Sunday, February 15, 2015

The changing landscape (oh when will it end?)


There is change in the air.  And change on the printed page.

The one constant about life is change. That is what my father used to tell me.  And I still find it hard to accept at times.

Take today for example.  I open the New York Times and made my way through the main news, travel and sports, then arts and business — all very comfortable and familiar to me.  Then I opened the Sunday magazine and low and behold the editor has a column about a total makeover of the magazine coming next week.

New York Times readers around the globe are trembling with fear and anticipation. It is like a combination of both Christmas and a trip to the Principal’s office.

President (then candidate) Obama made us sit up and acknowledge change in his first campaign for the White House.  He was going to change the dialog in Washington. Not sure he did it, but the editor of the New York Times Magazine seems set on changing my Sunday reading habit with as much force as a march on Washington.

Columns I have grown accustomed to will be axed.  Crossword puzzles I struggled through will disappear. Will stories be shorter or longer? Will the art still be world-class and avant-garde? “Who Made This”, one of the features I have grown to love — it is history. It is like Playboy taking away the bunnies.

Change is inevitable. But I don’t have to like it.  I can fear it.

And I already fear next week’s edition of the magazine. Oh I hope I am pleasantly surprised.  I hope it is better than my imagination fears it will be. I so looked forward to spending my Sunday mornings with CBS and with the New York Times magazine.  Curled up on the floor in front of a roaring fire (in Texas that is about three weeks, the rest of the time we lounge in front of the AC vents…) with the magazine and the rest of the Times spread out before me. What will happen next week?

Change is going to come.  Governments will change. Baptist will probably start sprinkling instead of full emersion and may even start liking Methodist.  Change in schools’ curriculum are a given — and change in laws will happen — but the New York Times Magazine?  I don’t know.  They even promise a new typeface for God’s sake.

Is nothing sacred?

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