Those Who Can’t Do Teach: Meet Life Coach Jayson Blair

 

bookreview041108_175Those who can’t do teach, they say. Perhaps that’s why Jayson Blair has become a life coach.

From the AP:

“People say, ‘Wait a minute. You’re a life coach?’ That makes no sense,'” says Blair, the ex-journalist best known for foisting plagiarism and fabrications into the pages of The New York Times. “Then they think about my life experiences and what I’ve been through and they say ‘Wait a minute. It does make sense.'”

Blair, 33, resigned from the Times in 2003, leaving a journalistic scandal in his wake. The resulting furor led the paper’s top two newsroom executives to resign. Blair wrote a book, then mostly disappeared from view.

For the past two years, he has been quietly working as a certified life coach for one of the most respected mental health practices in northern Virginia.

“He can relate to patients just beautifully,” said Michael Oberschneider, the psychologist who hired Blair and urged him to become a life coach. “Sometimes you just meet people in life who have these electric personalities. Well, Jayson is now using his talents for good.”

We only hope he can capture some of Matt Foley’s fire. “Go For It!”, Jayson Blair


Photo: Andres Serrano, from New York magazine.

New: The Mediaite One-Sheet "Newsletter of Newsletters"
Your daily summary and analysis of what the many, many media newsletters are saying and reporting. Subscribe now!

Tags: