My lucky life
I’m living a charmed life.
I hadn’t planned on it.
ItĢƵ just happened this way.
I’d been a shy, undistinguished, below-average high school student – with dreams of becoming outgoing, distinguished, and smart.
I found some refuge in broadcasting.
Especially since I managed to encounter people I thought I’d never meet minus a microphone or a camera.
John Glenn
I first met the ex-Marine, former astronaut, and (at the time) U.S. senator while I was a reporter for WBNS-TV – the CBS TV station – in Columbus, Ohio, in 1976.
I’d interview him when he came back to Columbus from Washington on weekends.
There was one meeting I’ve regretted.
He called an afternoon news conference. A reporter from a competing station – Terry Jessup – asked him why he flew all over the world on junkets, instead of taking care of the people he was supposed to serve back home.
The news conference ended, and Sen. Glenn went right for JessupĢƵ neck. On that day, Glenn wasn’t acting as a senator or astronaut. He was a Marine!
Glenn thought Jessup had asked him an unfair question.
He physically pushed Jessup against the wall.
I rushed to try to negotiate a peace deal between them.
While pinning him against the wall, Glenn turned to me and asked if I agreed that the question was unfair.
Sensing my broadcasting career, and worse, my life, flash before me, I blurted out, “I understood the question. But I may have asked it a little differently.”
Fortunately, the first man to circumnavigate the Earth released his prey, while he accepted my vague explanation.
I lived to see another day.
Jimmy Carter
I barely escaped with my life intact when I encountered the former governor of Georgia and presidential candidate Jimmy Carter in 1976.
I’d been assigned to interview him live for the noon news in front of the Ohio Statehouse.
I didn’t know much about Mr. Carter.
I’d watched either “Meet the Press” or “Face the Nation” when somebody mentioned that CarterĢƵ support for the Humphrey-Hawkins Full Employment Bill was only lukewarm.
Side note: I had no idea what the Humphrey-Hawkins Full Employment Bill was; what it was supposed to do, or why CarterĢƵ support for it was only lukewarm.
I didn’t care.
When I met Mr. Carter for that interview, he was standing alone (he had a limited campaign staff at the time), and I came only armed with that stupid question.
I stand about 6 feet 1. HeĢƵ about 5 feet 7 inches.
Suddenly I felt like I was looking up at him from the ground.
Because, when I asked him about his supposed “lukewarm” support for that blasted bill – live on TV, with the whole world to see – he responded like I’d accused him of being an ax murderer.
I was so humbled by his response, I nearly deflated.
I resolved that the next time I’d be assigned to cover a presidential candidate I would prepare myself properly.
Too bad.
I never interviewed another presidential candidate.
Ronald Reagan
Nope! I didn’t interview him. But I was in his presence while I was a reporter in Columbus.
Reagan and the legendary actor Jimmy Stewart were making ReaganĢƵ presidential campaign swing through the city in 1976.
They had to sit quietly, only a few feet away while I gave an on-camera report for the 6 o’clock news.
They were up next.
We passed each other in the studio.
For the record: They were both much taller than Jimmy Carter.
Maureen Reagan
While I was a reporter for Entertainment Tonight in the mid-1980s, Ronald ReaganĢƵ daughter, Maureen, did some reporting for the show.
She seemed to be a very pleasant person.
But having her around presented some people with a problem.
If she walked into a room, the Secret Service would lock the doors so you couldn’t leave.
If she was already in the room before you walked into it – you’d be locked out of it.
I did say she was a nice lady.
The Secret Service, though, wasn’t nice.
Because that was their job.
Edward A. Owens is a multi-Emmy Award winner, former reporter, and anchor for Entertainment Tonight, and 40-year TV news and newspaper veteran. E-mail him at freedoms@bellatlantic.net.