Thursday, March 26, 2009

The Postal Service; More Government Run Amuck!


So the U. S. Postal Service says it could go bankrupt. Sure e-mail has certainly changed the way we communicate and people just aren't mailing letters like they used to. But consider FedEX and UPS, private enterprise that has made a business out of delivering hard goods.

Where did the USPS go wrong? Perhaps they live in the past ensnared in a bureaucratic culture that either refuses or lacks the ability to adapt to the day.
You want to cut costs? Just a couple of thoughts. Why does the Postal Service commission all of these stamps? I mean, it's nice, but do we need to promote this cause and honor that individual. Call me a simpleton, but won't a simple flag stamp get the letter to it's destination just as quickly. I mean, we don't see FedEX designing new mailing boxes each month and giving us a choice when we head to their office. "Would you like the 'Scarlet Pansy Box' or perhaps the 'Take Your Pet To Work' container?" No, its the purple, orange and white box or nothing. And while we're on the subject. I know it's not what's causing the downfall of the U.S. mail (or is it) but tell me, am I the only one or do you find it hard to believe that anyone actually looks forward each Christmas to buying that ugly commemorative Postal Service Icon Christmas Ball. Or how many of us walk into the post office and walk out with the cuddly little post office stuffed bear or bronze embossed USPS key chain. And do they really need to be selling tiny postal trucks for the thousands of kids who shop at the Post Office? Come on. Government... and they wonder why we've had it.

Monday, March 2, 2009

The Rest Of The Story


He would greet us with the trademark "Hello Americans..... Staaaannnd by for News!!" When broadcast legend Paul Harvey past away this weekend, so too did a radio era. He was the last of a generation of journalists who had that unique ability to paint a picture in the minds eye with nothing but carefully crafted words and a technique that set Harvey apart from the rest, the masterful use of the inflection, the intonation, the.... pause. No one in broadcasting could wrap his arms around a story like Paul Harvey.

From the time I was in high school and knew I wanted to make a living at this craft, Paul Harvey proved an inspiration. I would wait with great anticipation to hear his news and comment as well as his Rest Of The Story broadcasts. It was a privilege to one day host my own talk show with the Rest Of The Story as my lead-in. I had the honor of meeting Mr. Harvey in person at a Radio Television News Directors convention in San Antonio, Texas in 1991. He addressed us all and I listened as a grandson would at the knee of his grandfather. I hinged on each word, each exhortation, each challenge to get it right as journalists and to maintain a standard worthy of the calling.
He once said of his unique style that as a young broadcaster that he tried to imitate someone else until his boss gave him this advice. If you try to be like someone else, the best you can ever hope for is second best. Be your own person. Good advise that I took to heart early on in my own career.
I admired so much about the man, but probably nothing more than his ability throughout his career to remain unchanged by fame, fortune and popularity. He was at his death, the same grounded individual who got into the business as a young high schooler in 1933. Paul Harvey was a man of high ideals, true integrity and deep faith. In a world where it's not always popular to share that faith, Paul Harvey never shied away from that important part of his life. As my sister so appropriately put it in an e-mail to me upon his passing, "Now Paul Harvey does really know . . . the rest of the story."
Rest in peace, Mr. Harvey. Job well done. . . . . . . Good Day!!