Fifty-two Wednesday's ago I became unemployed,
launching what would be the most interesting year of my life.
A few of my former co-workers have this week been describing their paths since that day.
This is my story.
A few of my former co-workers have this week been describing their paths since that day.
This is my story.
The darkened and silenced newsroom of News92FM 10/8/14 |
I was one of the
47 journalists unceremoniously “separated” by RadioOne when they dumped our all-news format in favor of an all-Beyonce stunt to herald the installation
of the company’s “Classic Hip-Hop” style of radio at 92.1FM.
I’d been fired many times before, and was confident I could find a new role at another outlet in a reasonable length of time.
Ha. It’s been a year.
I’d been fired many times before, and was confident I could find a new role at another outlet in a reasonable length of time.
Ha. It’s been a year.
The Program Director at KSBJ called me for coffee a month after the closure of News92.
KSBJ is a contemporary Christian music Radio station operated by the KSBJ Educational Foundation. It’s a non-profit station, and recently received “Station of the Year” honors from the Christian Music Broadcasters.
KSBJ is a contemporary Christian music Radio station operated by the KSBJ Educational Foundation. It’s a non-profit station, and recently received “Station of the Year” honors from the Christian Music Broadcasters.
KSBJ is a powerhouse of programming, street presence, and
positive influence in the communities it serves. If more commercial stations were
operated like KSBJ, fewer Radio people would be out of work.
Just sayin…
Just sayin…
I was
honored and blessed by the meeting, and soon after became an “occasional
announcer” on KSBJ.
The Publisher of Houston Woman Magazine called
me a week or so later to have lunch. She wanted a column for the women’s
magazine written from a male perspective, sharing what men wish women knew. My “Man
Cave Markings” pieces have explored the dynamic between the way women and men
think, why women are better engineers than men, how buying back-to-school
supplies has changed, and observations about one of my other “occasional” jobs--as postal worker.
A colleague called the following month,
suggesting I look at an opportunity to work as an aerial videographer for a
local television station.
I love to fly in small aircraft. Flying in
helicopters is nirvana for me, and the job is perfectly suited for my
technical abilities, nose for news, and sense of adventure.
I have trained in three
aircraft on three different camera systems. I've covered building fires, traffic
fatalities, cop chases, and grass fires. There is never a dull moment, and I've
grabbed some memorable images of my hometown from 1,000-ft. in the air.
Yes, I'm still on call.
Yes, I'm still on call.
Next, the News Director at Houston Public Media emailed me a
few weeks later about a part time position anchoring elements of the station’s
NPR programming on the weekend. With the
demise of News92FM, HPM became the only all-news Radio outlet in Houston.
In addition to being the local ringleader for shows like “Weekend Edition,”
Wait-Wait, Don’t Tell Me,” and “Car Talk,” I have also been pressed into service as a
back up traffic reporter for the weekday-morning and afternoon shifts, and as an
occasional weekday anchor.
But still no full-time employment.
The University
of Houston Downtown reached out with an invitation to teach in its MBA program
as a Corporate Fellow. I was paired with a professor to team-teach a section in
the Spring semester, “Business
Communication.”
Being bitten by the teaching bug, I applied to the University and have been accepted as a returning student to complete my degree.
That’s going to be another story for another post.
For a year tainted by no full time gig, it was a pretty full.
I continue to co-host the Automotive Reporter Radio Show with the inimitable Harold Gunn, which airs Sunday mornings at 8 on ESPN 97.5FM.
I continue to co-host the Automotive Reporter Radio Show with the inimitable Harold Gunn, which airs Sunday mornings at 8 on ESPN 97.5FM.
I was inducted into the Texas Radio
Hall of Fame.
Our adult children surprised us by sending us on a cruise (a much-needed break from the jarring reality of joblessness).
My wife was hospitalized for back surgery, and we spent Christmas Day in her hospital room.
Our adult children surprised us by sending us on a cruise (a much-needed break from the jarring reality of joblessness).
My wife was hospitalized for back surgery, and we spent Christmas Day in her hospital room.
Friends and family came to our aid and supported us.
One Sunday morning, a woman at church pressed an envelope into my hands and said, “I can’t tell you who this is from.” Inside were fifty, crisp $100-bills. Another church member wrote me a check for a large amount, and said, “this is not a loan. This is a gift.” Many, many similar outpourings of kindness continue to be shown to us. The LORD does provide.
I learned that COBRA is a blessing and a curse, reporting weekly job search
activities to the Texas Workforce
Commission is not worth the time and trouble it takes, and there IS an
unspoken bias against the Silver
Generation in the job search market:
No one wants to pay you for your experience, because it’s cheaper to hire a 20-something and train them to do the job you could already do in your sleep.
No one wants to pay you for your experience, because it’s cheaper to hire a 20-something and train them to do the job you could already do in your sleep.
I’m the One in the government’s weekly Jobless numbers
that’s not in that report: I’m no longer on Unemployment because it’s run out.
I am technically under-employed, not
unemployed. But I am imminently available for the taking, if you’re looking for
someone who can read, write, video (not afraid of heights), photograph, teach,
train…and tell others about how it’s done.
And I’m really, really over Beyonce.
And I’m really, really over Beyonce.
2 comments:
I love ATB (All Things Brent).
NC mountain fan.
Love having you be a part of Houston Woman Magazine now.
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