JENIFER RAGLAND -- Notebook
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I interviewed for a job at the Daily Pilot in the summer of 1997. I can
remember it vividly because it was the year of El Nino, and the 99-degree
temperatures were not exactly helping my anxiety-induced sweat outbreaks.
As I walked through the double doors at the front of the very distinctive
building on West Bay Street in Costa Mesa, my stomach was turning
somersaults more than it ever had.
Today is my last day at the Pilot. And it seems strange, but I have the
exact same feeling in my gut.
In fact, no matter how long I’d been here or how comfortable I was in the
job, those butterflies never really went away. Every day when I came to
work, something brought on that feeling -- a person I was excited to see,
a story I was anxious to watch play out, an experience I was eager to
relay.
As most people who work at the community news level in this business will
tell you, the job has plenty of downsides. The hours? Long. The pay? Not
so great. The workload? Sometimes it seems absolutely unbearable.
But as I prepare to leave today for a reporting job at the Los Angeles
Times Ventura County Edition, all I can think of are the best things
about working at the Daily Pilot:
Being surrounded each day by people -- from the news assistants to the
top editors -- who are smart, hilarious, insightful, caring, goofy,
innovative, sarcastic, witty.
Making them laugh while they are trying to conduct serious interviews in
offices and conference rooms, which all have glass windows. We’ve
contorted our faces. We’ve popped up from behind cubicle walls. We’ve
performed ridiculous dances, all the while gleefully watching them try to
suppress smiles and giggles.
Hiding food in their offices (or desks) while they are away on vacation,
and then snickering when they unsuspectingly come back to find moldy
doughnuts in their file cabinets.
The infamous white elephant Christmas party, where we spend a good two
hours doubled over in laughter as people unwrap anything from the ugliest
Kleenex-box cover you’ve ever seen to a rather gaudy gold statue of a
half-naked woman.
Lunches out at Wahoo’s.
Ordering in for the entire staff, which can be just as fun.
Being able to pretty much count on something sweet and most definitely
fattening being available right smack dab in the middle of deadline --
the exact time you probably get the most nagging craving for a snack. If
it’s not Krispy Kremes someone was thoughtful enough to bring in, it’s
cake for a birthday, wedding, promotion.
The 3 p.m. budget meetings, where the magic happens.
Walks across the street to the convenience store for a much-needed coffee
fix, bag of pretzels or venting session.
That acute feeling of satisfaction you get when you’ve managed to scoop a
competing paper with 20 times your reporting staff.
A bulletin board in the middle of the office, which someone at some point
in Daily Pilot history named the Marble Memorial Media Center. When
something you’ve written or edited gets pinned up for all to see and
admire, it can leave you with a high that lasts the rest of the day.
Knowing you have a core base of readers who pour religiously through the
news product you are producing each day -- their sense of ownership so
intense that countless numbers of them take the time to pack up a copy of
the paper when they go on vacation, take a snapshot with it and send the
photo in to be published.
And, of course, the going-away parties, when we sit around a table
munching on very good guacamole and swapping memories.
Goodbye, everyone. And thank you.
* JENIFER RAGLAND is city editor of the Daily Pilot.
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