There was a fire Friday morning in the Eagle River community of Anchorage, Alaska. Janet Seitz’ house sustained an estimated $70,000 worth of damage. I don’t know what all she lost, but I do know that her world was saved when a firefighter brought her cat, Max, to her from the still-smoking house. Seitz broke into tears when she got Max back safely in her arms.
Here’s the original photo at full size. Blow it up and see the emotion on the woman’s face clearly. Feel the honesty and immediacy of real life as it happens. This is news that matters to me.
We have something on television today called “reality TV.” It’s about 80 percent fake. It’s a phony. A lie.
We also have something we call news. It’s on television, online and in print. Even though I spent more than 10 years in news, I suggested last week that news is really just trivia that makes us feel smart and educated, but it’s almost all worthless — and it diverts us from things that matter in life.
Maybe this story from Eagle River is an example of news that matters, because it’s news that connects to the part of all of us that feels emotion — and we can briefly connect with an emotional and overjoyed woman.

FRIDAY FUNNIES
Serious medical issue will limit
Idiots in Congress haven’t heard of ‘law of unintended consequences’
Obama’s new ‘AttackWatch.com’ website smells like political fear
Evil media bias? It depends on which lens you’re looking through that day
Do political labels make things clear or just confuse everyone?
Could we stop being disappointed by just understanding each other?
Without hope for a better future, depression grabs us by the throat
Why keep playing a game that’s impossible for you to win?