Friday, August 7, 2009

Happy Trails

This week I joined the millions of other Americans who have lost their jobs thanks to the folly and greed that led to the recession. Far brighter people and better writers have addressed that elsewhere, so I will not do so here. Bitching gets tiresome after a while, regardless of its merits.

Here I will speak of the man who terminated me -- a sort-of Everyman in the Corner Office.

He is a good man and it pained him to pull the trigger on employees he had known for years and liked. Most of his day was spent in such closed-door, one-on-one meetings, all unhappy and woeful. He is paid well for the position he holds, but on this day it didn't feel worth the anguish he inflicted on talented, skilled and valued employees.

He said all the right things befitting his position: he professed his care and vowed to do anything he could. He listened attentively to every plea, curse word and rage, as if he were a preacher consoling a confessor.

Virtually no one else knew in advance of the coming tragedy. His second- and third-in-commands had not been briefed, the decision was so quick. It was evident to those he terminated that the order had come from On High: "Cut, cut deep and cut now." It's brutal out there, said the sacker to the sackees. And on this day, Brutality slung its scythe with deadly aim.

Card keys and other such company property were collected then and there and forms were signed and witnessed by the only other being in the death-house meetings: the HR person, charged with detailing how the condemned would be executed and how long it would take to exhaust the last, pathetic breath of life in the now-former employees.

The slain carried themselves from the gallows to their lockers and desks to perform the sad ritual of removing all possible evidence of their existence. Some of them appeared to colleagues to be visibly wounded; others were just unusually quiet. All left the premises quietly as their co-workers watched, speechless, at dead men walking.

The executioner went home at the end of the day with a knot in his stomach and a foul taste in his mouth. The business that he once loved so passionately had become -- much more so in recent years -- a spiteful and foul thing, virtually unrecognizable now.

What lies before him in the days ahead is a company of edgy and frightened employees. Today was a repeat of previous restructurings. His employees, already spread thin, must take on even more. Hell, he's laden with additional responsibilities and no additional compensation.

But he must carry on, leading and encouraging, remolding and pushing. He is the face of the company. To all his shaken flock who so earnestly seek reassurance and hope, he must appear steadfast and confident in the future. He must make omelets. And chicken salad. And lipsticked pigs.

At least he has a job. I don't.

Happy trails.

6 comments:

  1. Well written Mark. I'm not sure I can add much more except that I will miss sitting next to you on the anchor desk. You're a great teacher and mentor. You've made me a better journalist. You also kept me in stitches. I love your sense of humor! You are a great talent and you will be missed by so many. You're a true professional and I'm proud to say I've worked with you!

    -Heather B.

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  2. Mark, as a fellow "sackee," I can appreciate not only the eloquence of your prose but its passion. As in any disaster, this was a combination of seemingly benign events set in motion decades ago. We warned them each step of the way that it couldn't go on like this indefinitely and we were right. Brad B

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  3. I have enjoyed listening to you and Brad Barton for many years here in Dallas and I'm disappointed that I will no longer. Very recently I was marveling at how you folks at KRLD could always hit the top of the hour as though the CBS chime was waiting for you to stop talking! You and Brad made it such a professional big time place. It won't be as big anymore. Best of luck to you!

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  4. As a longtime listener (although that profile is in definite jeopardy), I knew that I always heard a professional broadcast when you (and Brad) were on the air. I knew it would be factual because your voice would not be attached to lies, crap or junk.
    It's a community's loss, not just one station. But KRLD will have to forgive me when I say my choices for AM radio are down to just one (and if I don't want sports, I guess my CD players will be working overtime).
    Good luck with your future and enjoy your grandchildren.

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  5. I didn't know you read my stuff. In the Morning Nrews or elsewhere?
    You can contact me directly at chuckbloom@hotmail.com.
    I'll start a dialogue about those of us in the news bidness out on the street ... except not this weekend 'cause my 2 1/2 year old granddaughter is coming to give Grandpa a birthday hug.

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  6. I am so happy to have found your blog...thanks to Carla over at Recession Mama who I just found today. Just wanted to say that I miss you dearly, as well as Brad and Carla. I am 25 and originally from Houston, and this station helped me get acquainted with Dallas and with the hectic commute! My mornings are not as fun as they were when you all were there, when the weather looks funny I don't have that voice I love so much to tell me what's going on. I am praying for you both and as SOON as you find a home somewhere else please let us know because there is a community waiting to change the station...XOXO

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