STEVE SMITH -- What’s up
If ever you needed proof that timing is everything, the next week
would be it. Next week I will say goodbye to two people who have been
instrumental in the development of my life during the past eight years.
I first met Bill Lobdell in August 1998, when I won a contest for this
job. OK, it may not be the most elegant way to start writing for a
newspaper, but from day one Bill treated me as a colleague and made it
clear that this was serious business. Our first meeting was brief but to
the point. “There are two rules,” Bill said. “No anonymous sources, and
no more writing for the Register.” That I had to stop my contributions to
the Orange County Register was a given, but the anonymous source rule had
me scratching my head. It was only a few days later that I started to
understand why Bill told me that.
I was killing time in the checkout line at a supermarket, scanning the
pages of a tabloid newspaper that was reporting on either an invasion of
penguins from outer space or the man with two heads who was suing a
barber for charging him for two haircuts -- I can’t remember which. But I
do recall reading many versions of the phrase “sources tell us that . .
.” It seems the sources in that trash either did not want to be or could
not be identified, and it made terrible reading.
Along the way, Bill and I have disagreed about a few important local
issues, but the discussions were always civil. We stuck to the facts and
left out the emotion that drives so many people to take one side or the
other.
Bill is moving on to the Orange County edition of The Los Angeles
Times to write and edit the religion section. Bill’s tenure at the Pilot
has left us all better informed. And over the past two years, Bill’s
counsel has made me a better writer (if it doesn’t show, I take
responsibility for not taking his good advice).
Thanks, Bill, and best wishes at your new job.
Next week is also the week I say “adios” -- not goodbye -- to Dr.
Laura Schlessinger. For the past six months, I have been editing Dr.
Laura’s national magazine, the Perspective. With the help of her
intelligent and dedicated staff, we managed to post dramatic increases in
circulation, renewals and two-year subscriptions. One issue was so
popular, it sold out -- a first, I believe, in the magazine’s five-year
history.
Dr. Laura is on a very high pedestal in our home. It was her
inspiration that drove Cay and me to take Bean out of full-time day care
and limit Roy’s to about a month. That was eight years ago. Four years
ago, when I started to make the switch to full-time writer, she supported
my efforts by posting my book on her Web site.
But there is a side to Dr. Laura that you do not know, one that may
never make it in the newspapers or onto “20/20.” As a Daily Pilot reader,
however, I’m going to share this secret with you: Dr. Laura is gracious,
kind and very funny. Here’s another juicy tidbit: She is driven to
helping children. That passion is the motivation behind nearly everything
she does, and she walks the walk. I know because I have seen her in
action.
These are not the best of times for Dr. Laura. When you’re on top, you
become the easiest target to shoot at, and it does not matter that you
have spent your entire career successfully motivating people to reach
beyond their fears and do something with this precious gift of life they
have been given. Because of her, there are untold children spending much
more time with their parents and plenty of Steve Smiths who did a
180-degree turn on their lives and have so much to show for it. Instead,
writers, broadcasters and tiny, narrow-minded social groups prefer to use
her temporary setbacks for their own gain, whether it’s for readers,
ratings or publicity. They are cheap shots all, lacking in any depth or
imagination.
It works both ways. The same person many of them wrote and spoke about
not so long ago, the one who was giving America heck and gave them
something to talk about -- and praise -- is the same person they now use
for target practice. All of these people with the very short memories
should be ashamed of themselves.
My relationship as her editor is over; I have to leave because I am
working far too many hours and my family life is suffering. There is
irony in that. Yes, I’m leaving, but Dr. Laura knows that if she needs
me, I will be there for her.
When I gave her the news, she looked at me sternly and said, “I’m glad
you’re quitting.” Then she smiled and said, “Because you’re quitting for
the right reason.”
That’s the real Dr. Laura story.
* STEVE SMITH is a Costa Mesa resident and freelance writer. Readers
can leave a message for him on the Daily Pilot hotline at (949) 642-6086.
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