NEW YORK (AP) — Tom Johnson’s profession took him from the White House to newspaper writer jobs in Dallas and Los Angeles to president of NCS. While that left him in a position to swap tales about two influential figures — Lyndon B. Johnson and Ted Turner — that’s not the true cause he wrote his memoir.
Instead, it’s to inform how his accomplishments got here regardless of struggling by a despair so extreme he contemplated suicide, within the hope that others will search assist when in want.
“I want to convey that depression is a treatable illness,” Johnson, 84, mentioned in an interview. “You do not need to kill yourself as two of my best friends did.”
He calls his memoir “Driven.” That appears partly in tribute to his mom, who advised a younger boy rising up in Georgia that he may accomplish what he wished in life by arduous work, and an acknowledgement that such drive comes with prices.
He went to work within the Johnson (no relation) White House proper out of graduate faculty at Harvard. As a junior-level aide who first labored with press secretary Bill Moyers, his most necessary obligation was taking cautious notes in conferences. He was trusted sufficient that when LBJ left the White House to return to Texas in 1969, he took Johnson with him as his high aide.
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This article accommodates materials about suicide. If you or somebody you understand wants assist, you possibly can name or textual content the 988 Suicide & Crisis Lifeline or chat on-line at 988lifeline.org
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A public break nonetheless painful years later
So you possibly can inform it pained him to publicly write, half a century later, that he had concluded that “our Vietnam policies were wrong. Disastrously wrong.”
He knew his outdated boss felt squeezed, believing within the strategic significance of the conflict however recognizing that it wasn’t going nicely and leading to pointless demise. Johnson recalled asking the previous president at some point, as they drove round his Texas ranch, whether or not he would have finished something in another way.
“He said, ‘Tom, I will go to my grave believing we did the right thing,’” Johnson recalled. The former president died a couple of weeks later.
Johnson went to work for Times Mirror, first on the Dallas Times Herald then as writer of the Los Angeles Times, throughout increase years for newspapers. He mentioned he was finally pushed out by the Chandler household that owned the newspaper as a result of he was deemed too liberal. He then thought-about the presidency at NCS, regardless of recommendation that Turner, the founder, was “nutty.”
He took the job anyway, in 1990, and shortly regarded Turner as a visionary decided to spend no matter it took to make NCS succeed as a worldwide information group. In retrospect, the 11 years he spent as NCS president marked its interval of biggest success as a tv community.
“Lyndon Baines Johnson was the most complex human being I ever had met,” Tom Johnson wrote in “Driven.” “He would remain the most complex human being I knew until I began working for Ted Turner at NCS decades later. In terms of complexity, the two men were in a league of their own.”
“Driven” is stuffed with inside tales about working for each males, however Johnson is evident about his loyalties. He admires them each. He left NCS quickly after Turner was successfully stripped of his duties following the community’s sale to Time Warner; watching that made Johnson’s despair reemerge, he wrote.
Johnson was first identified with despair whereas he was on the LA Times, retreating from household, associates and actions he liked. His spouse, Edwina, pushed him to get assist, the place he discovered he had a genetic predisposition to despair.
“You really learn the importance of this person who is sharing the journey with you, even when I was hard to love,” he mentioned. “I would lash out at her, I would lash out at my children. Never to people at work.”
Johnson made certain to take away weapons from his dwelling
Johnson mentioned his lowest level got here in 1989 when he misplaced his job as writer. A hunter, Johnson took his weapons to a colleague to get them out of the home. “Having a weapon readily accessible to a person contemplating suicide is a serious mistake,” he recalled.
He advised Turner about his battle with despair when discussing the NCS job. It wasn’t a problem. “He said, ‘Hell, pal, let me tell you about me,’” Johnson mentioned.
Through trial and error, he discovered the suitable drugs to assist him. Johnson mentioned he additionally benefited from speaking with another distinguished males who battled despair: newspaper columnist Art Buchwald, “60 Minutes” correspondent Mike Wallace and novelist William Styron.
Johnson was additionally a workaholic, who’d continuously depart the home earlier than his youngsters Wyatt and Christa awoke, not returning till they had been in mattress once more. He missed so a lot of his daughter’s sporting occasions rising up that she needed to confront him: “Don’t forget that you’re a daddy, too.”
“The biggest single regret of my life was that I was not a good father to my children in that regard,” he mentioned. “I was a good provider, but I wasn’t there for them.”
After retiring at 60, Johnson has tried to provide time to his household that he didn’t when youthful. He’s additionally been advocating for and elevating cash to assist folks with mental health issues, substance abuse and Alzheimer’s Disease, the latter of which his daughter was identified with in the course of the COVID-19 pandemic.
And he’s been writing ‘Driven,’ which he known as “the most stressful project of my life.”
His journey underscored that you simply by no means actually depart journalism: Johnson has been obsessed about ensuring it was factual and honest. “My wife said, ‘If you ever do another book, it will be with another wife.’”
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David Bauder writes in regards to the intersection of media and leisure for the AP. Follow him at http://x.com/dbauder and https://bsky.app/profile/dbauder.bsky.social