STEVE SMITH -- What’s Up
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The drive down to the Newport Beach Marriott to attend the annual
Mayor’s Dinner sponsored by Speak Up Newport on Thursday night produced
an unsettling sight. Sitting in the parking lot of Josh Slocums, the nice
restaurant so many locals have depended on for good food and drink for so
many years, was a remote broadcast van from television station OCN.
Thanks to the contribution of cash and interior design tips from
you-know-who, Josh Slocums is in danger of becoming our local version of
honey, and Cay and I witnessed the first fly it has attracted. That may
have been the plan all along, but I fail to see how selling one’s soul
for the wrong kind of attention is any sort of effective long-term
business strategy.
Sadly, Josh Slocums has put in with a fickle crowd, one that gets
bored easily and which requires an ever-increasing dose of excitement in
order to get the thrill. That will result, in short order, in burnout.
At the Marriott, Cay and I had a drink and were munching on appetizers
in a room of about 300 people when a fellow walked past bearing a name
tag we both recognized, but not clearly enough to identify the exact
connection.
“I recognize that name,” said Cay. “Who is that?”
“I’m not sure, but I think he’s a big pro-airport guy,” I replied.
Without missing a beat, Cay said, “Everyone in this room is a big
pro-airport guy.”
It was true. With the exception of only two people whom I knew for
certain did not want an airport built at El Toro, we had walked into the
lion’s den.
Seven o’clock rolled around, and we sat down to dinner at the table
hosted by the Daily Pilot and its publisher, Tom Johnson. I had the good
fortune to sit between Tom and Cay on my right and two of my favorite
locals, Barbara and Jim de Boom, on my left.
Barbara is the president of the Orange Chamber of Commerce and, in
answer to my question, she assured me that things were going well in
Orange, one of the county’s most gracious cities. I like Orange. There
are parts of the city in which time has stood still, to the benefit of
everyone and, despite the school board troubles, it still seems like a
nice place to live.
Jim is busy with the reading program for three Westside schools, a
plan that is one of the best ideas these parts have produced in the 15
years I’ve lived here. Jim told me the program needs 2,001 reading
volunteers for 2,001 kids. They also need about $900 more to fund the
purchase of the books they need for the program.
I am sending Jim a check for $100 to help with that expense. I hope
that there are eight other readers of this column who could do the same,
or even 16 other readers who could send $50 each. But I’m not sure I even
have 16 readers anymore.
The most interesting question of the evening came right out of the
blue from Sherry Bell, wife of Pilot columnist Joe Bell. “When you write
about Cay, does she get to see the column first?”
It was a great question, and one that I was fearing for a long time.
“No,” I replied. “If I did that, I’d never get to write about her.”
After the salad came the moment we’d all waited for. Master of
Ceremonies Peter Buffa took the lectern to begin the evening’s program.
Buffa is a very funny fellow, intelligent and a natural wit; someone I’d
listen to on the radio if he had his own talk show. He was a perfect
choice for the job.
The event’s final speaker produced both the high and the low of my
evening. Newport Beach Mayor Gary Adams offered a state of the city
address in which he expressed support for a John Wayne-size airport for
El Toro. That’s the low.
Then, at the close of his speech, Adams paused to thank the one person
who had made his dreams come true. He paused, struggling to clear his
throat and find just enough poise to thank his wife, Birgitt. Having been
in that same position at least a 100 times over the past three years in
an effort to acknowledge Cay, I knew just what he was going through.
Adams is a truly happy man, and I may disagree with him on the airport,
but I respect the public appreciation he gave to his wife that night.
I feel the same way about Cay. And thankfully, she has never asked to
preview this column.
* STEVE SMITH is a Costa Mesa resident and freelance writer. Readers
may leave a message for him on the Daily Pilot hotline at (949) 642-6086.
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