Categories
News

Turning pro

(This is not about sports, just FYI, although I’ve been thinking a lot about ballplayers who are pros in every way except getting paid, especially when it comes to college football. But that’s for another time.)

One of my favorite podcasters is Brian Koppelman — co-creator of “Rounders” and “Billions,” among other wonderful things — and his favorite guest is the marketing guru and author Seth Godin. They spend most of their time talking about how to figure out what you ought to be doing in your life and how to make it happen, despite all the obstacles (many of them self-inflicted) in the way.

Their latest conversation has an extended riff on the differences between an amateur and a professional. I was happy to hear Godin say basically the same thing I tell people about the key distinction: Pros do the work even when they don’t feel like it.

I’ve been lucky enough to love pretty much every job I’ve ever had. But there have been days on all those jobs when I would’ve rather been anywhere else — someone I cared about was sick, or I was mad at my boss, or my friends were out doing something fun, or (this happened in my 20s more than I’d like to admit) I was hung over.

This is even more tempting when you work for yourself — there’s no one to yell at you if you roll back over and go to sleep. (Although, trust me, once you check you bank balance, you will yell at yourself later.)

If you’re trying to jump-start a creative career — if you’ve always wanted to be a writer, say — those first few weeks can be a blast. So many ideas! The words just flow! And then, at some point, there comes a day when you just stare at the screen and the words feel encased in ice. It is not fun at all. Maybe it happens two or three days in a row. Maybe a week. And then you have to decide if this is what you really want to do.

I do not always provide 100 percent peak performance on those gray days. But I show up and do my best to get something done. I learned from the best. My mom was a waitress for the last 18 years of her working life. She was in her 50s and 60s when she worked there. She ached every morning when she got up. But she got dressed and had her coffee and went in every morning because that’s what a pro does.

Watching her work, and listening to her talk about it, taught me a key thing about being a pro. At the Denny’s where she worked, cooks and servers constantly called in sick or just didn’t show up — they’d work a week or two and just vanish. A lot of people quit the moment they found out it was hard work. My mom was a fantastic waitress. But she also got better shifts and more leeway on the job because she stuck around when so many others didn’t.

This, to me, is the great value in being a pro. You might think you’re not as good as a lot of the people around you. But if you stick with it, a lot of those people are going to give up. Your competition will just fall away.

And all those days you do the work when you don’t feel like it? They start to accumulate. Pretty soon you’ve built something you’re proud of. Maybe something that can support you for the rest of your life.

Categories
News

Inertia and the Seinfeld chain

I gave a book talk Wednesday afternoon to a great group of folks at Amity Presbyterian Church here in Charlotte. During the Q&A, a woman talked about how she’d tried to lose weight but never could build any momentum to keep going. “How do you fight inertia?” she said.

I have a whole chapter about inertia in my book. It’s the hardest force to fight for most of us who are trying to change. Our bad habits are like gravity, pulling us back to the ground when we try to break free. I don’t have any easy answers. But I did tell the woman about the Seinfeld chain.

The story goes that a young comic once asked Jerry Seinfeld for advice on how to get better. Seinfeld said the key was writing jokes every day. He had come up with a simple system: He got a calendar, and every day he wrote, he put a big X through that day on the calendar. Once he strung together a few X’s, he had a chain. And then the goal every day was not to break the chain.

Seinfeld has kept the chain going since 1975.

There’s a documentary called “Jerry Before Seinfeld” that has a brilliant illustration of this. Seinfeld is sitting cross-legged in the middle of a street, surrounded by the pages of jokes he’s written for the past 40 years (he writes on a legal pad). The pages fill the whole block.

Three years ago, I gave up fast food for Lent. Before that I had been eating fast food nearly every day, sometimes two or three times a day, for 35 years. The first day I gave it up, I printed out a little one-page calendar and crossed off the date. That was a tough day. I really wanted some Wendy’s. Then I crossed off the next day. I wanted some McDonald’s. Then the third day and the fourth and the fifth. And with every passing day, I craved fast food a little less, and I wanted to keep the chain going a little more.

As of this morning, if I’ve done my math right, the chain is 1,296 days long.

I don’t even cross it off every day anymore — sometimes I’ll forget and have to go back and fill in a couple of weeks. But the chain is always there, in a slot on my desk where I can see it. It’s always in the back of my mind.

I’m healthier and happier and have more money in my pocket because of that chain. The brilliance of it is that it gave me a good habit to replace a bad one. And it was a painless way to build the inertia I needed.

It also couldn’t be cheaper. Find a calendar or print one out. Figure out something you want to do (or not do) every day. Start crossing out those boxes. Follow the chain and see where it takes you.

— TT

Categories
News

Baseball on the radio

We got rid of our cable a few months back. We realized that we were just watching Netflix and sports, and I was watching too much sports. With 250 cable channels, there’s always a game on, and in the moment I could make myself believe that Rutgers v. Maryland was the best possible use of my Thursday night. So we cut the cord.

When we did that, we lost one thing I did care about: the Atlanta Braves. They’re really good this year. Ronald Acuna Jr. has 41 homers from the leadoff spot. Max Fried, who looks like John Mulaney’s little brother, leads a group of strong young pitchers. The bullpen was a disaster early in the season but seems to have righted itself for the playoffs. It’s the most fun Braves team in my memory. But all of a sudden I couldn’t watch.

So I started listening on the radio.

These days, except for the station where I work, I don’t listen to the radio much at all. It’s all podcasts and Spotify. Occasionally I’ll catch the beginnings of a Panthers game if we’re late getting home from church. But that’s about it.

The Braves aren’t on local radio in Charlotte. Stations in a couple of the outlying towns carry the games, but the signal’s not strong enough. But I have a Sonos doohickey that connects my phone to my stereo, and I found a digital feed on the phone. So I set that up in the living room, grabbed a book, and settled back to listen to the game.

I had forgotten what a joy that was.

Part of it is nostalgia, I’m sure. I have strong memories of riding around South Georgia with my mom and dad in our old VW Beetle, back in the ’70s when the Braves were terrible. I’d beg my folks to turn from the country station to the game. In my memory, Buzz Capra always pitched his heart out but the Braves never got him enough runs. It didn’t matter. Ernie Johnson was the announcer, his voice as warm as bourbon, and I could imagine the ballpark and the blurred chalk of the batter’s box and the fly balls that died on the warning track.

That’s the beauty of the radio — of all audio, really. Your mind conjures the visuals. I was a devoted MTV watcher back in the ’80s, and some of the videos were fantastic short films … but they were never quite as magical as hearing a record for the first time and imagining everything about the band with nothing more to go on than the sound.

As I listened to the games over the summer, I’d find myself drifting in and out. But one thing I didn’t do was change the channel — there was no remote in my hand, like an unfired gun, making me antsy to look for something better. I even listened to the ads. There’s an exterminator company that still uses the same earworm jingle I remember from 30 years ago: Lookie lookie lookie, here comes Cookie, Cook’s Pest Control.

Now I’ve got that dumb jingle stuck in my head. But I’ve also got the sound of the home crowd when a home run lands in the stands, and the tension of a 3-2 pitch you can’t see, and the warmth of a couple of announcers telling stories to pass the time on a lazy summer night. (The Braves seem to have a rotation of sorts on the radio. I think it was Jim Powell and Ben Ingram on most of the nights I listened, and sometimes Joe Simpson, and maybe some other guys with one-syllable first names and two-syllable last names.)

A few weeks ago I bought a streaming package for the TV. It’s football season, and despite the moral dilemmas of watching football, I’m still drawn to my Georgia Bulldogs.

The streaming package also came with the channels the Braves are on. I would like to tell you that I ignored those channels and kept listening to the Braves on the radio, but my will is not that strong, and besides, the playoffs are coming.

But that’s fine. Now that I remember, I’ll still listen to a game now and then. At the beginning I thought of the radio as a passive way to take in the game, as opposed to the way TV captures more of your attention. But it’s not passive. Your mind does more of the work. Limitations free your imagination. You can create a whole world from the crack of a bat.

— TT

Categories
News

The work no one ever sees

There’s an interview with Rhea Seehorn, the actress who plays Kim Wexler on “Better Call Saul,” that has stuck in my mind ever since I read it a few months ago.

She had spent a decade in Los Angeles, landing a couple of recurring roles in sitcoms, a few guest spots on other shows. She spent most of her time auditioning for parts she didn’t get. She spent untold hours in little conference rooms, acting her heart out for casting directors, giving her all in scenes that never made the screen.

She still wasn’t much of a name when she auditioned for “Better Call Saul.” But the casting directors remembered her:

I’d never booked anything with them, but they called me in for dramas, dark dramas, dark comedies, light comedies, everything in between. I got to play a wide range of material for them that I didn’t ever get to do onscreen, but they saw all of it. And then they cast “Better Call Saul” and called me in for that role. I went in and I auditioned with a gazillion people and there were callbacks and then there was testing. But from the beginning, Sharon and Sherry, they told me it was my audition [that booked me the role] but also them knowing a 10-year body of work of mine that no one had ever seen. It made me cry when they told me that.

Any creative career requires so much unseen work — pots that never make it to the kiln, lyrics that end up in the back of a notebook or the bottom of a trash can.

My laptop files are full of writing the world will never see. I’ve got four book proposals that never became books. Then I’ve got a whole batch of files that are stuff I cut out of various versions of “The Elephant in the Room.” This morning I opened the document with cuts from the second draft — a point where I was already two and a half years into writing. I got rid of everything from one of the opening quotes (Eventually everyone learns his or her own best way. The real mystery to crack is you — Bernard Malamud) to a whole deleted chapter. The document is 15,390 words — 58 pages long. Only a few people saw any of those words. I cut most of them before they ever got to an editor. They’re the failed auditions for the book, the work I had to do on the way to doing the work that made it.

I never completely get rid of all that unseen work — there’s often a scrap in there that I can combine with a scrap of something else, the way I imagine hot dogs get made. But even if all those cuts never see light, they’ve done their job. Every word you write, every lump of clay you try to shape, every scene you pour your heart into — it all counts. You won’t know how or when. You just have to do it.

— TT

Categories
News

New season, new goal

It’s the first day of fall. Time to start projects. And the project at the top of my list is writing regular posts on this blog.

Blogs are the digital version of vinyl. The main way most of us live on the Internet is through streaming — Facebook or Twitter or whatever. I still spend a lot of time in those places, more than I should. But lately what I’ve craved is the sound of a single voice, something to spend a chunk of time with, the needle dropping down on the record.

I’ve been drawn to the people who build their own little worlds here, people like Austin Kleon and John Scalzi and Jason Kottke and my dear friend Joe Posnanski. I admire their commitment to putting something out there in the world every day, even if it’s small, even if it’s occasionally (in John’s case) a picture of his cat.

We don’t have a cat. But I might stick a photo up here from time to time as my daily appearance, or a great quote I ran across, or some other tidbit. Other days I’ll have more to say. I have a couple of particular projects I want to try in this space … maybe things that can become something bigger down the road.

I’ll also have book news from time to time. This will be the first of 16 million times I remind you that the paperback of “The Elephant in the Room” will be out Jan. 14 and is now available for preorder, and of course you can still buy the hardback and ebook and audiobook and such. I’ll be doing a tour for the paperback in January and will let you know more when that’s firmed up. And … I hope to have some news soon about book #2. I’m REALLY excited about the possibilities there.

I’m also really excited about the possibilities here. Come back and check it out when you can.

— TT

Categories
News

The guru

This piece won’t be as good as it would have been if Jay Lovinger were around to edit it.

Here’s how he worked, at least with me: He would read my story and then give me a call. He might start with a thought on a movie he saw, or an update on which joint or organ in his body was currently falling apart. But then we would turn our conversation to the story. He would have just a few thoughts — “I think the problem here is,” he would say, or “It feels like it would be better if,” or “You might try doing this.” And those few comments would turn the story from a rock into a gem. Not only that, he would it say it in a way that made you feel like it was your idea all along, and he was just there to remind you what you already knew.

When we were done with the call, I felt confident and content, like I had spent a week at a spa. It was an amazing gift. If Jay had chosen to, he could have become the second-greatest Jewish faith healer in history. But what he loved was working with writers. Officially he was retired, but unofficially he was still working with one writer on a magazine story and another on a novel, right up until early Sunday morning, when he died at the age of 75.

Jay was managing editor at Life magazine for a year, and he ran the Washington Post Sunday magazine, too. He was part of the original staff at Inside Sports, a brilliant publication for a brief moment in the ’70s and ’80s. He worked at People, Sports Illustrated, ESPN the Magazine. He edited some of the best writers of the last 50 years: David Halberstam, Hunter Thompson, David Remnick, Bob Woodward, Gary Smith, Tom Junod, James McBride.

Over the next few days you might see tributes to Jay from some of those stars. I just wanted to add a small voice to the choir. Jay came into my life at precisely the time I needed him. And maybe at a point where he needed me.

*****

It was 2013. I had quit the newspaper where I’d worked for 23 years for a chance to write for a startup called Sports on Earth. After a year on that job, the guy who ran the site called to say he was coming through Charlotte and asked me to meet him at his hotel. When I got there he took me into a conference room and fired me.

After that, what I wanted was a place to write the long magazine stories I loved to read. What I needed, besides a paycheck, was an editor I could trust and my confidence back. I called my friend Jena Janovy. We had worked together at the Charlotte Observer, and she had left for ESPN.com and ESPN the Magazine. She got me an interview. I flew up to Bristol, Connecticut, for two days of interviews with the key editors. Then we got in Jena’s car and she took me to New York City to meet Jay.

By then I think he was a part-timer, too. He’d had a series of health problems and so he worked from his home in the Bronx. I’m not sure ESPN quite knew what to do with him. We talked for a while at his apartment then walked down the street to a diner.

Maybe you’ve been lucky enough to have a few nights in your life where you just sat and talked with friends for hours, and at some point you broke through the shallow surface and got to the stuff that matters, and three hours flew by like 30 seconds. That was that night with Jena and Jay. I didn’t get back to Bristol until 2 in the morning, and I had to be up at 5 for my flight. It didn’t matter. I floated home.

ESPN signed me to a part-time deal to write a few longform stories a year. I did that for a little more than three years and Jay edited most of those stories. I would grind and sweat, send a draft to Jay, he’d read it and make it better and make me feel like the heavyweight champion of the world. By then he and his wife, the writer Gay Daly, had moved to Sleepy Hollow, New York. I went up to visit one time. Gay is just as charming and smart and funny as Jay. The three of us went to a Thai place and talked about stories and it felt like the diner in the Bronx. I wanted to move in with them and live like that forever, although my wife, back in Charlotte, might have objected.

Jay and I did three stories in particular that I’m really proud of. One was on the last days of former North Carolina basketball coach Dean Smith, who had lost his memory to Alzheimer’s. One was on NASCAR driver Dale Earnhardt Jr., who was trying to restart his career and his life after a series of terrible concussions.

The third was on a quarterback named Jared Lorenzen, who was a fat guy like me. I heard later on that some editors at ESPN wondered why we were doing the story — Jared wasn’t a star, you couldn’t put him on the cover and sell magazines. But Jena believed and Jay believed. They shielded me from the blowback and let me tell the story. And after it came out, for a while at least, it was the most-read feature on ESPN’s site that year.

That story also gave me the courage to write about my own lifelong struggle with my weight. I sent an early draft of my memoir to a few close friends. Jay called me to talk about it. I don’t even remember what he suggested, although I’m sure I took the suggestions. I just remember how much he cared about what I had written, and how he made me feel like the whole thing was worthwhile and meaningful. Which were things I already knew but had forgotten out there in the jungle of trying to get the work done.

Maybe that was Jay’s real gift. When you got lost in the work he knew where to find you. And he showed you how to get home.

*****

His body was a wreck for as long as I knew him. He needed to get a knee replaced. His heart had been bad for years. His kidneys failed and he had to go on dialysis. Sometimes he could joke about it. Other times he just sounded tired.

But he still burned to work. He must have told me a dozen times to send him drafts of anything I wrote — book ideas, stories for other publications, whatever. As his body crumbled he wanted to keep his mind alive.

We talked a lot about death over the years, not in a morbid way, but as our natural destination — where the human story always leads. We’re all going to die. The only question that matters — the core of any great story — is what we choose to do with the time we have.

Jay loved great movies and great novels. He loved a good ball game. He loved his wife and daughters. He loved all the writers he had nurtured over the years. Some of them would show up at his house, needing an edit, and they would sit side by side and turn words into art.

I’ve been doing this work for a long time now. The money matters some, the kind words from readers matter more, the finished stories matter more than that. But what matters most is the relationship. I’ve come to realize that what I treasure more than anything is working with people who make me laugh and make me think. People who (to quote Jason Isbell) give a damn about the things I give a damn about.

I’ve never met any editor who fit me so perfectly as Jay. And he was a genius because so many others he worked with — so many different styles and characters and personalities — feel the same way, too.

Jay was not much of a note-writer, at least not with me. He liked to talk. But last month, after Jared Lorenzen died at age 38, I wrote a short follow-up piece for ESPN. Jay didn’t edit that one — Jena did. But when it came out I got a note from Jay.

Your piece on Jared after his death was beautifully and lovingly done — not to mention achingly painful, especially because I’ve been reflecting on my own mortality and what it means, for obvious reasons. Wondering what happens to all our knowledge and creativity and wisdom after death. (There’s a scene in “The Unforgiven” when The Kid has actually killed someone for the first time. He tells Clint Eastwood how sick he feels, how he never wants to kill again, how he doesn’t want to be like Clint. And Clint says, “It’s a hell of a thing, killing a man. You take away all he’s got, and all he’s ever gonna have.”)

We all end up in the same place, and as Clint says later in the movie, deserve’s got nothing to do with it. But maybe Jay’s not really gone if you can still read the thousands of stories he shaped. Maybe a part of him still breathes inside the writers he made into not just better storytellers but better human beings.

I know for sure that Jay Lovinger will live on in everything I write, and in how I hope to live, and I know that’s true for so many of the people he touched. His knowledge and creativity and wisdom made so much of the world better, down to this little essay. He wasn’t here to edit it, except he was.