I choose to believe this Pete Finney anecdote is not true.
No job was too small for him. Izenberg recalled a story Mr. Finney told
about a reporter in pre-computer days who had a story due but was
assigned to ride in a Carnival parade. To get the man's story, Mr.
Finney went to the parade, and the reporter threw it to him from his
float.
I know, toward the end, a few of us couldn't help pointing out when Finney
appeared to be phoning it in or when he was a little too much in awe of some of
our city's most powerful people. Also when he wrote sentences like this.
Tom Benson is saying this, unable to restrain a roar of Category 5 laughter.
Or as his New Year's Day "predictions" column became more Get-Off-My-Lawnish
In town for the NBA All-Star game gala at the Saenger, Miley Cyrus is
arrested for lack of talent. Police Chief Ronal Serpas tells reporters
her foam No. 1 finger has been locked away in the evidence room. "She's a
modest girl, but then again, she has so much to be modest about,"
Serpas says.
Or jingoistic
At the Winter Olympics in Sochi, Russia, NSA whistleblower Edward
Snowden, wearing earphones and a hidden mic, carries the Olympic torch
in the opening ceremonies and high-fives Russian president Vladimir
Putin, calling him a "misunderstood genius."
But, as they say, ninety percent of the job is just showing up. And
Finney certainly did that for decades. No one can deny that he knew his city well.
Peter Paul Finney was born Oct. 17, 1927, in New Orleans and lived
there his entire life with the exception of his time in the Louisiana
Air National Guard in the early 1950s.
Between his graduation from
Jesuit, where he was editor of the Blue Jay, and his freshman year at
Loyola, he embarked on his sportswriting career with the New Orleans
States.
The States became The States-Item in 1958 and in 1980 was merged with The Times-Picayune.
Working
as the lead columnist for all three publications, Finney turned out an
estimated 15,000 columns and 12 million words touching on local,
national and world events and personalities.
Although he had
numerous opportunities to leave New Orleans for more lucrative
opportunities, he never did, a decision longtime Newark Star-Ledger
columnist and close friend Jerry Izenberg said was both the right one
and fortuitous for his home town.
With the way our media persons (especially in the sports department) seem to hop from place to place every few years, is a career like Finney's even possible anymore? Or are we just trudging on toward the day when every word written about everyone's local sports team is produced by the same robot in Bristol, Connecticut?
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