Time
©2013 by LeeZard
Life is a series of
hellos and goodbyes……
Billy Joel, Say Goody-bye to Hollywood
Time keeps on
slipping, slipping, slipping, into the future……
Steve Miller, Fly Like an Eagle
Time is an illusion…..
Albert Einstein
Courtesy of Sarah Sharbach |
There are
friends in life and then there are the people you love. These are the friends
with whom, even if you don’t see them for years, you can still resume the last
conversation in mid-sentence. If we are very lucky we have more than one or two
of these friends. I am blessed to count Jim and Jackie Stutzman in that circle.
Sadly, Jackie passed away late last month, following a brief, valiant battle
with Leukemia.
We of my
generation are certainly becoming aware of our mortality but this is not a
Boomer’s view on life and death. Nor is this a eulogy, an obituary or even a
tribute (although a Jackie tribute could fill several pages); this is a
reflection on TIME.
I met Jim
Stutzman in mid-1971. I’d just returned from Washington, D.C. to my parents’
home in the New York City borough of Queens after Metromedia Radio News, a
nascent network for which I toiled, folded.
I was pounding the New York City pavement, boldly walking into radio
stations in search of employment.
One of the
first stations I approached was WOR-FM at 1440 Broadway, two blocks south of
Times Square. In 1971, commercial FM radio was still a relatively new
phenomenon and still lagged behind AM Radio in popularity. ‘OR-FM was one of
the early top FM dogs in The Big Apple.
After
convincing the reception/gatekeeper to let me wander back to the newsroom, I
walked in to find one person poring over some AP wire copy. He looked up and
offered a kindly hello.
He was a
relatively short friendly man with thinning hair, the beginning of smiley
wrinkle lines at the corners of his eyes and a honey toned voice made for radio.
This was my first encounter with Jim (Stutz) Stutzman.
After
Stutz’s warm welcome – unlike the welcomes I’d received at previous radio
station visits that day – I explained my purpose and, holding out my resume,
asked if he was the News Director. “No,” said Stutz, “Keeve Berman is News
Director and he is gone for the day.”
Nonetheless,
Stutz took a quick look at my (still brief) resume and his eyes lit up. “You
were at Metromedia,” he exclaimed. “Did you know Mike Dewey?”
“Know him?”
I replied. “We’ve been drinking buddies for the last two years.”
“Dewey and
I worked together at Armed Forces Radio in Berlin,” said Stutz. With that, he walked
into the empty News Director’s office, picked up the phone and quick-dialed a
number.
“Hello
Keeve,” I heard him say, “a friend of mine just walked into the office looking
for a news gig. You need to hire him.” Stutz handed me the phone. After a
brief, impromptu telephone interview, Keeve Berman directed me to be in his
office the next morning, audition tape in hand. And that was that; I started at
WOR-FM the next week. But Stutz and I didn’t really become friends until four
years later when the tables were turned.
--------------
I arrived
in Seattle, WA in February 1974 as News Director for a brand new station,
KZOK-FM (OK102 and a half). Its format was centered on the enormous creative explosion in Pop and
Rock music that began in the mid-60s. I was hired to bring a more thoughtful
and deeper look at the news and events of the post-Vietnam/Watergate era.
I’d heard through the radio grapevine that Stutz was somewhere in the Pacific
Northwest, maybe Portland, OR. When I initially flew to Seattle in January to
look over the place and the people for whom I would work, I called back east to
our old News Director to find out if he knew Stutz’s exact location. “Yeah,”
said Keeve Berman in response to my question, “he’s in some suburb east of
Seattle, a place called Bellevue.”
Ironically,
I was staying at a Bellevue hotel just eight blocks from Stutz’s home. And,
when I made the move to Seattle one month later, it was on Stutz’s living room
floor that I slept for the first month. And, it was when I first met Jackie.
Our friendship was cemented and Jackie easily joined as if she was there from
the beginning.
Unfortunately,
by early 1975 it was clear the station’s ownership and upper management just
didn’t get it – neither the vibes of its audience or how to run a radio station.
One cold
damp March afternoon in1975 management suddenly “pulled the plug” on our sister
AM station, KTW, and its news/talk format. At the close of business that
fateful day, the company president told a shocked staff meeting, “don’t come to
work tomorrow; we are taking the station off the air.” Just like that forty-seven
people were thrown out of work in the biggest massacre in Seattle broadcasting
history. C’est la radio.
Don't ask! |
My studio
was down the hall from the staff meeting and I watched my colleagues stagger
out in shock and dismay. The good news was I found myself surrounded on the FM
side by a core group of incredibly bright, talented and creative people who
shared my vision for a radio station with high quality music programming,
in-depth, relevant news coverage and a deep involvement with its community.
Over the
next few weeks this group met privately to discuss options and possible
solutions to what we now viewed as a severely listing FM ship. Finally, Tom
Corddry (TC to us), who had earlier programmed KOL-FM, Seattle’s first progressive
station, reported he had the solution! Sitting east across Lake Washington in Bellevue,
was an FM station, KBES, with a powerful signal but only serving its Eastside
audience with a dated Middle of the Road (MOR) format and standard “rip & read” headline news. The station was losing upwards of $30,000 a month.
Corddry
approached KBES ownership offering an entire staff ready to pull the struggling
operation back into the black. All he asked for was complete creative control
and a modest budget for promotion. Despite any real understanding of the format
Corddry proposed, the owners took a giant leap of faith and accepted TC’s
offer. Desperation breeds strange bedfellows.
Unfortunately,
this meant the same fate would befall the much smaller staff at KBES-FM as that
of KTW-AM. C’EST la radio.
There was one
exception, however. As we looked over the outgoing staff at KEBS, I turned to
TC and pointed to one name on the list. “You can’t fire this guy,” I told him.
“Not only is he my friend but he has more radio chops up his ass than everybody
else we have combined.”
That name
was Jim Stutzman.
KZAM 30th Anniversary Reunion |
Amidst this
creative chaos was the calming nature of Jackie Stutzman. If KZAM was
Neverland, Jackie was Wendy, the tolerant and patient den mother to the Lost
Boys (and Girls). While she rarely, if ever, took part in the antics and
shenanigans around her, she was always there with an understanding smile and
unquestioning affection.
-------------
When Jim
retired a few years ago, he and Jackie moved to the home they built on 10 acres
of land they owned on Guemes Island. Guemes is an eight-point-three square mile
hat-shaped haven just a five-minute ferry ride from Anacortes, in the northwest
corner of Washington State. There are about 300 permanent residents on the
island.
When I
learned of Jackie’s passing, I immediately called Stutz. After expressing my deepest
condolences I asked, “Are you up there by yourself?”
“Yes, I
am,” he replied.
“Do you
want company? Nobody should be by themselves at a time like this.” The words
flew from my mouth before they even registered in my brain. That’s the way it
is with family.
There was a
short pause and Stutz said, “Yes, I would
like some company.”
I arrived
at Guemes six hours later, at 6:30PM. When I walked into the house and gave my
old friend a hug, he collapsed in my arms, sobbing and repeating over and over,
“Oh fuck, oh fuck,” We stood like that for several minutes until Stutz took
some deep breaths to regain his composure.
Though we
hadn’t seen each other in years, our conversation picked up right where it left
off. It was a conversation that continued for three nights (and early mornings)
until about 4:30AM each time. Needless to say, we covered an enormous amount of
territory – and TIME. More than once we looked at each other and either Jim or
I would ask, “When did we get so fucking old?”
Over the
course of the weekend the KZAM crew came out of the email woodwork. Message
after message arrived and not one included the standard, “My deepest
condolences and you are in my prayers.” Each email was not only written
beautifully but also contained heartfelt, almost poetic remembrances of Jackie’s
quiet grace and love. As I said to each KZAMmer in subsequent phone calls and
emails, “despite the passage of TIME, we are family forever.”
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