Wednesday, July 29, 2020

J-Speaks: The WNBA and NBA Saying Her Name


One big question that was being asked about sports returning, specifically the National Basketball Association (NBA) and in a quiet way the Women’s National Basketball Association (WNBA) is would it take away from the momentum in the fight for social justice and police brutality against minority communities? If what was demonstrated over the weekend when the WNBA tipped off it’s 23rd season and what the NBA and its player have done during their press conferences in the lead up to their restart, the fight for social justice and police brutality will continue.

The 2020 WNBA Season from IMG Academy in Bradenton, FL began with social justice and police brutality front and center during its three-game slate on Saturday (Seattle Storm versus New York Liberty; Los Angeles Sparks versus Phoenix Mercury; Indiana Fever versus Washington Mystics) and three-game slate on Sunday (Connecticut Sun versus Minnesota Lynx; Chicago Sky versus Las Vegas Aces; and Dallas Wings versus Atlanta Dream) where in all six games the players from both squads and their respective coaching staffs wore black (short or long sleeve shirts) with “Black Lives Matter” on the front, which also displayed on the court, and “Say Her Name” on the back in reference to Breonna Taylor, a 26-year-old Emergency Medical Technician (EMT) of Louisville, KY who was killed in her own home by plain closed police officers, who shot into her home while she was sleeping on Mar. 13 in a no knock warrant execution. On the left sleeve of the shirts consisted of the Nike, WNBA and WNBPA respective logos.  

Both teams also went back to their respective locker rooms when the playing of the national anthem occurred. 

Before the start of the contest between the Storm and the Liberty, which Seattle won 87-71, Liberty veteran guard Layshia Clarendon in addressing the crowd before tip-off said that the WNBA is “dedicating” the 2020 season to Breonna Taylor, whose murders have yet to be arrested now 133 days after the fact. “Breonna Taylor was dedicated and committed to uplifting everyone around her.”

The former Sun guard added the WNBA is also dedicating this season to the “Say Her Name” campaign, which is committed to saying the names and fighting for justice for African American women who very often are forgotten in the fight for social justice.

“Black women, who are so often forgotten in the fight for social justice. Who do not have people marching in the streets for them,” Clarendon said, adding, “We will say her name: Sandra Bland, Atatiana Jefferson, Dominique Rem’mie Fells and Breonna Taylor-We will be a voice for the voiceless.

That was followed by a moment of silence for 26 seconds, which was the age Ms. Taylor was when were life was taken. During that 26 seconds of silence, the players and coaches had their backs turned where those that were in their playing uniforms had on the backs of their jerseys Breonna Taylor names on the bottom of their last names, while some of the players and the coaching staffs had their black shirts with their backs turned that again had on the back “Say Her Name.”

The oppression of black women is unfortunately something that is not new to our nation. The late great Malcolm X once said, “The most disrespected woman in America is the Black woman. The most unprotected person in America is the Black woman. The most neglected person in America is the black woman.”

That is why the WNBA and WNBPA have as mentioned dedicated this season to social justice where all the players will wear special uniforms that will feature the names of women who lost their lives from police brutality and racial violence like Ms. Taylor.

The players association also late last week came out with hooded shirts that are available for sail that have on it, “We Are Breonna Taylor,” with all the proceeds going to the Breonna Taylor foundation, which is in association with her mother Tamika Palmer.

At the forefront of making sure Ms. Taylor’s name remains in the subconsciousness of our nation in our fight for social justice has been Former Dream All-Star guard, Angel McCoughtry, now with the Aces, who said in what this season is about for her, “I’m asking for justice. So, this year when I play, I’ll have Breonna Taylor’s name on my back.”

Along with being an EMT, Taylor in a conversation with her mother Ms. Palmer, ESPN’s Holly Rowe learned that her daughter loved basketball and played the game in middle and high school.
She also said that her daughter had a smile that could light up a room and was a “beautiful power of force for the world.”

“When these WNBA players reached out to me to honor her in this way, I felt loved. I’m amazed that these women will say her name and support me in this fight for justice.”

The idea to have names like Taylor on the back of the players jerseys by McCoughtry came from hearing from some players in the NBA that returning to play would disrupt the moment generated in the fight for social justice.

“I was like, ‘I don’t think it’s a distraction,’” McCoughtry said. “Let’s try to use our platform to try to fight and advocate.”  

It was here that McCoughtry and her business partner came up with the idea for the players to have on their jerseys the names of those who lost their lives to police brutality like Taylor, who as mentioned is from the city where McCoughtry played collegiately at Louisville.

McCoughtry said to Rowe that it was Taylor’s name the WNBA players should have on the back of their jerseys as a part of the “Say Her Name” campaign, which she got the blessing of Taylor’s mother Ms. Palmer and her family.

The players in their between first and second quarter interviews of their season-opening games on ESPN and ABC on Saturday and Sunday with Rowe made sure to mentioned Breonna Taylor’s name and why it is important to keep her name in the consciousness of the viewers watching.

The newest addition to the Mercury Skylar Diggins-Smith said to row how special it is to be back on the court after all the uncertainty of if the 2020 season would be played, and how thankful she was to wake up another day, Breonna Taylor is not here, while being able to get the 2020 WNBA season underway is great, it is just a game at the end of the day.

The fact that Ms. Taylor is dead and that her killers have not been brought to justice in as mentioned over 130 days have yet to be charged is inexcusable.

“We’re calling for the four police officers involved to be arrested for the murder of Breonna Taylor and we just hope that we make her family proud and do her justice this year,” Diggins-Smith said to Rowe.

The Aces’ sharp-shooter Kayla McBride echoed those same sentiments by saying in between quarters of their contest versus the Sky on Sunday to Rowe that the WNBA is playing this season for “something bigger,” social justice, Taylor, police brutality.

“This is a lifestyle. This is our livelihood, and we’re trying to portray that each and every game,” McBride said. “I’m so proud to be a part of this league, these women, what we stand for, and we’re just going to continue to be out there and play for them.”

In her presser before her team’s season opening 99-76 win against the Mercury, WNBA champion, two-time WNBA MVP, five-time All-Star, and Turner Sports basketball analyst Candace Parker of the Sparks said that her or any one of her teammates or WNBA peers could have been Breonna Taylor, and why they wore Taylor’s name on the back of their jerseys over the weekend, they represent so many African Americans, especially African American women that have had their lives taken.

While it has been a matter of real importance that justice comes to those who have taken the likes of most recently George Floyd, Rayshard Brooks, Ahmaud Arbery and Tamir Rice, Michael Brown, Trayvon Martin, Eric Garner, Stephon Clark and many more African American men, the likes of Michelle Cusseaux, Tanisha Anderson, Natasha McKenna and the aforementioned Breonna Taylor deserve to have their names said in peaceful protests and right at the forefront of who needs social justice.

The NBA players have been doing their part in their bubble in Orlando in the lead up during their press conferences keeping the pressure on the authorities in Louisville to arrets the officers who shot and killed Ms. Taylor unnecessarily.

“I’m going to take this time to give my condolences to the family of the Taylors,” is what Los Angeles Clippers All-Star forward Paul George said. “We’re going to again, keep this fight going, and us our platform to stand up for those that can’t stand anymore.”

Denver Nuggets forward Jerami Grant used his presser to say how the killers of Ms. Taylor are still free and need to be arrested.

“Equality is demanded and Black Lives Matter,” were the words from Boston Celtics’ swingman Jaylen Brown. “Breonna Taylor is an example of a Black life who was taken because of, you know, how the system has been laid out, and we’re going to continue to protest.”

Brown’s teammate Marcus Smart said that his answer for every question he is asked by the press will be, “Justice for Breonna Taylor.”

Starting guard for the Portland Trail Blazers CJ McCollum said in his presser that Kentucky Attorney General Daniel Cameron is in position to arrest the cops responsible for the murder of Ms. Taylor, which has yet to happen.

Philadelphia 76ers forward Tobias Harris stated that as well how he and his NBA peers will keep the pressure on Attorney General Cameron to arrest Louisville Metro Police Department (LMPD) Officers Jonathan Mattingly and Myles Cosgrove, and LMPD detective Brett Hankison, who are responsible for Ms. Taylor’s death. 

The biggest that expressed the important of Ms. Taylor getting justice for being murdered came from four-time Kia MVP and three-time NBA champion LeBron James of the Los Angeles Lakers, who said after the Lakers’ scrimmage versus the Mavericks last Thursday, “The same energy we had on the floor is the same energy we have towards having justice for Breonna Taylor, and her family, and that’s the energy we bring to the game. That’s just who we are.”

James also said it is just awful how the U.S. and the world needed to see the George Floyd video of him being killed by Minneapolis, MN police officers how out of control law enforcement has been towards minorities. On top of that, the officers that killed Taylor were at the wrong place, and the suspect they were looking for was already in custody, which James said was “not okay.”

The peaceful protest and the explosion of frustration that has been displayed across the county since the death of Mr. Floyd James said is not a movement, and that society has not had a “damn movement” for minorities.

“When you black, it’s not a movement, it’s a lifestyle,” he said. “A lot of people can’t even have that conversation of actually looking someone in the eye and telling them how they feel. And a lot of people when they tell you how they feel, I have to be able to accept your response, no matter if you tell me what I want to hear or not. We’ll end this with justice for Breonna Taylor.”  

In a essay narrated during intermission of the “Storm versus the Liberty,” Sparks All-Star forward and ESPN basketball analyst Chiney Ogwumike said that the mission of the WNBA and the Women’s National Basketball Players Association is to be an aid to “fix a broken system that is unwavering.”

She added, “We are informed and united. Our voices are finally being heard. Now more than ever, we need to amplify and empower Black voices.

While this movement for social justice and police brutality by the players of the WNBA might be new to the public, this is something they have sunk their teeth and collective minds into since 2016, which is when former San Francisco 49ers quarterback Colin Kaepernick began kneeling during the playing of the national anthem to peacefully protest police brutality occurring in minority communities, which cost him his NFL career.

On Sept. 26, 2017 before the start of Game 1 between the Los Angeles Sparks and Minnesota Lynx, the Sparks players left the court before the playing of the national anthem, while the Lynx players stayed on the hardwood of Williams Arena on the campus of the University of Minnesota.

Not too long after that, four of the Lynx perennial All-Stars, who led them to their four WNAB titles in the last decade in now former forward Rebekkah Brunson, Hutchinson, MN native and now head coach of the Lady Golden Gophers basketball squad Lindsay Whalen, now Sparks guard Simone Augustus and 2014 WNBA MVP and three-time All-Star Game MVP Maya Moore held a press conference to address police brutality wearing black short sleeve shirts that said, “Change Starts With Us: Justice and Accountability” on the front and on the back the names Philando Castile and Alton Sterling and “Black Lives Matter.”

“What is happening is not new. Racism is unjust and very real,” Brunson said at the presser.
Moore, the 2013 WNBA Finals MVP, seven-time All-WNBA selection and two-time WNBA All-Defensive Second Team selection added at the presser, “This is a human issue, and we need to speak out for change together.”

Many WNBA teams have impactful statements about the inequality and racism that many minorities and women, especially African American and minority women have faced in this nation for centuries from locking arms during the national anthem instead of standing at attention. The Connecticut Sun one time wore black shirts during warmups that had on the front “EQUALITY.”

As important as making statements wearing shirts stating the injustice or the names of people who lost their lives at the hands of law enforcement or Caucasians that act as if they are law enforcement, it takes bold action for real change to take place.

Moore felt propelled to take action sitting out last season, as well as this season at the Zenith of her career to focus all her energy in the cause for social justice.

The future Hall of Famer said that the decision to put her career on hold was to “prioritize” the things she felt were more urgent, and how interesting it is that two years later the nation and really the entire world is “literally” being forced to take on the issues of social justice, police brutality and mass incarceration.

“We need to be people before players right now and just say something because we’re hurting,” Moore said. “We have a chance to really take this time and energy to re-create something more beautiful. We can actually do something about what’s going on.”

“I just really wanted to show up for things that I felt were mattering more than being a professional athlete.”

Moore’s journey through the criminal justice system was an eye-opening experience that really tested her faith in people and the institutions of our country where people and leaders who have been entrusted to serve and protect are the ones who are oppressing minorities.

During this process though, the former University of Connecticut Lady Husky stayed focused thanks to her belief and character, and the innocence of her friend Jonathan Irons.

That faith was rewarded on Mar. 9 when in the Missouri Western District Court of Appeals, the judged overturned Mr. Irons’ conviction and he was released to his family on July 1, being greeted by his family and Moore, who all wore masks because of the Coronavirus (COVID-19) Global Pandemic.

“One of the most rewarding things I’ve been able to do in that is to show and be present, and advocate for Jonathan and for the general cause of it really comes down to is dignifying people and saying, ‘There’s no one that’s beneath getting justice.”

“I try to spread the world. Tell people about these real human beings that are going through these realistic situations in ways we can examine our justice system, and not assume justice is being served all the time.”

Moore also said that minorities who want the justice system to be fair to them regardless of their past is the same as athletes wanting to play a game where it is called fairly. Fans do not want to watch a game that is fixed one team’s favor because there is bias against another squad. That is what is being asked by many minority communities who have seen their families torn apart, some for generations by an unfair and unjust justice system. They want their truth to be shown and to be treated with dignity and respect.

That is why several notable WNBA players like Renee Montgomery of the Dream, and Natasha Cloud of the defending WNBA champion Mystics have decided to sit out this season to put their respective energies towards social justice initiatives such as education reform and fighting voter suppression.

“This is bigger than basketball. We’re not only athletes. When we take that uniform off, we’re black,” Cloud said at a peaceful protest in Washington D.C. in the early part of the summer.
Another step the WNBA has taken in the fight for social justice is forming the Social Justice Council, which consists of the aforementioned Clarendon, Sydney Colson of the Sky, Tierra Ruffin-Pratt of the Sparks, rookie Satou Sabally of the Wings, Brenna Stewart of the Storm, and A’ja Wilson of the Aces.

The impressive part of this council is that its formation was totally done by the players and the league is providing them the necessary resources to give this council everything it needs to educate, amplify, and execute a course of action in the fight for social justice.

The players have will also be voicing their causes for social justice and equality on their shoes on gameday this season through an initiative, “My Kicks My Cause.”

All-Star center for the Mercury Brittney Griner in her team’s tilt on Saturday afternoon versus the Sparks on ABC had on her shoes “Pride,” “Equality for the LGBTQ community and “Black Lives Matter.”

Her teammate Brianna Turner had on her sneakers “Black Lives Matter” and “Black Votes Matter.”

One person who is not surprised at how the WNBA has dived in head on with their message around the cause for social justice and helping to create real social change is former ESPN basketball analyst, former color analyst for the Washington Wizards for NBC Sports Washington and the new head coach of Duke University Kara Lawson.

The former Tennessee Lady Volunteer, who spent 13 seasons in the WNBA with the then Sacramento Monarchs, Sun, and Mystics, winning a title with the Monarchs in 2005 said that the actions taken by the players of the WNBA is something that comes natural to them.

That they are women from diverse backgrounds from across the earth who are passionate about communities, especially minority communities. That passion has been manifested in a multitude of ways.

“But in this moment now with social justice, with racial justice, with the need for leadership, and the need for effective leadership, what better people than the women of the WNBA to share their voices. To show case their platform, and to just lead us in that way,” Lawson, who was named the new head coach of the Lady Blue Devils said to Robinson on Saturday during the WNBA Halftime Report, presented by State Farm.

“So, I’m very proud to be a 13-year veteran of the WNBA. It’s something I hold very near and dear to my heart, and it makes me proud as an alum of the league to see those players and those women leading the way and giving a voice to the voice less.”

Brooklyn Nets All-Star point guard, who along with James helped lead the Cleveland Cavaliers to their first NBA title in franchise history in 2016 has committed $1.5 million through the creation of the Ky Empowerment Initiative, for all female empowerment and equity to support some or the aforementioned WNBA players who opted out the 2020 season because of the previously mentioned global pandemic.

The Coronavirus (COVID-19) Pandemic coupled with the injustices that minorities have faced for over four centuries being brought to the forefront has displayed the incredible divide we had for far too long in our country, and even the world.

When the WNBA put a plan in place to begin their season at IMG Academy in Bradenton, FL and the NBA put their plan in place to restart their season at the ESPN Wide World of Sports Complex in Orlando, FL, there was a feeling that would take away the incredible momentum towards the movement for social justice.

So far though, the WNBA and the NBA have been whenever players and coaches have gotten in front of a camera or microphone about keeping the conversation about social justice and police brutality at the forefront, especially when it comes to getting justice for Breonna Taylor.

The hope is that this momentum and pressure will continue and lead to real change in our country for the next generation of minorities in this country, who are hungry for a better world where they can be themselves and not think that the color of their skin is the determining factor if they will live or die.

Information and quotations are courtesy of 7/23/2020 6:30 p.m. “WNBA Season Preview,” with Ryan Ruocco, Rebecca Lobo, LaChina Robinson, and Holly Rowe; 7/24/2020 3 p.m. edition of “NBA: The Jump” on ESPN with Rachel Nichols, Jorge Sedano, Amin Elhassan,  and Richard Jefferson; 7/24/2020 8 p.m. “NBA on TNT/Bleacher Report: The Arena,” presented by Tractor Supply Co. with Cari Champion, Draymond Green, and Charles Barkley; 7/25/2020 12 p.m. on ESPN and 3 p.m. on ABC WNBA Tip-Off, presented by AT&T “Seattle Storm versus New York Liberty and “Los Angeles Sparks versus Phoenix Mercury,” 7/26/2020 12 p.m. and 3 p.m. “Connecticut Sun versus Minnesota Lynx” and “Chicago Sky versus Las Vegas Aces” with Ryan Ruocco, Rebecca Lobo, and Holly Rowe, with the WNBA Halftime Report, presented by State Farm, with LaChina Robinson; scores of games from 7/25/2020 and 7/26/2020 from WNBA app; 7/27/2020 11 p.m. edition of NBATV’s “Gametime,” with Ro Parrish and Sam Mitchell; https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Candace_Parker; https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kara_Lawson; and  https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shooting_of_Breonna_Taylor;  

J-Speaks: The Passing Of A Television Treasure And Icon


For a quarter century, he was the consent ray of sunshine each morning no matter what the weather forecast was. As big and as great as he was in the daytime, he became just as big in primetime as host of one of the most popular game shows. He had a spontaneous wit, a hilarious humility and an endearing charm that made you laugh, smile and be captivated by his presence whether you saw him in person or on the small screen. As great as he was on television, he just as exceptional as a husband and father to his four children. On Friday, we said goodbye to this iconic television figure, who in the early part of this new century set the Guinness Book of World Records as the most watcher person in the history of television for six decades.

Legendary television host, entertainer, comedian, and New York native Regis Philbin, the long-running host of “Live!” and “Who Wants to Be a Millionaire” died on Friday, one month shy of his 89th birthday from cardiovascular disease at a hospital in Greenwich, CT. He was 88 years old.   

He is survived by his second wife of five decades Joy Senese, their two daughters Joanna and Jennifer, also known as J.J. and two grandchildren Ivy Schur and William Schur from J.J. and her husband of 14 years, television writer Michael Schur. Mr. Philbin also had two children, daughter Amy and son Daniel from his first marriage to Catherine “Kay” Faylen, the daughter of actor of the late actor Frank Faylen.

“We are deeply saddened to share that our beloved Regis Philbin passed away last night of natural causes, one month before his 89th birthday,” Mr. Philbin’s family wrote in an exclusive statement to People magazine on Saturday.

New Jersey-born long-time soap actress and co-host on “Live with Regis and Kelly” from 2001-2011, when he Mr. Philbin stepped down at the age of 80, Kelly Ripa posted on her Instagram page a picture of her and Regis over the weekend.

Mrs. Ripa and her current “Live with Kelly and Ryan” co-host Ryan Seacrest were visibly saddened about the loss of the television legend on Monday morning’s edition of the show.

Ripa said in the opening of the show, done virtually the past said that she and her husband of 24 years in actor Mark Consuelos were “lucky” enough to have their three children, Michael, Lola and Joaquin with them on Saturday when they got what she called the “horrible” news of the passing of her co-host on “Live!” for a decade and who became her very dear and close friend.

“As people get older, you always know that certain things are inevitable, and passing-away is one of those things.  But Regis is one of the people we all believed I think would somehow figure out a way around the inevitable,” Ripa said while fighting back tears of how Philbin would continue to live for as long as he could. “And you know, it was not in the cards I suppose.”

“Somehow, he couldn’t find a way to live forever that we all I think assumed or thought that he could or would or should or somehow God would give a special ticket for him.” 

Also mentioned during the opening monologue of Monday’s show that Mr. Philbin will be buried at his alma mater Notre Dame University at Cedar Grove Cemetery at Notre Dame, IN, which he referenced many times on “Live,” particularly his love for the Fighting Irish football team.

“This is my favorite place in the whole world,” Mr. Philbin said to People magazine on his way to a Notre Dame football game back in 2011. “The more I travel, the more I love Notre Dame.”   
Mrs. Ripa also said on Monday that the first person she thought of when she got the news of Philbin’s passing was  Joy and their two aforementioned daughters Joanna and J.J. Ripa also thought of the lady she succeeded as the co-host of “Live!” nearly two decades ago Kathie Lee Gifford, who tweeted @KathieLGifford on Saturday, “There will never be another.”

What Ripa said that she connected with Mr. Philbin’s daughter’s the most is how they had fathers that had the amazing ability to make you laugh. That having a funny daddy made you funny to be around, and how to appreciate what Ripa referred to as the “ludicrous” side of life. 

Two people who got to see that ludicrous side of Mr. Philbin for many years were the executive producer of “Live!” Michael Gelman, who began on the show as a production assistant back in the 1980s and Art Moore, the vice president of programming at WABC and executive in charge of “Live!,” who along with many of the behind the scenes staff built “Live” into the television giant that has been nominated for 37 Emmys, winning six times.  

“I came to Regis as a kid and he took a chance on me. He such a young energy that I think he believed in my young energy,” Gelman said. “He was responsible for my career. He was responsible for my family [two daughters Jamie and Misha]. He was there when I met my wife [Laurie] and for 25 years, I started the day with him and my early morning meeting with him playing Dean Martin. And at the same time, I ended my day with him. He would want me to call him every night before bedtime…. It was a relationship like a father son relationship but I was the father and he was the son.”

The relationship between Mr. Philbin and Gelman was so close, like a father and son that he mentioned on Monday’s show that he once took him to Notre Dame to show him his old dorm room and the ducks he would frequently talk to when he received an honor degree from his alma mater.

Mr. Moore, whose worked with Mr. Philbin for 28 years said it is tough to put a lifetime of work into one specific moment.

The first or second week when Moore joined “Live!” in 1989, Mr. Philbin started doing banter with him, which he responded but did so as a way to get the grasp of how the environment was.
Right after the show one day, Mr. Philbin grabbed Mr. Moore and asked him if he was okay because he did not want to give his longtime friend and co-worker the wrong impression of him.

“I said, ‘Listen, I know what you do. Whatever it takes to make to make this show work is what’s important,” Moore said to Philbin in that moment. “You let me know, and I’ll let you know if it goes too far. But sometimes I think it maybe it did for me. And we all know where that goes.”

Mr. Moore did say though that he knew when Regis was going to have a serious conversation with him when it began with, “Let me ask you something?”

He also pointed out that Mr. Philbin all the time that he was “the 24-hour entertainer,” where he was a constant performer looking and aiming to please everyone that watch him on television or who he came into contact with out in public. If you waived to him to say hello, he waived right back. If a fan stopped him on the streets of New York or wherever he was, he would take the time to chat or take a picture.

“He had time for everybody, and he made everybody feel better when they left,” Moore said. “And that’s how I kind of want to remember him. Just a gold mine of talent but a big heart.”
More than anything when you watched Regis Philbin on television each morning, you were watching someone who Seacrest said was the “best friend” of everyone, even those that only knew him from seeing him on television.

Seacrest said that he remembers watching him as a child growing up in Atlanta, GA where he was so excited to see him on television because he felt like he knew him. He especially remembers waking up in the summertime watching Mr. Philbin and Ms. Gifford every morning while eating breakfast.

“He had this amazing ability to be so comfortable on television. This amazing ability to really feel like he is your companion, and you looked forward to hearing his stories,” Seacrest said. “What he did last night, and how he would tell those stories.”

To put into perspective the kind of respect that Mr. Philbin had on others, Seacrest said the first time that he worked with him and Ripa on the Disney Christmas Day Parade, this was the moment he called his big break. The moment where he felt that he could be the kind of entertainer and host of a show that brought joy, excitement, and optimism to viewers, just like Mr. Philbin, who he looked up to growing up.

Seacrest said Mr. Philbin was someone that he studied when he watched him from how he would walk on “Live’s” studio set. How he would sit in the stool of the co-host table. How he would tell stories. How he would interview guest.

“I looked up to Larry King and Regis Philbin. There are just so very few people who are so iconic and so good at what they did, and that is Regis Philbin,” Seacrest said.

Seacrest added that when he got the news of Mr. Philbin’s passing, he could not believe it at first. He said that he sent a text that he hoped it was just a rumor and not true, which he convinced himself for a minute that it was a rumor.

Unfortunately, it was not a rumor as it turned out that Mr. Philbin did indeed pass on to the gates of heaven.  

Another fond memory Seacrest said he had with Mr. Philbin was one day after he and Ripa finished their show and he went to go do his syndicated radio show, the man he idolized growing up came downstairs to the studio and gave Seacrest a hug, which he considered a seal of approval that he was the right person to be in that co-host chair on one of the best syndicated talk show on television.

It brought a lot of emotion out of Seacrest because he said that he wanted to be there for Ripa and that he wanted Mr. Philbin to approve the idea of being the co-host of “Live!” He wanted to get the approval from the man who he called a “national treasure.”

Mr. Philbin will get a chance to spend the rest of eternity in heaven because of how he treated others, with love, respect, and dignity. He especially was that way with Mrs. Ripa’s aforementioned kids Michael, Lola, and Joaquin Consuelos.

She said that whenever he was around her children, he would talk to them like they were adults, which he did with a lot of kids, especially those of “Live!” staff, regardless if they were toddlers or tweens.

“He would talk to them like they were adults and my kids responded to that in a way that was so-they just worshiped him,” Ripa said, adding, “and Regis is responsible for Michael’s love to this day of Dean Martin and The Rat Pack.”

Mr. Philbin got Michael one Christmas his first Dean Martin CD when he was three years old, which Ripa said on Monday that he played, and by age 4 Ripa was reciting Dean Martin Las Vegas routines.

There was one segment for the show where Mr. Philbin babysat Mrs. Ripa’s kids and during one part of that segment Mr. Philbin spoke to Lola while she was brushing her teeth getting ready for bed and she was staring at him, and he said to her that she was a “gentle little lady.”

Ripa said that moment made her realize what it felt like to be have been in the shoes of Joanna and J.J. because Mr. Philbin had a “softness” to him.

That soft and joyful spirit, mixed in with some comedy and solid conversation that made Mr. Philbin the legend he is was on full display when he worked with Mrs. Gifford, with celebrity co-host when she was on vacation and with his wife Joy, when she would fill in for Gifford.

The chemistry was so good between Mr. Philbin and Mrs. Gifford that many thought, especially Seacrest and Ripa that they lived together because the set they did the show on had the feel of a New York City apartment building, with the backdrop behind the desk they sat at resembling a real terrace that you see on many apartments in New York City.

Even though they were married to different people, with Gifford being married to the late great NFL Hall of Famer Frank Gifford, the set they hosted the show on gave the illusion that they worked and lived together in an amazing apartment.

Ripa said in watching the show back in the late 1980s and 1990s, she thought that Joy Kathie Lee, and Mr. Gifford lived in the same apartment together.   

Born on Aug. 25, 1931 in the Bronx, NY, Mr. Philbin, an Irish Catholic attended Old Lady of Solace Grammar School and then Cardinal Hayes High School before going on to the University of Notre Dame.

After serving our country in the Navy as a supply officer, Mr. Philbin got his start in television behind the scenes as a page at “The Tonight Show” in 1955, working his way up to being an announcer for the show in 1962.

His first exposure in front of the camera came in 1967 as the sidekick to Joey Bishop on ABC’s late-night talk show, “The Joey Bishop Show” from 1967-1969. 

After replacing Steve Allen on “The Steve Allen Show” in 1964 and a six-year stint (1975-1981) as co-host of KABC-TV’s “A.M. Los Angeles” first with Sarah Purcell (1975-1978) and then with Cyndy Garvey (1978-1981), Mr. Philbin followed Garvey back to New York City where they launched “The Morning Show” on Apr. 4, 1983 locally on WABC.

Two years later, Mrs. Gifford, who was Kathie Lee Johnson at the time took over as co-host and on Sept. 5, 1988, the show was re-titled “Live with Regis and Kathie Lee” and the rest is history. A history where Mr. Philbin was nominated for 37 Daytime Emmy Awards, winning six times and received the Lifetime Achievement Award Emmy and was inducted into the Television Academy Hall of Fame.

Perhaps his greatest achievement came on Aug. 20, 2004 when Mr. Philbin set the Guinness World Record for most time in front of a United States television camera, which was then 15,188 hours and grew to an incredible 16,746.50 hours.

That record came from his ability to have conversations in the opening part of “Live!” or when he interviewed guest on the show about the project or projects they were there to promote to talking about their life outside of work to their favorite things to do. If the guest were from the world of music, he would very often right on the spot sing with them like he did very on one occasion with John Travolta.

On top of that, he would always greet and be polite and joyful with the any guest that came on “Live!” and would never as anything that was out of bounds, even if the guest is mired in controversary.

“I have turned away from that kind of an interview to something that I would put them in a better light, something that’s not going to make them feel as badly as they do about what happened in their real life,” Mr. Philbin told National Public Radio (NPR) in a 2011 interview after stepping down as host of “Live!”

“And I think it’s come back, not to haunt me but to bless me because a lot of the people that I have interviewed over the years have no qualms about coming back and do it again and again and again.” 

A little over two decades ago, Philbin took on primetime television as the host of the beloved game show, “Who Wants to Be a Millionaire” back in 1999.

“I never expected it. I never really wanted any more than what we have in the morning, never really dreamed of it,” he told Larry King back in 2001. “I thought, you know, I climbed all my mountains and then suddenly this comes along and never dreamed it would be this big. And all of a sudden, it’s another mountain and we’re on top. And it’s a great feeling. And I love it.”
Earlier this year, Mr. Philbin would return to the set of the game show be began 21 years ago to give his blessing to new host and fellow talk show host on ABC late night Jimmy Kimmel of “Jimmy Kimmel Live.”

“It will never be what it was with you Regis but thank you for giving me the opportunity and your blessing to host this show. I will do my best to carry on your tradition,” Kimmel said.
Kimmel affectionately tweeted @jimmykimmel over the weekend, “Regis was a great broadcaster, a good friend and a tremendous amount of fun. He leaves behind a beautiful family and a TV legacy that will likely go unmatched, I hope our friend [Don] Rickles met you at the pearly gates of heaven with open arms and a slew of insults you loved so much.”

The nation, especially the state of New York, the television industry, and the industry of entertainment at the start of this past weekend said goodbye to a legend, who had the ability to entertain those that watched him either up close or from the small screen.

Regis Philbin had the ability to hold a conversation with you where you were locked in. He was up for anything to get a laugh out of those watching him and always took the time to say hello or converse with those he entertained.

Hall of Famer and WNBA color commentator for ESPN Rebecca Lobo during the broadcast of the season opener of the Los Angeles Sparks versus Phoenix Mercury on Saturday afternoon on ABC when the news broke of Mr. Philbin’s passing told a quick story about when she was playing for the New York Liberty in the early years of the league, they practiced at the then Reebok Club, now the Equinox Sports Club on the Upper West Side of Manhattan, which was right across from the ABC Studios, Mr. Philbin would come in to work out and converse with Lobo and her teammates at the time.”

“His effusive personality that you saw on TV is what we saw as well whenever we had interactions with him. He will be missed,” Lobo said.

While Mr. Philbin took the work of being an entertainer seriously, he never took himself too seriously and he was always presence, especially with his wife of five decades Joy, a former interior decorator, his four children from Amy and Daniel from his first marriage and Joanna and “J.J.”

The two greatest gifts that Regis Philbin left us was his ability to always entertain and to always be present, which he was at all times with his co-host on “Live!” first with Kathie Lee Gifford and then Kelly Ripa. 

Information and quotations are courtesy of 7/25/2020 3 p.m. “ABC News Special Report,” with Tom Llamas; 7/25/2020 3 p.m. 2020 WNBA Tip-Off, presented by AT&T, “Los Angeles Sparks versus Phoenix Mercury,” with Ryan Ruocco, Rebecca Lobo, LaChina Robinson, and Holly Rowe; 7/26/2020 New York Times story, “I Climbed My Mountains,” by Jessica Bennett, Scott A. Rosenberg, and Susan Edelman; 7/26/2020 9 a.m. edition of WABC 7 “Eyewitness News Sunday Morning,” with Mike Marza, Michelle Charlesworth, and weather anchor Amy Freeze, with report from ABC News’ Chris Connelly; 7/29/2020 9 a.m. Edition of “Live with Kelly and Ryan,” with Kelly Ripa and Ryan Seacrest; www.google.com; https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Live_with_Kelly_and_Ryan; https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kelly_Ripa; https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Michael_Gelman; and https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Regis_Philbin.  

Sunday, July 19, 2020

J-Speaks: The Sudden Passing A Civil Rights Icon and Longtime Congressman From Georgia

He was the son of sharecroppers in rural Pike County, AL. He was the protégé of Dr. Martin Luther Kings, Jr. who challenged the segregated Jim Crow South through nonviolence in the historic struggle for equal rights for all Americans, which continues today. This lion of the Civil Rights movement would carry that mantle of moral authority into Congress Representing the state of Georgia from the middle of the 1980s until his sudden passing at the start of this weekend.

Congressman John Robert Lewis, who served Georgia’s 5th congressional district in the United States House of Representatives beginning in 1987 died late Friday night. He was 80 years old. Mr. Lewis is survived by his son John-Miles, who he brought into this world with his wife of a little over four decades Lillian Miles, who Mr. Lewis met at a New Year’s Eve party hosted by fellow civil rights leader Xernona Clayton and broadcast executive. Mrs. Lewis passed-away on ironically enough New Year’s Eve 2012.

His passing was confirmed in a statement by House speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-CA) in a statement which read in part, “Today, America mourns the loss of one of the greatest heroes of American history: Congressman John Lewis, the Conscience of the Congress.”

“John Lewis was a titan of the civil rights movement whose goodness, faith and bravery transformed our nation-from the determination with which he met discrimination at lunch counters and on Freedom Rides, to the courage he showed as a young man facing down violence and death on Edmund Pettus Bridge, to the moral leadership he brought to the Congress for more than 30 years.”

“In the halls of the Capitol, he was fearless in his pursuit of a more perfect union, whether through his Voter Empowerment Act to defend the ballot, his leadership on the Equality Act to end discrimination against the LGBTQ Americans or his work as a Senior Member of the Ways and Means Committee to ensure that we invest in what we value as a nation.”

Back on Dec. 29, 2019, Mr. Lewis announced he had Stage 4 pancreatic cancer but vowed to fight it with the same fire for which he had against social and racial injustice. He told “CBS This Morning” in June that he believed that his health was improving.

“I have been in some kind of fight --- for freedom, equality, basic human rights --- for nearly my entire life,” he said. “I have never faced a fight quite like the one I have now.”

Born on Feb. 21, 1940 outside of Troy, AL, Mr. Lewis was drawn to activism surrounding the Montgomery Bus Boycott, which were led by the late great Dr. Martin Luther King. At 17, Mr. Lewis would meet Rosa Parks, who on Dec. 1, 1955 refused the order of bus driver James F. Blake to give up her seat in what was called the “colored section” of the bus she was on to a Caucasian passenger after all the seats in the white-only section was filled.
  
He told the story of meeting Rosa Parks and Dr. King on CBS’ “The Late Show with Steven Colbert” in 1957 and 1958 respectably at the ages of 17 and 18, and it was these two icons who inspired Mr. Lewis to get into what he referred to many times in his over three decades in Congress, “good trouble.”

“These two individuals inspired me to get in trouble. And I’ve been getting into ‘good trouble,’ necessary trouble ever since,” he said to Colbert.

That led Mr. Lewis to become one of the thirteen original “Freedom Riders,” who protested segregated bus terminals across the South.  

In the 1960s, Congressman Lewis was right at the front of battle to halt the Jim Crow laws that led him to suffer many wounds, some visible from those tilts from blows to his body and a fractured skull. In fact, there was a photo of Mr. Lewis with a bandage on his head from the beating he and other Riders took in one of many arrests in the fight for social change.

“We must cry. We all must cry together. And we want our freedom and we want it now,” he once said.

But that only made him more determined to win the battle of the civil rights movement, being there, front and center for every moment civil rights movement.

He would March shoulder-to-shoulder with the late great Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. Organize sit in demonstrations at segregated lunch counters in downtown Nashville, TN, which was called the Nashville Sit-In Movement when he was a student at Fisk University, where he received his B.A. in religion and philosophy. Before that, Congressman Lewis graduated from American Baptist Theological Seminary in Nashville.

While the battle has continued to the present day, Mr. Lewis would be right there as the lone surviving speaker and chairman of the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee (SNCC) from the original March on Washington for Jobs and Freedom on August 28, 1963, joining the late James Farmer, founder of the Congress of Racial Equality (CORE) in 1942; the late A. Philip Randolph, organizer of the Brotherhood of Sleeping Car Porters in 1925; the late Roy Wilkins, who was named Executive Director of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP) in 1955; the late Whitney Young, who spent much of his career working to abolish employment discrimination in the South and was the Executive Director of the National Urban League, which he held until his passing in 1971; and Dr. King as the “Big Six,” who help planned this historic event. Where Dr. King gave his famous “I Have a Dream” speech. A similar event will take place on Aug. 28 in the same area of the National Mall in the District of Columbia.

“Let us not forget that we are involved in a serious social revolution,” the longtime Congressman from Georgia said on that historic day, adding “We don’t want our freedom gradually but we want to be free now.”

“I appeal to all of you to get into this great revolution that is sweeping this nation. Get in and stay in the streets of every city, every village and hamlet of this nation until true freedom comes, until the revolution of 1776 is complete.”

On the same day of Mr. Lewis’ passing, a close associate of Dr. King in Baptist minister Reverend C.T. Vivian passed-away at the age of 95.

It is because of that speech and the work that has taken place since then a person in D.C., who has worked as a poll worker said, “Without John Lewis and the Civil Rights movement, I would not be a poll worker. We would not have the freedom to vote.”
Another D.C. resident said John Lewis “changed the face of America,” adding, “such a great man, such a great loss.”

Two years later, Mr. Lewis’ named rose to national prominence as the spearhead of the defining moment of the civil rights era when he and fellow activist Hosea Williams lead over 600 peaceful protestors from Selma to Montgomery, AL across the Edmund Pettus Bridge in Selma, AL on Mar. 7, 1965.

“We’re marching today from Selma to Montgomery. We’re marching to our state capitol to dramatize to our nation and to world our determination to win first class citizenship,” a 25-year-old Lewis said in a speech prior to the march that day.

Lewis was in front of the pack where he and those that marched were met by Alabama State Troopers and the bottom of the bridge and who ordered them to disperse. They did not and they stop to pray, which then led the state troopers to disperse tear gas on the marchers and was followed by serious confrontation between the troopers and protestors, with the troopers beating them with night sticks, in what is now known as “Bloody Sunday.” Mr. Lewis’ skull was fracture from that confrontation and he suffered scars on his head that he would bare for the remainder of his life.

“I was the first person to be hit, and I still have the scar on my forehead,” Mr. Lewis said to CBS News’ Bob Schieffer, former anchor of CBS’s “Face the Nation” at the same site of the march a few years back. “And I was knocked down. My legs just went out from under me. I thought I was going to die on this bridge.”

Mr. Lewis survived “Bloody Sunday” and was there by the side the 36th President of the U.S. President Lyndon Johnson when the Stonewall, TX native signed the Voting Rights Act, which outlawed discrimination against voting, which allowed millions of African Americans in the South the right to vote for the first time. 
 
After an unsuccessful bid for Congress in 1977, Lewis accepted the position of Associate Director of ACTION in the administration of President Jimmy Carter, where he was responsible for running VISTA, the AmeriCorps national service program designed to alleviate poverty. The Retired Senior Volunteer Program and the Foster Grandparent Program, now known as Senior Corps under the authority of the Corporation for National and Community Service, whose stated mission is to provide aid to senior citizens in communities in the U.S., while promoting a sense of community.

After holding that position for two and a half years, Mr. Lewis resigned as the 1980 presidential election was on the horizon.

One year later, Mr. Lewis ran for an at-larger seat on the Atlanta City Council, which he won by earning 69 percent of the vote.

In 1986, he would run for the 5th District seat in the House of Representatives again after former Atlanta City Councilman Wyche Fowler gave up his seat to make a run for the U.S. Senate.

Mr. Lewis in the August Democratic Primary ran against State Representative Julian Bond, who he defeated in a run-off of 52 percent to 48 percent.

The race though put a severe strain in the African American community of Atlanta, GA because many black leaders supported Bond over Lewis.

They were especially unhappy when Lewis ran campaign ads accusing Bond of being corrupt, implying he taken cocaine and suggested he fabricated about his role as a civil activist during the civil rights movement.

Mr. Lewis during the campaign was endorsed by the city of Atlanta’s newspapers and became a favorite of the Caucasian liberal establishment. His win came from how well he polled amongst Caucasian voters, who were a minority in his district. That is how he defeated the Republican candidate Portia Scott 75 percent to 25 percent.

Congressman Lewis would be reelected 16 times to Georgia’s 5th Congressional District, falling below 70 percent of the vote only once during the general election in 1994, when he barely defeated Republican candidate Dale Dixon by a margin of 69 percent to 31 percent. He ran opposed six times (1996, 2004, 2006, 2008, 2014 and 2018).

In his 33 years of services to the 5th district of Georgia, Congressman Lewis would get into “good trouble,” pushing as a liberal democrat who pushed for civil rights, gay rights, and freedom for all Americans, especially minorities in our nation.

“I got arrested 40 times during the 60s. And since I’ve been in Congress another five times,” he said.
  
Getting into “good trouble” earned Congressman Lewis was awarded the highest civilian honor in our country, the Presidential Medal of Freedom in February of 2011 and that medal was placed around his neck by the first African American President as well as the 44th to lead our nation Barack Obama.

In a statement posted on the website “Medium,” Mr. Obama wrote about Mr. Lewis, “He loved this country so much that he risked his life and his blood so that it might live up to its promise. And through the decades, he not only gave all of himself to the cause of freedom and justice, but inspired generations that followed to try to live up to his example.”

Mr. Obama added about the moments before taking his oath in 2009, he wrote, “When I was elected President of the United States, I hugged him on the inauguration stand before I was sworn in and told him I was only there because of the sacrifices he made. Not many of us get to live to see our own legacy play out in such a meaningful, remarkable way. John Lewis did.”

In recent years, Mr. Lewis has been an outspoken critic of our current leader of our nation Donald Trump, skipping his inauguration, the second inauguration of a Republican president he skipped and his first State of the Union address.

Congressman Lewis has been involved in several protest against President Trump’s zero-tolerance immigration policy.

“We are getting in ‘good trouble’ to set people free,” Mr. Lewis said at one of those rallies against the current president’s immigration policy. “I will go to the borders. I’ll get arrested again.”

Nearly 60 years later after the murder of George Floyd in the custody of three Minneapolis, MN Police officers in late May, Mr. Lewis said he welcomed the plethora of protest that occurred not just in this country but globally against African Americans and all minorities having their lives taken at the hands of those who are supposed to serve and protect them.

Along with that, Mr. Lewis welcomed those demonstrations that took a stand against systemic racism in many corners of our society.

These peaceful protest Congressman Lewis saw these protests as this generation taking the baton and continuing the battle that he and the “Big Six” began in the 1960s deciding to chose love over hate to create a better and greater nation and world.

“It doesn’t matter whether we’re black or white, Latino, Asian American or Native American. It doesn’t matter whether we’re straight or gay. We are one people. We are one family. We all live in the same house,” Mr. Lewis said.

He also said of the movement to co-host Gayle King “CBS This Morning” in June, 10 days after the murder of Mr. Floyd, “This feels and looks so different. It is so much more massive and all inclusive. To see people from all over the world taking to the streets, the roadways to stand up, to speak up, to speak out, to do what I call getting in ‘good trouble.”

“And with the sense of determination and commitment, dedication, there will be no turning back. People now understand what the struggle was all about. It’s another step down a very long road toward freedom, justice for all humankind.”

In how the “Black Lives Matter Movement” has been the engine driving these demonstrations against the dark cloud of racism that has existed in our nation for four centuries, Congressman Lewis said, “

As important as is it and will continue to be for us as Americans, not just minorities to strategize and mobilize to express our frustrations and disappointments about how our nations sees a certain number of us through peaceful protests, it will up to our leaders at the local, state and federal level to come together to strategize, mobilize, vote and approve laws that will make our nation more equal.

It is why back in 2016, days after another mass shooting, Congressman Lewis asked all of his colleagues of the House to join him on the floor as he led an unprecedented sit-in trying but failing to secure votes for gun control legislation.

In June, Mr. Lewis visited “Black Lives Matter” Plaza in Washington where he stood on spot of the new mural with a mask on and using a cane and said that it sends a mighty powerful and strong message to the rest of the world. In what was his last public appearance.

Congressman Lewis was joined at the newly formed plaza by Mayor of the District of Columbia Muriel Bowser (D) as many people stopped to take photos of the civil rights icon. In a photo that Mayor Bowser posted on her Twitter page @MayorBowser, it was of Mr. Lewis standing on the “Black Lives Matter” mural with his arms crossed across his body facing the White House.

If supporters of Congressman Lewis have their way in Alabama, the aforementioned Edmund Pettus Bridge will be renamed in honor of the Civil Rights Icon. A petition to rename the bridge has already according to a report from the Sunday morning edition of WABC 7 “Eyewitness News” has over 400,000 signatures. Edmund Pettus was a confederate general and Ku Klux Klan leader, and from how many statues and symbols of those that represent the worst of our country have been taken down or renamed, this might be the next one.  

On Friday, the United States did not just say goodbye to a legend that represented the Fifth Congressional District of Georgia for 33 years in the United States House of Representatives in John Robert Lewis but it lost one of the great storytellers at the heart of the struggle for equality for African Americans for six decades and was the last remaining person that was alive who spoke at March on Washington 57 years ago.

A storyteller who national correspondent and co-host of “CBS This Morning Saturday” Michelle Miller, who graduated from Howard University in Washington, D.C. said of being in the presence of Mr. Lewis on the many occasions she did being in the “presence of greatness,” who was kind, had strength with a mix that “air of humility all his own.”

Former Atlanta Mayor, the 14th United States Ambassador to the United Nations, and former Congressman of Georgia’s Fifth District Andrew Young (D), who also graduated from Howard University said in an interview on Saturday virtually with Miller of the fellow Civil Rights leader one of his “heroes.”

“John Lewis was maybe the quietest member of the Civil Rights Movement,” Mr. Young added. “He could laugh and he could joke. But he was very seldom rowdy, loud or—he had no ego at all. He had the power of humility that just won people over to him. He didn’t push. He wasn’t angry and he had many reasons to be angry. But he always dominated by that loving spirit in life. There was a power in his humility that just made people want to follow him.”

That humility and kindness is how Congressman Lewis was one of the few lawmakers left on Capitol Hill who is universally admired by both his Democratic colleagues and Republicans in part because at the height of the impeachment of President Trump last year he participated in a bipartisan tribute to retiring Georgia Senator Johnny Isakson (R-GA). Lewis ended his remarks by doing something that is rarely seen today in our nation’s capital for a long while, he crossed the house floor to give Mr. Isakson a handshake and a hug.   

President Trump offered condolences to Congressman Lewis’ memory by ordering flags to be lowered to halve staff, while also tweeting that he was saddened to hear the news of the Civil Rights hero’s passing.

Congressman Lewis also formed a friendship with New Jersey reporter and fill-in weekend sports anchor Anthony Johnson of WABC 7, who was his boss who he said that he had the “honor” of serving as his first congressional secretary back in 1987.

In a personal conversation with his former boss as he paid a last visit to him back in January, where he asked Mr. Lewis if he ever afraid when he was on the front lines of the Civil Rights movement.

Mr. Lewis answered to Johnson, “I came to that point where I lost all sense of fear. I thought on that bridge in Selma that I just might die, and I was prepared to give it all I had.”

Johnson said of Mr. Lewis that he and the staff that worked for him new he was “funny” and “hilarious” like when he had a meeting at the White House with our 35th President John F. Kennedy (D) following the March on Washington, he intimidated the late leader of our country.
Johnson also said that he was an office instigator where during his daily activities on Capitol Hill going from meetings, votes, and political functions, he saw how his former boss never missed an opportunity to greet everyone.

Among Congressman Lewis loves according to Johnson were people, flowers, and enjoyed art, and he adored his wife in the previously mentioned Lillian. His favorite childhood story involved him preaching to his chickens on his family’s farm in Pine County, AL. He baptized the chickens, who did have names. Near the place where those chickens went to church, they named a street after the Civil Rights icon in his hometown years ago.

When Johnson asked Mr. Lewis if the world who would know his name, he said, “It really didn’t matter. It still doesn’t matter whether the people know John Lewis or not. I just tried to do a little something. I just tried to help out. That’s all.”

He added when Johnson said that the world knows who his former boss is, “Nobody know my name,” which got a laugh from his former staffer. “Just a poor boy from Alabama.”
While to others John Lewis was a person that was front and center at a very important point in our nation’s history, to Johnson, his former boss’s life was “a breath of fresh air in a sea of humanity that can often be cruel and heartless simply because of the color of a person’s skin.” “I will miss my friend.”   

Throughout his life from his late teenage years to his last breath, Mr. Lewis became a living reminder of the legacy of the Civil Rights Movement, a movement that has brought about some change in our country, with a lot more change to be made.

“When people tell me nothing will change, I just feel like saying, ‘Come and walk in my shoes,” Mr. Lewis said once on CBS News’ “Face the Nation” about how things in our country have slowly but surely have gotten better. “I will show you. I will take you to those places.”  

Information and quotations are courtesy of 7/17/2020 New York Times stories, “John Lewis, Towering Figure of Civil Rights Era, Dies at 80,” by Katharine Q. Seelye and “C.T. Vivian, Martin Luther King’s Field General, Dies at 95,” by Robert D. McFadden; 7/18/2020 and 7/19/2020 6 a.m. edition of WABC “Eyewitness News This Morning” with Mike Marza, Michelle Charlesworth, and Amy Freeze with Weather, with report from ABC News’ Trevor Ault and from New Jersey reporter and fill-in weekend sports anchor Anthony Johnson; 7/18/2020 7 a.m. edition of “CBS This Morning Saturday,” with Michelle Miller, Dana Jacobson, and Jeff Glor, with reports from political correspondent Ed O’Keefe and “CBS This Morning” anchor Gayle King; https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Andrew_Young; https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lyndon_B._Johnson#Voting_Rights_Act; https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Johnny_Isakson; https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Michelle_Miller; and https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/John_Lewis