A hack like me…

The Wall Street Journal today has an article about the five greatest inaugural speeches of all time. I’ve been writing professionally for almost 20 years, but have only written a couple speeches.

I found it a humbling experience. Writing for speaking is quite different from writing for reading — and probably the ultimate form of writing by ear. Paying attention to word choice, how words work together, word length, sentence length, overall speech length, and still getting your point across — and a stirring point at that — is a skill I certainly haven’t mastered and will always be intimidated by. At my first writing job, the firm sometimes engaged the services of an older/wiser/ better writer who used to write speeches for President Gerald Ford. So the initimidation factor goes way back.

Imagine my surprise and delight, then, when I honed in on this little gem from the WSJ article, referring to the inaugural speech it ranked #1: FDR’s in 1933:

In his opening, FDR spoke the line that everyone today knows: his assertion of his “firm belief that the only thing we have to fear is fear itself.” Much like Kennedy’s “ask not” dictum a generation later, the aphorism was not original; Roosevelt’s was inserted by his aide Louis Howe, who is believed to have seen it in a department-store advertisement.

So, one of the most memorable lines from any speech ever delivered was likely penned by a hack like me, earning his living writing copy for a department store. (Can you imagine a department store with such an ad today? Times were clearly different!) And as ever in the long tradition of copywriting, where writers pen memorable lines for their clients every day, we’ll likely never know who he was, and he’ll never get the credit.

But he wrote it, and he knows.

It does a hack’s heart good — my very own “message of hope” on today, the inaugural of the 44th U.S. president.

When a thing has been said, and well said,
have no scruple: take it and copy it.
                                                 ~ Anatole France

Yay! (And get your own damn icon.)

Afterglow. Nothin’ like it. 

Here’s wishing a speedy recovery for Willis McGahee. And kudos to the Ravens for playing a hell of a game — we were worried. Thank you, Troy!

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Lounging in bed this morning watching the news on Channel 4, I saw a piece by Bill Hillgrove about the Terrible Towel. The gist, as you might expect, “He who desecrates the towel, beware.”

What struck me most was Bill’s comment that the NFL was looking into introducing towels (or facsimiles) of their own. Then I found this P-G article that describes the effort.

What the hell? Ripping off Myron Cope’s brainchild and making money on a team icon whose sale funds a charity in honor of Myron’s disabled son? What an insult.

They couldn’t do a pennant, or a flag, or a foam whatever? Had to be a towel?

Or wait, maybe it’s appropriate that all those other NFL teams wave the white towel (in surrender) when the Steelers come to town.

Or maybe that’s what Steeler fans should wave in disgust when the refs make lousy calls against us or fail to notice when James Harrison gets held on nearly every play.

Or maybe it’s that imitation really is the sincerest form of flattery.

Nah. It’s just the NFL trying to make a buck off a Pittsburgh original. Good luck with that.

Right now, though, it matters not. Pittsburgh’s goin’ to the Super Bowl!
HERE WE GO, STEELERS, HERE WE GO!

Arriving at one goal is the starting point to another. 
                                                                  ~ John Dewey

Oh no, not Country Home too?!

My decor is doomed. Seems it wasn’t enough that Cottage Living magazine folded, now the one I like even more, Country Home, is closing the barn doors for good. Two favorite magazines gone in 2 months (although I did learn that my Cottage Living subscription would be honored by Southern Living, which was a nice surprise).

Has the world finally had enough of the uber-emphasis on decorating the last 10 years? Can HGTV be far behind? Surely not, but I could probably give up cable if that folded. 

So now I’m down to Better Home and Gardens (a perennial subscription for close to 20 years) and my recent gift subscription to Martha Stewart Living — so lovely but so unattainable. It sure doesn’t bode well for the state of this ol’ house in the days to come. Good thing I’ve saved the back issues. Inspiration has to come from somewhere.

A comfortable house is a great source of happiness.
It ranks immediately after health and a good conscience.
                                            ~ Sydney Smith

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