2020 has been a year. Here are some moments from mine. In Instagram photos.
2020 has been a year. Here are some moments from mine. In Instagram photos.
Rarely do I misplace anything. Sure, I might bury important paperwork in my backpack or place the Apple TV remote in a different spot, but I never misplace stuff.
Especially my car.
Well, there’s a first for everything.
I was flustered Wednesday afternoon around 5 p.m. driving into rush hour traffic Downtown looking for a place to park.
I pulled into the far right lane of the Boulevard of the Allies near Market Street to park on the street.
It’s very clearly marked that parking is not permitted between 4 p.m. and 6 p.m. But other vehicles were parked there already.
I sat there for a few minutes contemplating what to do.
Scared of the threat of being towed and the clock not being closer to 6 p.m., I moved my car to Third Avenue and Market Street.
Fast forward to my dinner meeting ending. I agree to take one person home.
Upon reaching the Boulevard of the Allies and Market Street, I calmly kept pushing my car’s unlock button. Nothing.
Still calm on the outside (but just about freaking out on the inside), I call the parking authority. I get the tow company number and call.
The woman asks where my car was. I tell her. As I’m on hold, my mind is racing and it starts to unravel my steps just about 2 hours prior.
It slowly hits me that I didn’t park on the Boulevard of the Allies.
The woman said they had no cars with my description and none that came in from that area in that time.
I tell her I think I might have parked on another corner. She laughed and said to call back if I didn’t find my car.
Turning the corner onto Third Avenue, I’m clicking my car button nonstop until I finally see the lights blink.
Success!
I might have gone crazy, but at least my car wasn’t towed!
Unlike many colleagues and friends, my stories of Edith Hughes don’t involve what seemed to be a haphazard interview session or a layout filled with red ink corrections.
My first run-in with Edith came one morning in 2007 in the Gateway Newspapers former office on Greentree Road. It was early that morning — just myself and Signal Item editor Bob Pastin were in. Edith quickly zipped through the office, pausing just enough to look at me — a new face. She rushed into Bob’s cubicle and asked, “Who is that?”
Bob replied, explaining I was the new (at the time) part-time reporter for the Signal Item and Sewickley Herald. She came back out of his cubicle, looked at me as I awkwardly smiled at her — unsure of what just took place, and then she left.
The first time I spoke to Edith was in Harrisburg for a Pennsylvania Newspaper Association weeklies conference. Her first statement: “Did you get breakfast?” No, I said. She then looked me up and down and asked how I was liking the Sewickley Herald. Before I could finish a sentence, she said, “Interesting attire, young man.” I had on khakis, a polo shirt and tennis shoes — my usual work attire.
She then said, “Maybe you’ll learn something here to take back to Sewickley.”
What she didn’t know is that it wasn’t the guest speakers from The Patriot-News or any other newspaper that I’d learn from that day. It was Edith who would teach me more than I ever thought I could know.
You see, Edith had a way with more than just journalism. She had a way with life. In her eyes, good manners, proper attire and fine detail meant everything. You didn’t cut corners. You gave more than your best. And you did all of that out of respect for yourself, your talent and your colleagues.
I got to know her more through stories from colleagues and from her random visits to the Sewickley Herald office. She played a major role in the Herald’s annual honors dinner, recognizing the great community-minded individuals of the year. Place cards were handwritten, not typed. The menu offered nothing but the best food. And the entire evening was as perfect as perfect could be. Why? Because she’d settle for nothing less.
At one of the honors dinners, she looked at me and said, “You clean up well. I almost didn’t recognize you.”
In January of this year, I returned from a nearly two-week-long vacation. I had a missed call and e-mail from Edith. Odd, I thought. Out of the more than 20 voice mails and 200 e-mails, Edith’s were the first messages I responded to.
Days later, I heard from her. She wanted to talk to me in person. I was nervous, to say the least. She couldn’t fire me, she didn’t have that authority anymore. Right? But what did I do to be getting a visit exclusively from Edith?
I dressed a tad nicer than my average wardrobe (no tie, though), and awaited her visit. Snowflakes were flying. Edith called and said she’d be late. Finally, Edith arrived and whisked me away into the conference room where she shut the door.
“I need you to talk at the weeklies seminar about everything you do with technology,” she said. “It’s in April.”
This was early January — many months and inches of snow away from April.
“Yeah, I’ll do it,” I nervously said, scribbling down the words “April” and “PNA.”
“Yes, you’ll do it,” Edith said, either repeating what I said, but probably correcting my language.
She expected an outline by mid-February. I e-mailed her an outline by the end of that week in January.
The morning of the conference, Edith — oddly enough — was late. As it turned out, the massive rain and flooding from the previous day and night knocked the power out at her hotel. I stayed elsewhere in the Harrisburg area, which was unheard of in Edith’s mind because I did not get breakfast options at my hotel (though, she was impressed that I got a better room rate than she!).
Right before my turn to present, I completely re-did my entire presentation because the previous speakers took most of what I was going to say. Introducing me to the crowd, Edith explained what a dedicated and passionate reporter I was, and what I had done to help make the Sewickley Herald a newsier paper. I can remember standing there thinking, “Holy crap, Edith is saying this about me?”
Afterward, Edith told me I was the best presenter (even though I went over by 15 minutes). “That was some talk you gave” she said. “Even I was surprised. You knocked their socks off.” She paused and said, “You’re already booked for next year.” I didn’t get a chance to agree because she grabbed a mint and walked away.
I wasn’t hired by her or even worked under her, but I still felt I needed her approval as a journalist. And I’m pretty sure I got it that day.
She didn’t make the Herald’s honors dinner this year because she was traveling. But I did sit next to her in May at the Keystone Press Awards, where she, again, spoke highly of my presentation a month earlier. At the Keystone Press Awards dinner, we talked about my presentation for next April and how she thought the awards dinner chicken was too dry and the speakers were mostly boring.
She, no doubt, has made a lasting impact on my career — and more importantly, my life. Thanks to Edith, I hold myself in higher regard and respect the decisions I make and the stories I cover, knowing that my name is on whatever story I’m writing at the moment, so it better be the best it can be.
“Reporters are a dime a dozen,” she once told me. That phrase has stuck with me, allowing me to remember what my job is and to carry it out with dignity and respect.
Edith made me realize just how important grammar and proper communication skills are, and to be poignant, sharp and decisive.
My world is a better place thanks to Edith.
I remember the days when I loved staying out until 4 in the morning or later. Friends and I would go out to a bar or a few and then spend time at somebody’s apartment watching TV, playing board games or just hanging out. And, we’d either crash there or walk home just in time to see the sun rise.
Remember thinking that 8 p.m. was too early to go out?
”Social media” is a misnomer. The quantity of those we know has increased, but the quality of what we know about these folks is lacking. How social are we if we’re consistently quickly flipping through photos and status updates about our friends’ lives?