What’s your tolerance of change? Do you automatically resist it, or do you give change a sporting chance to alter your life for the better?
“The only constant in life is change.”
I cannot count the number of times I heard that bromide spouted by speakers at numerous retail industry conferences. They were quoting Heraclitus, a Greek philosopher who lived some 2,500 years ago.
“He famously taught that the world is in constant motion, noting that ‘Nothing endures but change.’ He is also widely remembered for his river analogy: ‘No man ever steps in the same river twice, for it’s not the same river and he is not the same man.’
If it isn’t broken don’t fix it. That’s a classic reason to be change averse. Well, maybe a tinker or two would do wonders.
Sports teams know that stagnation may lead to losing, or at least, non title seasons. Very few stagnant-roster teams secure consecutive championships.
I grew up watching CBS News. Even before Walter Cronkite sat in the anchor’s chair, I listened as Douglas Edwards delivered 15 minutes of news each night on our black and white television in Brooklyn. Edwards sat in the anchor’s chair beginning in 1947, replaced by Cronkite in 1962.
I’ve stayed loyal to CBS through the years, through evolving anchors, even and up to Tony Dokoupil.
Poor Tony. A handsome face, for sure, but a lightweight, no doubt, when compared to all of his predecessors, I’d say. It has not helped his standing that he has been plagued by misfortune after misfortune, from opening night technical difficulties, which periodically continue to show up during a telecast, to the faux pas of not securing a visa to enter China to cover Donald Trump’s recent visit there.
Without explaining why he was in Taiwan, 100 miles away from China, while anchors from competing networks reported from Beijing, Dokoupil also had to endure the misfortune of having to abruptly end a telecast as a cameraman had an emergency medical incident while he was wrapping up his first broadcast in Taiwan. The next day Dokoupil failed to provide an update on the condition of the cameraman.
Why do I stay with CBS? For sure, inertia plays a part, a big part, of the reason. From time to time Gilda and I sample the news on NBC and ABC. The news is just as depressing on those networks. And, even after lots of CBS correspondents have been let go under Bari Weiss’ regime, we prefer digesting the news from those still at what once was rightfully called the “Tiffany Network.”
The luster has definitely and definitively lost its sheen at CBS. Thursday night, when Stephen Colbert signs off, it will mark the final “Late Show” broadcast dating back to David Letterman’s tenure. Letterman and Colbert combined for 33 years of entertainment, 22 years for Letterman, 11 for Colbert.
Colbert brought a more political sensibility to the show. The times—the Age of Trump—demanded it.
CBS, the network under William Paley and Edward R. Murrow that stood up to Senator Joe McCarthy in the 1950s, that under Paley and Cronkite sounded the futility of President Lyndon Baines Johnson’s American involvement in Vietnam and helped expose President Richard Nixon’s Watergate crimes, no longer has ownership and management that unfailingly seeks to shine light on truth, not in its news division, and not through its late night entertainment.
Media reports suggest that Bari Weiss is planning changes to two of the crown jewels of CBS News, its “Sunday Morning” show with Jane Pauley and the multi-anchored Sunday evening “60 Minutes.”
I started this blog by recognizing change is an essential part of any organism’s existence. Evolution. We are today vastly different from our ancestors—decades, centuries, millennia ago.
“These are the times that try men’s souls,” Thomas Paine wrote in 1776. Paine, of course, was writing about the darkest days of the American Revolution, the need to strengthen the resolve of the men and women seeking a separation, a change, from what they had known before. They had no models to aspire to, no compass to discern their proper direction.
We, on the other hand, know that in our 250 year history as a nation, no previous president grifted as much as Trump, none created a slush fund for his family and cohorts, none bullied our allies as he does, none sought to overturn an election or instigated a mob assault on our Capitol.
The pendulum of history will swing away from Trump.
I look forward to that change.
