I've written somewhere around 1,700 columns for the
Charlotte Observer. This is the hardest one.
I'm leaving the paper and taking a new job.
I'll be writing about sports for a new website. It's part of a
joint venture between The USA Today Sports Media Group and
Major League Baseball Advanced Media. I'll be writing about
all sports -- in particular, I think, college football. More details
are coming next month, and the site should launch sometime
this summer.
I'll be here at the Observer two more weeks.
Let me stop for a second and try to breathe.
This is hard. I still love the Observer, and always will. My wife, Alix Felsing, will still be working
for the paper. We’re staying in Charlotte. I'm not running away from the Observer. I'm running toward this new thing, with the hope that one day it'll make me as proud as I've been to work 23 years for this great newspaper.
Y’all – meaning everyone who has taken the time to read
something of mine over the years – have been such a
pleasure to write for, and talk to, and figure out the world
with. We've shared some of our most profound thoughts,
and some of the deepest places in our hearts. As long as I’m
alive, you’ll be a part of me.
All of you know that things have been tough for newspapers
the past few years. Some days haven’t been much fun. But
most days still are, because we still have the biggest and
best news operation in the Carolinas, and we still have gifted
journalists who work their tails off to get you the news every
day.
I'll miss a lot of things, but maybe what I'll miss the most is those days when a big story happens and all the brainpower and hustle in this newsroom focuses on doing the story right. Nobody can beat us on those days. Nobody.
The Observer will be here long after all of us are gone. And it's still the best deal in town.
So the fair question is, why am I leaving all this?
Part of it is that lately I've felt a pull toward writing sports. I've dabbled in it for the paper, but I've wondered what it would be like to write sports full-time. There's a built-in joy to sports -- at the end of every game at least half the fans are happy, and that's more than you can say about a lot of things in life. More than that, sports gives a writer access to all the big issues -- love, loss, the desire to connect with other people, the longing for something larger than yourself.
My bosses at the Observer, as we were talking all this out, offered me a chance to write a lot about sports. But there was something more in my head.
Let me try to describe it.
Sometimes, when you’re going down the highway, you can
look over and see another road running beside the one
you’re on. I’ve spent a lot of time on the highway, and I've often wondered
about those people on the other road, how the world might
look from over there, how our journeys might be
different even though the direction is the same.
The thing is, you can’t know unless you take the other road.
This road I’ve been on with the Observer, and with you, has
been the trip of a lifetime.
This paper gave me a chance at the greatest job I've ever had. And it only worked out because so many of you gave me a chance and let me into your lives, a few hundred words at a time.
I'll have some more to say over these next couple of weeks. For now, let me say thank you. And let me also say that thank you isn't nearly enough.
Showing posts with label this is hard. Show all posts
Showing posts with label this is hard. Show all posts
Monday, April 23, 2012
Well... I have an announcement
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this is hard
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