Gene Brim: Missing at Dorchester
Editorial
A
year ago last winter over lunch Gene Brim talked with us about the upcoming
Dorchester Conference. “You know,” he told us, “I’ve
been to 32 out of 35 Dorchester conferences.” Wow.
It was especially
like Gene Brim to have invested
so much energy in Oregon’s annual Dorchester Conference. It was
also just like him to be one of the leaders in Pacific University’s
Tom McCall Forum. And it was just like him to respond this way when we
called him five years ago about a new media publication: “I was
on my way out the door when you called, but I stopped and turned around
because we really do have a media problem in this state.”
Gene’s
comment revealed his thinking: how open he was to new ideas, how important
he thought debate was for our society, how he believed that limited public
debate had hurt Oregon in previous years, and how he thought that what
we did, together, could make a difference.
Besides
being a wonderful person, Gene Brim had the unique capacity to take fallen
down high-voltage wires (ideas) and pick them and connect them again.
In his five years working with BrainstormNW he did it time and time again
for us.
Gene, a
terrifically successful innovator and business leader in Portland, would
often describe himself by saying, “I guess I am an amateur journalist.”
For BrainstormNW, he was more than an amateur.
It was Gene’s
idea to have Bob Packwood write an article on the history of the Dorchester
Conference in ’98. It was also Gene’s idea to feature North
Portland minority leader, Chad Debnam (May ?98); Gene’s idea to
have a number of writers submit pieces on the condition of Oregon’s
GOP in ’98; and Gene’s idea to ask Jack Roberts to participate
in a Brainstorm debate series on education in ’00. Along the way,
Gene even wrote two articles for BrainstormNW.
The most recent, in March ’00, “An Opportunity for
Northwest
Ambassadors to Give Back,” detailed
his experiences
with his wife Evie spending a month teaching in Poland.
It was also
Gene who—politely—tore up our first business plan calling
it “inadequate,” and it was Gene, again, who said, “though
it’s not perfect,” to go ahead on the amended plan.
And in the
last few months of his life, even while in declining health, it was Gene
who stepped up his involvement in BrainstormNW. In late summer Gene found
time to become an owner of BrainstormNW, to participate in ownership meetings,
and in late December to critique a BrainstormNW TV pilot. He also found
time in the fall to advise the editors on how to get an exclusive interview
with Bob Whitsitt. “Make it a piece that lets Whitsitt tell his
side of the story, because one more negative story about him won’t
add anything to the conversation.” And we did.
Gene Brim’s
involvement in BrainstormNW was an inspiration to the magazine’s
editors. There were many, many times in the first three years of publication
when the struggle of building a new media product in Oregon seemed too
difficult, but then the thought would occur: “If Gene Brim believes
it’s worth trying, then it’s worth trying.”
Gene Brim’s
life ended on January 13, 2002, but his inspiration will be a part of
BrainstormNW as long as the magazine is published. We’ll continue
to ask, have we asked enough questions? Have we asked the tough questions?
What would Gene think?
Gene Brim—we
can’t thank you enough, and we will miss you at Dorchester…
BrainstormNW - March 2002
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