Tutorial

Go Back   Tutorial > Education > Relationship tips

Forum overview

Latest topics
Show:

Portalsearch

Advanced Search

Statistic
Topics: 36012
We welcome our newest user: Amurrepimmelm
New users:
12-02-2008
- Amurrepimmelm
12-01-2008
- thupeWeexhept
12-01-2008
- Muptgrettwipt
12-01-2008
- Surbumbdottib
12-01-2008
- Aceceingeller


Mal Johnson - Boss and Friend


Relationship tips

Sponsored Links:

Reply
 
Thread Tools Search this Thread Display Modes

  #1  
Old 11-12-2007, 03:14 AM
LapTop's Avatar
LapTop LapTop is offline
Administrator
 
Join Date: Apr 2007
Posts: 21,894
Mal Johnson - Boss and Friend

Sponsored Links:


"If anyone cries or starts to feel sorry for me, I’ll come back and kick their ass." Mal Johnson, last words

Mal Johnson was my first boss. She was the real deal. Smart. Personable. Hard-working. Genuine. Modest, sometimes almost self-effacing. Yet at her core, spicy, pragmatic and confident.

Yes, I have a story. Not about Mal, but from Mal. And it's a doozy.

I worked as Mal's assistant at WKBS TV in Philly while still an Annenberg student. It was such a small station, we did everything. Reporting, directing, research, commercials, voice-overs, writing, editing.

Mal was my teacher, my mentor, my role model. Even as a young white girl I didn't think of Mal as a "black woman." She made no distinctions, fit no stereotype, drew no lines. She simply set high standards and expected us both to meet them.

Mal Johnson was a consummate professional. A force of nature, really. A leader and a trailblazer. But here's the thing: I knew her when that part of her life was just beginning.

I was there when she first met Cox Broadcasting CEO Leonard Reinsch. An older, rich, Establishment white guy. Who saw Mal's potential and offered her a chance to realize it.

She and I spent hours discussing whether she should take the job as first female reporter for Cox Radio and Television News. On Capitol Hill no less.

Obviously she did, the rest is important journalistic and black history. Leonard Reinsch became Mal's mentor. I joined her for a brief time at Cox and got to know him a bit ... an astute, take-charge executive and fascinating man.

Leonard Reinsch was a broadcasting legend. He created the early radio "fireside chats" which FDR made so famous. US presidents still talk directly to the nation today based on Reinsch's original concept.

But Leonard Reinsch made possibly his greatest contribution to history when he orchestrated the televised Kennedy-Nixon Presidential Debates, 1960, throwing in a little added insurance for JFK.

Therein lies the story. As told to Mal by Leonard. As told to me by Mal.

Most historians agree that on substance alone, Nixon was the clear winner. But millions of viewers saw much more than they heard. A pale, shadowed, fidgety Richard Nixon, uncomfortable and sweating profusely. Not a pretty picture.

At the other podium, tan, fit, steady John F. Kennedy, facing the camera directly, calm and dry. The very picture of a confident Commander in Chief.

Here's why. Leonard Reinsch was a Kennedy man. Everybody knew Nixon had a pronounced 5 o'clock shadow and tended to sweat a lot. Plus he'd just had knee surgery. All of which made him vulnerable to --irony of ironies-- dirty tricks.

So Leonard Reinsch had someone turn off the air conditioning in the studio. Small space, big cameras, hot lights. The temperature soared. Nixon was cooked.

JFK stayed cool and collected. How? Because at every break, he was given a fresh towel, a dusting of talcum powder and a clean duplicate shirt, tie and jacket.

Mal believed Leonard's story and I do too. We may never know. In the end, it's not as important as this: If you don't know about Mal Johnson, you should. You owe her a lot. We all do.

Good-bye, Mal and thank you. You led the way. And kicked ass to make sure everybody followed.


Brief biography of Mal Johnson from the National Council of Women's Organizations (slightly edited)
Mal Johnson is a founding member of Philadelphia Association of Black Journalists, and was a television reporter at the former WKBS in Philadelphia. Ms. Johnson became the first female reporter employed at Cox Radio and Television News, where she worked for 27 years. As their first female White House correspondent, Ms. Johnson covered five presidents, as well as Capitol Hill, the State Department, and various Federal agencies. In 1980, Ms. Johnson was promoted to Senior Washington Correspondent and assigned additional duties as National Director of Community Affairs. She is a Founder of the National Association of Black Journalists and the National Broadcast Association for Community Affairs. She was inducted in the Journalists Hall of Fame in 2000. A TV documentary of her life is in the Archives of the History Makers of America.
Sponsored Links:
Reply With Quote
Reply

Sponsored Links:

Compare price

Compare products

Download software


Free Download Softwware


Tags: , , ,



Currently Active Users Viewing This Thread: 1 (0 members and 1 guests)
 
Thread Tools Search this Thread
Search this Thread:

Advanced Search
Display Modes

Forum Jump

Similar Threads
Thread Thread Starter Forum Replies Last Post
My best friend vista Funny Picture 0 06-27-2007 12:01 AM
Johnson Controls Engineers the First Two-Color Door Panel to a One-Piece Carrier in N LapTop Racing tips 0 05-09-2007 01:40 PM
When You Run into an Old Friend LapTop Writing tips 0 05-08-2007 08:12 PM
Dog Training - "Showing who's the boss" to your puppy LapTop Dog training tips 0 04-28-2007 08:04 AM



All times are GMT. The time now is 02:55 AM.


Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.7.2
Copyright ©2000 - 2008, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.

RSS 2.0 HOME