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Debra Pickett resigned from the Sun-Times Monday afternoon, minutes after being asked to do a story she thought was preposterous.

“I laughed,” says Pickett, recalling her response when features editor Christine Ledbetter called with the assignment to breast-feed her infant son in public places and write about it. "I have to say I didn't take it terribly seriously." She'd seen other Sun-Times stories begin with an "outrageous premise" then get negotiated into something not beneath the dignity of adults. Some other day, she and Ledbetter might have begun negotiating. But not this time. Pickett, who was due to return from maternity leave February 26, tells me, “I said, ‘Well, there’s probably a conversation I need to have with Don Hayner before I can talk to you further about this assignment.'” Hayner’s the managing editor. Pickett had been trying to reach him all day. "I felt the ground had shifted a little bit under my feet while I was gone," she says, and she wanted Hayner to tell her where she stood. Her resignation was already a possibility, perhaps even a likelihood. The breast-feeding assignment shifted the ground a little more. She called her husband, an Amtrak executive who was on a train between Washington and Philadelphia, and they talked. Then she reached Hayner. She didn't ask where she stood. She quit.

The idea for the breast-feeding story came from editor-in-chief Michael Cooke, who says it was simply an idea -- a paper could no more assign such a story than it could assign a reporter to pose nude for an art class. And just as it wasn't the story, per se, that drove her off, Pickett insists, it also wasn't a desire “to stay home and be a full-time mom to my baby.” It was simply this: “When it’s time to grow up and move on it’s time to grow up and move on.” In journalism, she observes, “people’s stars rise and fall.” Hers had gone up -- she “trembles on the cusp of stardom,” I wrote in 2002, when she'd been at the Sun-Times two years, her profiles of interesting people she met for lunch were making the Sunday paper worth reading, and her column had begun appearing Friday’s on page two. And then it started to head down. While Pickett was on leave the column, which she continued to write once a week, was moved back to the Lifestyles pages. "It's not where I wanted to be professionally," she says.

"She was a young, single Chicagoan," says Ledbetter. "That was the mantra for the column. She morphed into what she morphed into. If she chose to write about her boyfriend and her baby, those are Lifestyles topics." 

Pickett doesn't disagree. “As a columnist you get locked into a persona," she says. "There were a lot of serious things I was interested in that I wanted to write about which weren’t in line with the mission of the paper and my role at the paper. I’ve developed a strong interest in Africa and the AIDS crisis there. The dilemma was that for every column about that there were three columns about the boyfriend. That’s what people expected.”

She says the paper encouraged her boyfriend columns, which led to husband columns and baby columns -- three of her last four columns mentioned her son (whom, by the way, she does nurse in public places). “That’s what my unique signature was,” she says. “That’s what people came to expect and associate me with. That was fine, a lot of fun, but it’s not necessarily who you want to be your entire adult life.” By the measure of what it covers and with whom, the Sun-Times is a small paper. There’s not much opportunity for personal reinvention. “The Sun-Times has a great staff writing about politics,” Pickett remarks, perhaps wistfully; an assignment to go forth and breast-feed is a pretty blunt way of being told your services won't be required for that coverage. She says she wants to finish a novel she’s working on and supposes she’ll freelance. “I’ll certainly make some calls and have some lunches and conversations. This is very much a happy thing for me.”

"Sometimes she drew laughter. Sometimes she drew blood," says Cooke, recalling the lunching stories. "An editor can't ask for more than that."

UPDATE: Eric Zorn does a good job of thinking about Debra Pickett on his Tribune blog. Link here.

UPDATE: Wow! Blogger Tom Roeser has more to say about Pickett than you'd think any one person could, no matter how keen a cultural observer. "Bravo Pickett," he writes. "For the first time I find her interesting, not as a narcissistic marketing sell but for herself." Link here.  


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Comments
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mary Burke
February 15th - 10:43 a.m.
YEA!
John Kuczaj
February 15th - 3:03 p.m.
Bummer. She was good & still improving. The substance counter-balance to the vapid stylings of Paige Wiser.
Hopefully they ST will give the breastfeeding assignment to Mariotti.
Not a fan
February 15th - 5:16 p.m.
Pickett would be perfect for Lake magazine.
BobH
February 15th - 6 p.m.
Obviously the breastfeeding story idea was distantly, if at all, related to her decision. People throw out story ideas all the time. Sometimes they're not great, and the reporter says so.

It would be wrong if her quitting came off as a protest of some sort because of this story idea. But the way this story is written, that's just the impression that will be spread.
Hobbes
February 15th - 6:03 p.m.
The serendipitous beneficiary to this fascinating story is the kid. He now gets a full-time mom, who's there whenever he needs her---not when she decides to bestow "quality time."
Annie
February 15th - 6:32 p.m.
Wow Hobbes. Thanks for the time travel back to the 1950s. Maybe Amtrak will ask her husband to breastfeed and public -- then he can quit and the kid will have both a mom and a dad!
Wenalway
February 15th - 6:58 p.m.
Darn -- fewer columns about someone's boyfriend. I know my newspaper reading experience will be diminished greatly now that I won't see thrice-weekly, unfunny recaps about a relationship I have absolutely no reason to care about. Guess I'll stick to being a captive audience for the repetitive, unfunny stories of co-"workers."
Insideout
February 15th - 10 p.m.
The breastfeeding story idea gets at everything that is going haywire these days at the Sun-Times. Where did all the news go? The front of the paper is filled with wire and the news of the absurd. The editor and publisher are too busy hobnobbing with the powerbrokers (Daley, Blagojevich, Natarus and Burke) to care about writing critically about them. Instead, let's try the Tribune for mismanaging the Cubs. Or put a Sam Zell puff piece out front. An "independent newspaper"? Hah! Not long ago, the paper used to be one of the 10 papers that "did it right." Where has that paper gone?
wenalway junior
February 15th - 10:55 p.m.
dude, get a life.
Seigfried Royko
February 16th - 9:15 a.m.
We all should look on the bright side: Pickett now has time for any number of lunches with the Jim Beluishi's and Dr. Phil's of the world -- and the only folks collaterally damaged will be people seated at adjacent tables.
Wenalway
February 16th - 11:25 p.m.
Darn, one of the "cool kids" objects to my objection to thrice-weekly unfunny recaps of the mundane by an adolescent hiding in the body of an adult. I shall lose so much sleep worrying about that.
Chicago Expat
February 20th - 5:01 p.m.
Why do people--including Debra Pickett and poster Hobbes--persist in using the phrase "full-time mom" to describe a mother who doesn't work outside the home? Do mothers cease being mothers when they have an outside career? Are fathers who have jobs outside the home part-time fathers?
Chicago Steve
February 22nd - 6:36 p.m.
Recently I spoke to apartment doorman about our former former neighbor Debra Pickett. She lived in building and later her future husband during times when Suntimes gave Deb great assignments. Many trendy restaurants and celebrities clamored for Deb to feature then in her colume. Jobs change as do readers expectations, but I must admit that I'd still enjoy seeing Debra interview celebrities like Britney or Trump.
AntiWenalway
May 9th - 9:32 p.m.
Gosh, Robert, speaking of adolescents hiding in the body of an adult...
Wenalway
May 15th - 10:40 p.m.
Darn, one of the people who wants to argue with me made their way over here. And what a surprise -- the person didn't make an argument.



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Harold, Daily by Harold Henderson

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Branzburg v. Hayes, the split U.S. Supreme Court decision (1972) generally construed by journalists and judges alike as affirming some sort of reporter's privilege in federal courts.

U.S. Appellate Judge Richard Posner's influential opinion in McKevitt v. Pallasch (2003) telling those journalists and judges they were wrong -- there is no such privilege.

John Milton's Areopagitica (1643), one of the earliest and most eloquent arguments for a free press. Said Milton: "As good almost kill a man as kill a good book; who kills a man kills a reasonable creature, God's image; but he who destroys a good book, kills reason itself, kills the image of God, as it were in the eye."

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