Reporter Turned Mommy

A tribute and a girl’s night out

Those of you that read this blog may remember my recent post on my buddy Brian McIntyre. Unfortunately, B-Mac passed away a week ago today, on Mother’s Day.

His viewing was Thursday, funeral Friday and Saturday there was a wonderful benefit to help his wife and five-year old son. I could go on and on about what a wonderful guy he was and the legacy he leaves behind. I was so touched at the viewing to see in the midst of the dozens of photographs of B-Mac, there was one of Brian and I and our friend, Gina, at an Ohio University RTNDA (Radio Television News Directors Association) Conference. We all loved this man!

Despite our sadness, the benefit was absolutely packed and I got to see a lot of my old friends from OU that traveled to be here in Cleveland for the event. No one can pack a room like B-Mac! Some of the girls from Fox 8 and I made a night of it and had dinner at a fun tavern in Rocky River.

I’d never been to the Burntwood Tavern and it was great! We had patio seating which was perfect for our beautiful weekend weather. The food was awesome and the company was even better! Here’s a look at our group! From left, Suzanne (when I was working, everyone got the two of us confused! haha Two blonde reporters was too much for people to keep straight!), Danielle, the famous and wonderful Danny Coughlin (Danny was a sports anchor at Fox 8 for decades. He retired a few years ago and has since written two books on his 45 years in the Cleveland sports market. To check out his books, click here) , Katie, Me, Lindsay, Stacey and Elisa!

 

I miss seeing these girls so much and it was great to catch up. Of course, as the girls enjoyed delicious looking wine, I enjoyed fabulous ice water! :) Good news on the pregnancy front though….I’m  feeling better and I’m sure I’ve gained back some of the weight I lost.

Here’s another look at our group, or should we say, “Danny and the girls!”.

 

We all loved  B-Mac, so here’s to our buddy, for getting us all together this weekend! We miss you.

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Paying it forward, for one of my mentors

I’ve been lucky in my life to have had some great career mentors. One of those mentors now needs my help. His name is Brian McIntyre. I first met B-Mac, as we all call him, when I was a freshman at Ohio University. He was already a big-name TV reporter in the Cleveland market, but he always came back to OU to talk to all of us young, aspiring, journalists. Brian made a point of learning our names, watching our newscasts, and then critiquing our work with us after each show. It took time. It took patience. But you could see he loved it.

Years later, when I was 25 and working as an anchor in Charlotte, I landed a job at Fox 8 in Cleveland. One of my first calls was to B-Mac. He was as proud of me as my own parents! Brian gave me loads of advice, from where to live, to the ins and outs of the TV market. When I moved to Cleveland, he took me to dinner, gave me a tour of the city and even copied his own rolodex of news contacts for me.

Over the years, while we were both reporting for different TV stations in Cleveland, we would run into each other on stories. He would always say something over the top when he saw me, like, “There’s the most beautiful woman in Cleveland!”. He said that stuff to everyone to lift us up and make us smile. It always worked! When I would complain about my job, he always said, “We have the best jobs in the world” and he was able to remind me of why I became a reporter in the first place.

Now Brian is in the fight of his life. Cancer has taken over his body and he is now under Hospice care. He has a beautiful wife and an adorable five year old son. Brian was the breadwinner for his family. His wife, a Cleveland school teacher, was recently laid off. While Brian does have insurance, the bills are still piling up. On May 19th, a benefit is being held to help cover expenses for Brian and his family.

Here is the information.

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Anything that any of you can do will be truly appreciated by this wonderful family.

Though I haven’t talked to Brian in a while and have kept up with his journey mostly by Facebook, I feel such a profound sense of gratitude to this man. Have I taken the time to mentor someone the way he did me, and so many others? No. Do I exude positive energy and hopefulness when I walk into a room? Not always. The question is, why not? I am now going to try make a conscious effort to be more like one of my mentors. B-Mac would want me to pay it forward. 

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Ode to OU…and the Sweet 16!

Tonight, my Alma-mater, The Ohio University Bobcats, take on that little school in North Carolina, called the Tar Heels! (insert sarcasm here!) I am so proud of OU for making it this far!

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I chose OU for one specific reason as a graduating high school senior from West Virginia…the world class E.W. Scripps School of Journalism. It still ranks as one of the top ten journalism schools in the nation and the professors at that school are the reason I easily walked out of college with an on-air anchor job at the age of 21.

OU is located in Athens, Ohio…that’s in Southeast Ohio and is only about 45 mins from my hometown. (there’s a new highway now, though and I guess you can now make the trip in about 30 mins!) As a freshman at OU, when I would tell people I was from WV, they would always say, “Oh wow, you are a long way from home!”. I would laugh. My fellow co-eds, mostly from the Cleveland or Columbus area, weren’t very good at geography outside of Ohio! (ha, I’m kidding guys).

I’d like to share with you the following article by  Jonathan Knight from the website, theclevelandfan.com

Before you read it, I’d like to add, OU is a fairly large school with about 17,000 undergraduate students. I think the most famous alum is Matt Lauer. Roger Ailes, President of Fox News, also attended OU, as did numerous broadcast professionals and print journalists.

Terry Anderson, best known as the longest held American hostage in Lebanon, became a professor of Journalism during my sophomore year at OU.

My other small issues with this list. Number 3 is not true. Please! I drank out of a keg at least twice a week at OU! (maybe the author was being sarcastic)

Also, Number 12. As a West Virginian, we love Huggy Bear! He took us to the final four just two years ago.

And lastly…Number 14. I have no idea what he’s talking about. All of us OU alums say we went to “OU”…and always refer to our school at OU. Not sure what that is about.

Now read and enjoy. This is a great list of some of what is great about OU!

16 SWEET THINGS YOU DIDN’T KNOW ABOUT OHIO UNIVERSITY

Jonathan Knight from the website, theclevelandfan.com

“As exemplified in the past week, OU has proven itself as a school capable of fun, jack-in-the-box surprises. 

As in “Oh…You!”

Now, with the Bobcats about to take the national stage Friday night against top-seeded North Carolina looking to pull off yet another shocker, most fans are eager to learn more about this plucky institution straddling Appalachia.

So as a graduate, I feel it my duty to present a list of 16 sweet things you didn’t know about this Sweet Sixteen party-crasher:

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1. Athens is one of the most haunted places in America

The legend – passed along over plastic beer cups for years now – is that five cemeteries around the city form a pentagram with the OU campus right in the middle, resulting in all kinds of haunting shenanigans and spooky goings-on.

Those on the fence about the university’s claim as a paranormal playground are usually swung by one look at The Ridges – a creepy former lunatic asylum (yeah, a freaking lunatic asylum) that overlooks uptown Athens and makes the Amityville Horror house look like Bath & Body Works.

 

 

bobcat lying12. There are a lot more human Ohio Bobcats than actual Ohio bobcats

The Division of Wildlife estimates there are currently only about 1,000 bobcats in the state. Which doesn’t sound like much until you take into account that the bobcat – like the Confederate flag – was incorrectly considered to be wiped out in the 19th century.

For every bobcat in Ohio, there are roughly 100 people who graduated from Ohio University and still live here. And every one of them has been obnoxious on Facebook this week.

paul newman3. Paul Newman is OU’s most famous dropout

Pretty much everybody knows somebody who dropped out of OU, so it’s not that elite of a club. But the chairman happens to be one of the iconic actors of the 20th century. 

Word around the campfire is that Newman was expelled after rolling a beer keg down Jeff Hill and crashing it into the university president’s car.

But that’s preposterous. Kegs aren’t allowed at Ohio University

ohio u si cover4. An Ohio University basketball player was once on the cover of Sports Illustrated (and it wasn’t Gary Trent)

The Shaq of the MAC may still be the best-known basketball player ever to come out of OU, but he never graced the cover of SI. That honor goes to Walter Luckett, who you’ve never heard of, and – as a freshman in 1972 – was slapped on Sports Illustrated’s college basketball preview issue.

Inside, SI describes OU as the school “…of the pleasantly different Mid-American Conference that upsets all of those Big Ten teams early each season before being rudely slammed back to Athens by some NCAA tournament opponent in March.”

Now, 40 years later, they’re rudely slamming Big Ten teams out of the NCAA tournament.

5. Ohio offers a class on baseball history

Two, actually: HIS 319B-American Baseball Before 1930 and HIS 319C-American Baseball Since 1930. More than 3,000 students have taken these classes, created by legendary history professor and baseball historian Dr. Charles C. Alexander.

Joke all you want, but Andy Katzenmoyer couldn’t have passed either one of these classes.

macgyver season1_16. Bart Simpson, Al Bundy, and MacGyver are all OU alums

In other words, without Bobcats Nancy Cartwright, Ed O’Neill, and Richard Dean Anderson, The Simpsons, Married…With Children, and making grenades out of pencil erasers never would have been the same.

 7. Ohio University was founded 66 years before Ohio State

Hard to believe, especially since OSU has branded itself as literally the only existing college in the state.

 

8. This is not the farthest the Bobcats have ever gone in the NCAA tournament

In the same year a Cleveland professional sports team won its last world championship, the 1964 Bobcats capped a 21-6 season with back-to-back stunning upsets in the then-25-team NCAA tournament.

First OU took down Louisville, then upset fourth-ranked Kentucky to reach a regional final, where No. 2 Michigan stopped them one win short of a Final Four match with John Wooden’s first championship UCLA team.

Cleveland fans can’t help but like the precedent this sets.

 

harvard on the hocking9. Ohio University is nicknamed “Harvard on the Hocking”

Keeping in mind that when Ohio University was founded in 1804, it was one of maybe five colleges open for business in North America. So while valid at the time, the Harvard comparison probably hasn’t endured that well over the last two centuries.

Incidentally, the Hocking is a river running through southeastern Ohio that overflows each time it rains longer than 15 minutes, prompting enough boil orders to make Louis Pasteur horny.

 10. Of all those arrested at OU’s infamous Halloween bash every year, 2/3 are visiting Ohio State students

Just saying.

 

austin carr ohio university11. Austin Carr once scored 61 points against OU in an NCAA tournament game

Still a tournament record, future Mr. Cavalier Austin Carr went bananas in 1970, hitting 25 of 44 shots (long before the three-point era) and leading Notre Dame to an easy 112-82 first-round win over the Bobcats.

But after Carr then lit up Kentucky for 52 two days later, they couldn’t feel too bad.

Bob Huggins12. Bob Huggins couldn’t cut it at Ohio University

It was big news when Huggy Bear went back to his roots and returned to coach his alma mater at West Virginia. But what nobody talked about at the time was that Huggins, a stud of a high school hoops player, originally was a Bobcat, then transferred to WVU after his freshman year.

Had he stayed, he might have actually lived up to his potential as a coach.

 13. OU’s Winter Break is longer than its Winter Quarter

OK, that’s not really true, but it sure feels like it. OU’s legendary month-and-a-half vacation between Thanksgiving and New Year’s is still four weeks shorter than any of its academic quarters.

For what it’s worth, it goes away next year when the school switches to semesters, allowing Miami and Ohio State students to have just as good a chance at getting the sweet part-time Christmas jobs at Banana Republic.

 

14. Officially, they don’t like to be called “OU”

Which they need to get over.

 

athens halloween15. The Princeton Review named OU the nation’s No. 1 party school for 2012

For starters, how the hell do you quantify something like that?

While many – ahem – more conservative alums are outraged at the Jimmy Buffett reputation the school has generated in recent years, let’s not put too much emphasis on one opinion. 

Playboy only ranks it the fifth-best party school. (And you get the feeling they’d have better insight than The Princeton Review.)

And frankly, would you rather be a graduate of the top party school or the one with the 14th-best osteopathic medicine program?

bobcat beats brutus16. OU’s mascot beat the living shit out of Brutus Buckeye

It was a moment that made every OU administrator cringe but made every alumnus smile and pull up You Tube: Rufus the Bobcat physically assaulting the oddly proportioned Brutus before the football Buckeyes’ blowout victory over the Bobcats in 2010.

Making the story even better, the guy in the Rufus suit wasn’t even an OU student and had secretly planned the beatdown for an entire year. 

That’s the way they do things in the 740 area code, baby.

 Of course, this is just the tip of the iceberg. There’s much more to know about Ohio University: its gorgeous campus, its kick-ass journalism school, its thousands of successful alumni.

And of course, its students also tend to reenact the Russian Revolution when the clocks spring forward an hour and the bars close early.

It’s a school of ironic contradictions sprinkled with modest midwestern charm, and it’ll be interesting to see how it evolves if OU’s awareness continues to emerge on a national level.

But that’s for another day. For now, as sure as the morning sun will rise on the catwalks criss-crossing South Green and the Burrito Buggy will stay open late, there will be good times in Athens over the next few days and nights. 

Go get ‘em, Bobcats. Keep making us proud.

 

 
 
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OU….Oh Yea!

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My alma mater….the Ohio University Bobcats… are in the sweet 16! This is the first time they’ve made it this far since the 1960s and I am so proud of my bobcats!
Many of you may notice that I’m a huge wvu mountaineer fan (because im from wv and if you’re from the mountain state you bleed blue and gold) and I rarely follow OU sports…(because they are in the MAC and it is usually not that exciting). So I am thrilled to be able to cheer on my alma mater in the big dance! Matt Lauer of THE TODAY show is thrilled as well. He also went to OU and was giving shout outs to the bobcats this morning!
We play UNC on Friday. That will be a tough one….so in the meantime…I’m basking in the glow of making it this far!
OU…..Oh Yea!

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