A new magazine was being...
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A new magazine was being launched. The descriptive mailer was designed to catch your imagination. "It (the magazine) takes a sophisticated stand against fashionable despair and disengagement. With drama, humor, and zest, it argues that happiness lies in expending ourselves for a good purpose. It brings us back to life, back to our senses, the full use of our minds, bodies, and emotions. It asks: Who among us is admirable and why? What in our lives is still wonderful, worth celebrating, still excellent?" For those still unconvinced, it added that the publication was for "closet optimists," those who still have some faith in human worth and possibilities. The editor suggested he was weary of journalistic myopias that appeal to our worst instincts. He was not interested in dragging readers "through cesspools of mediocrity." I could scarcely restrain myself from grabbing the checkbook and subscribing immediately. Is it possible that the good in people can be more exciting than the bad? At least they are less expensive to the taxpayers. I guess I am still skeptical about the future of such a magazine, but I hope and pray that it succeeds. The concept of what is newsworthy runs counter to the usual concept that news is anything that is tragic, sordid, or devastating. Is it possible that the good in people can be exciting news? Will people storm the newsstands to read all about kindness and decency? How can these compete with the excitement of murder, rape, and political corruption? Ah, new magazine, I wish you well! -- Meddock
