Tag Archives: Tulsa the city

Remembering Wayman

Growing up in Texas, and being as relatively young as I am, I admit I didn’t know much about Tulsa legend Wayman Tisdale until I moved here.

I can see that people here are hurting, having lost such a wonderful ambassador for this city at age 44. He lived here from his early years until he went to OU and became a star.

Not to forget that many argue he’s the best Oklahoma high school player of all time, having starred at Booker T. Washington.

He was athletically gifted, and no musical slouch either. Tisdale, an accomplished jazz musician, was to go on a national tour this summer. The son of a minister, he was a man of great faith who lived by example. And you can’t talk about Wayman without mentioning that incredible, joyful smile.

By all accounts, Wayman always claimed Tulsa as his home, and Tulsa gladly claimed him back.

I hope somewhere he’s looking down on his hometown paper and approving of the coverage of his death. It’s a weird thought, I know. But I think we have really done a great job so far, gathering quotes from people who knew him, collecting all his facts and stats and arranging many photos of him, all the while being respectful.

We at the paper know he is well-loved in these parts, so we readily bumped everything off the sports front page, even on high school championship weekend (those sports got a small, subtle, respectful strip at the bottom). He truly deserves every inch of coverage.

But (notice the big quote at the bottom of B1), former OU coach Billy Tubbs put it best: “You don’t have enough space in the paper for all of the great memories.”

Here are a few links to see how the World covered the passing of one of Tulsa’s favorite sons.

May 16

A1: Front page

B1: Sports front

May 17

B8-B9: Very cool-looking vignettes from Karl Malone, Billy Tubbs and others. Designed by James Royal.

And if you click on nothing else, here is Bruce Plante’s cartoon: Wayman

More at tulsaworld.com/wayman

Sharing is caring: Part II

So about three weeks ago, the state’s largest dailies, the Tulsa World and The Oklahoman (in Oklahoma City), entered into a content-sharing agreement. So far, so good, it seems.

It is very strange to see their bylines in our newspaper and on our Web site, as I’m sure it’s weird for them to see ours, too. This measure, although not unusual these days, is hard to get used to. But if it helps us all keep our jobs, I am for it. While change is hard, it is also necessary, especially in such dire circumstances.

What’s important is that each paper retains its distinct identity, and I think we’ve accomplished that so far.

I recently blogged about the Fort Worth Star-Telegram and the Dallas Morning News sharing sports content and how I wasn’t really in favor of it for them. But the situation in Oklahoma is much different.

The World’s and Oklahoman’s sports beats don’t overlap nearly as much as those in DFW, which is why content-sharing has been minimal so far for our department. It has mainly been getting photos from them so far.

What this change boils down to is that all Americans (newspaper folk included) are making adjustments. We are beset by our cold, empty pockets and we are considering changes that once seemed radical – cutting cable, Internet or dining out. Or, we’re postponing “American dream”-type stuff, like college, buying a house, opening your own business, or starting or enlarging a family.

Due to this recession (When does it officially become a depression? When we start saving pieces of string?), many businesses are realizing that if they don’t find ways to make money, they suffer. When industry giants Google and Microsoft lay off thousands, you know it has hit everyone. And don’t forget the Arena Football League, which canceled its season.

All I know is that I can’t wait for someone to figure out how newspapers can profit better off of the Web. (I don’t think that genius will be me. I’ve pondered, and I got nothing.)

Once the solution is found, then we’ll be OK. We’ve got the content and the talent, just no strategy. Hopefully, newspapers nationwide can ride out the storm of this downward economy and find brighter skies ahead.

The face of Tulsa unemployment

Just a short one today:

One of my former co-workers was interviewed by a local TV station on Friday. A Georgia native, he graduated from Missouri’s prestigious J-school last May. He started at the World a few months later and was laid off in January. He now works at Walgreens.

I hope he, and all the rest, land on their feet.

P.S. The owner of KOTV-6 and its sister station, KQCW, laid off 13 last August.

Finally – my first professional blog

As much as I’d like to view the New Year as something clean and fresh, that image was tarnished on Tuesday.

For about five days, 2009 seemed like it was going to be better. Not that 2008 was all that bad for me (it was relatively uneventful, in fact), but a lot of people struggled to make ends meet last year and the country’s mood was sour. But on Jan. 1, we thought we were getting a fresh start. New president on the way, with hope and new ideas for getting our economy out of the toilet.

All that changed on Jan. 6, the day 28 of my co-workers were suddenly laid off.

The signs were there. In March 2008, all 18 employees of our neighborhood zoned divisions (called the “Community World”) were also suddenly laid off. (Several were rehired by the downtown office, where I work.)

Our sections began shrinking for summer, as usual, but come football season it was obvious we were still cutting back. The price of newsprint skyrocketed last year. We canceled our internship program. There were many other signs, too.

Now this. Dear friends, ripped away from us simply because “last hired, first fired.” Or in the case of some others, their talents were deemed luxury items and they were let go (the Graphics department save one guy.) I understand why, but my heart is still broken for my former co-workers. They all have their own devastating stories, and I’m not going to go into all of them for fear of leaving someone out and making this too much longer.

All I’ll say is, if this same formula is used next time, I’m gone. The hard-working, talented, funny, nice guy who was let go from Sports was hired just two or three weeks after me in summer 2006. And I have little faith that there won’t be more layoffs within the year. I just don’t see where else they will cut back. But I am thankful for this time in which I can prepare.

All that said, I have begun investigating ways to make myself more valuable to my company. Not that value matters if you were the last one hired, but in case I am deemed superfluous, I want to put the best “me” out there for someone else to hire. That includes showing I am up to speed in new technologies, which is one reason why I started this blog.

I don’t have a personal blog anymore. Once I graduated college, that chapter kind of ended. Once in the real world, I didn’t have much to blog about besides work life and wedding planning. And let’s be honest — those things interest almost no one. And I was afraid to blog about work too much because I wasn’t 100 percent sure what was suitable and what wasn’t. I decided to err on the side of caution.

So this blog isn’t going to be about work, per se, but I am going to market it as a sports copy editor’s blog. I will probably slip a personal note or two in, but I’ll try to keep it relevant to what’s going on in the newspaper industry, the sports world, and promote the Tulsa World while I’m at it. Why not.

So enjoy. It already feels good to stretch my writing muscles again.

P.S. I took the photo at the top of my blog from my patio at sunrise in December. The buildings outlined are a hotel and a Petco.