Everybody knew Kent wasn’t going to last long. He had been hired as sports editor of a small daily newspaper — and he was a disaster from the beginning.
I watched it all happen because I was managing editor of a small weekly in the same company. I had friends in the daily paper’s newsroom who were telling me everything as it happened. In his first week on the job, he and a local high school football coach were talking privately about a star player for an opposing team who had been injured in a shooting a couple of years before. A bullet had been left in his head after the shooting because it was too close to his brain. It was a miracle that he had returned to play football.
Kent and the coach were talking about the player and were jokingly referring to him as “Bullet Brain” in their private conversation, but Kent didn’t have the judgment to know this wasn’t something to be made public, so he quoted the coach — in a story that ran in the paper — calling the opposing player “Bullet Brain.”
He wasn’t fired, but he clearly wasn’t going to work out.

When we sell Jesus like soap, maybe we’re spiritually bankrupt
How could a stranger at sunset possibly know what I had to say?
If majority rule is such a great idea, why don’t we vote on toothpaste?
As humans live in slums, why do I complain about my privileged life?
Brutal truth is that we will never be able to fix all of world’s evils
Intuition sometimes tells you when someone is worth chasing
Trip to Memory Lane reminds me some relationships deserve to die
‘Resisting arrest’? When police have wrongly invaded your home?