Manager and an HR-looking woman. 
When no one else seemed to be logging in for a group meeting, I knew what it was. 
Just last week, they changed — again — the way we were doing our assignments as a way to manage time and costs. Can't go in to details. But I was moving my pages faster than I had previously. 
My wife was working from home as well and was on a computer call herself. So I told her first. 
Told my son when he got home, and called my mother later in the evening. 
You tell the news, and then there is the pause, as it sinks in, as the person you told looks for something, the right thing, to say. 
There's a look, not quite blank, but empty, as if something is being sucked out of them, as they start hurting for you. 
And not wanting to do that any more, I had not told my sisters and brother or any extended family. Until this post.
Sorry to them. 
My wife, quoting a woman she works with, one who used to work at a big metro daily that is a shell of itself, said that she didn't leave newspapers. Newspapers left her. 
That's something I know. I have said variations of it to people I know who were getting out. 
She is usually right about such things, but it takes me a while to get around to agreeing. Usually. I do agree. She says I need to find something else to do. 
I know I need to. I just haven't got a clue what that ought to be. 
I have been a newspaper office drone since 2010. I've covered some big events as a freelance writer on certain occasions. Took a week to go the World Meeting of Families in Philly when Pope Francis came to the U.S., and also covered the 2012 Democratic National Convention in Charlotte. But jobs like that and stories like that were few and far between. 
I know so much of the newspaper profession these days is based in digital, rather than my forte, shoe leather. 
Newspapers like we used to have are going away. Far away. 
But we still need journalism in this society. Desperately need good journalism. 
And I think I have some stories yet to write. But don't know for whom I could. 
So my last hurrah in journalism will be a basically unseen design gig for a company that ... admits it wants to be digital. 
Thoughts and prayers will be greeted with thanks. All my best to you and yours.