This is incredibly embarrassing. It is arguable that “just looking” is a betrayal. And here I am, confessing not to “just looking”… but to actually feeling.
(Why mention it at all?
Because it is eating me up. Also,
I am hoping for feedback, indicating I am not alone in this… particular
behavior.
Over the decades, I have seen thousands of women on
television. The following reaction
occurred only twice, which, although admittedly concerning, does not establish enough
of a pattern to make me a candidate for prosecution on Law & Order: DTV (“Disgusting Television Voyeur.”)
No excuses. It
happened. And I need badly to talk about
it.
Back in 2004, I was seriously smitten with Bethany McLean. *
(* These are not household names. I am not talking Baywatch bathing suit runners.
I came across Bethany McLean watching C-SPAN 2, during one of their always-illuminating “Non-Fiction
Weekends.”)
Bethany McLean had co-written a book entitled The Smartest Guys in the Room, exposing
the corrupt business practices of Enron,
a formerly highly praised operation revealed to be a “Ponzi Scheme” passing as
a legitimate enterprise. In a series of
articles for Fortune magazine,
fighting blistering opposition, Bethany laid bare Enron’s fraudulent “Business Model.”
Did I find Bethany McLean physically attractive? I did.
But something deeper and truer caught my unwavering attention.
She was smart. Sparklingly
articulate (especially for a “Numbers” person.)
Demonstrably courageous. On top
of which was this “thing” about her – a remarkable stillness,
signaling personal confidence and unimpeachable integrity.
Throw those attributes in a blender and push the button. Pour it in a glass. You get Bethany McLean.
The last time I saw her on C-SPAN Bethany announced that she had gotten married. Somehow, that
changed the dynamic, marriage (and children) discombobulating the insanity. After that, I never saw her or ever – until
now – thought about her again.
Bethany McLean was the first and only symptom of this aberrant behavior.
Now, there is Katy Tur.
Katy Tur is a reporter for MSNBC, charged with the unenviable duty of covering and traveling
with the repellent Donald Trump political campaign. Every couple of days, Katy appears on TV for
her “stand-up”, a few minutes of “face time” where she updates viewers on the
latest insult to humanity perpetrated by the Republican candidate for President
of the United States. (You can probably
infer where I stand in this election.)
There is little similarity between Katy Tur and Bethany
McLean. Katy’s “stand-ups”, though always
informative, feel comparatively unpolished, Katy exceeding her allotted
minutes, contradicting the show’s “anchor”, becoming occasionally tongue-tied
as she extemporizes her report.
Katy’s uniqueness is underscored by her appearance, distinguished
by – with respect – a straight-as an-arrow aquiline nose – not a “cute as a button” poll-tested “television” nose, but a proud
nose of individualizing distinction.
All of which I find helplessly endearing.
My precise “Moment of Enchantment”?
During a lull at one of the conventions, MSNBC offered a segment where a gathering
of female reporters shared their experiences covering the tough, seemingly
endless political campaign.
When her turn came, Katy confessed to her latest assignment
requiring her to depart her previous posting in London, triggering a difficult “breakup”
with her European boyfriend.
The moment she said that, Katy’s hand flew immediately to
her face, offering a moment of unvarnished vulnerability.
Oh, man! I wanted to
hug her. Katy’s natural reaction was so
startling – and painfully human – I connected person-to-person with that woman,
realizing how rarely genuine, intimate feelings are ever openly displayed in
front of the cameras.
I started watching her regularly, hoping she’d “score big”
in her appearances, worrying when she looked tired, wondering whether candidate
Trump had ever… I did not even want to think
about that.
I knew I had completely “lost it” when… well, you know that
saying “When you’re standing in a hole, stop digging”?
One night, the network’s Chris Matthews introduced that
analogy, and, in the course of her subsequent “stand-up” Katy mentioned it
again.
Only she quoted it backwards.
When she began, “As you yourself said, Chris, ‘When you’re
digging a hole’…”
“No-o-o-o-o-o-o-o-o-o!!!!!”
Realizing she was headed for disaster,
I immediately changed channels.
I had gotten “too close.”
I was unwilling to witness the “train wreck.”
I know the trajectory.
The presidential campaign will some day (mercifully) come to an end, and
Katy Tur will eventually exit my consciousness, as did Bethany McLean, more
than a decade before.
Still…
This shameful attachment occurred twice.
If it happens again,
I gotta find a “Support Group.”
1 comment:
Andy...
I totally identify with your smitten reactions to her. I too find her refreshingly adult/youthful, with something serious going on in that beautiful, non-cookie cutter noggin of hers with the deeply expressive eyes. Maybe you and I should both attend a support group.
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