Saturday, May 28, 2011

Oprah Winfrey: 10 moments that made her

President Obama, wife Michelle and Oprah Winfrey Winfrey has the ear of presidents - Obama is the fifth

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One of the most-watched programmes in US history, The Oprah Winfrey Show, is ending after 25 years. But the impact of its hostess goes far beyond television.
Her first episode, entitled How to Marry the Man/Woman of your Choice, suggested this was to be a daytime show like any other.

The show in numbers

  • 62m: Viewers for Michael Jackson interview
  • 27: Appearances by singer Celine Dion
  • 5: US presidents on the sofa
  • $30m: Sales of her Book Club selections
  • 48: Number of Emmys
Source: Oprah Winfrey Show
But some 4,560 episodes later, the likes of Madonna, Beyonce and Tom Hanks have been lining up to appear at her farewell show, which is broadcast on Wednesday.
During those 25 years, Winfrey has become a household name, a cultural phenomenon and one of the richest people on the planet.
As she signs off to continue work on her own cable channel, her ability to get the newsworthy guests appears undiminished.
This month, President Obama talked about why he felt the need to publicly produce his own birth certificate. And Sarah Ferguson spoke about not being invited to the royal wedding.
So how has Winfrey been such a success? Ten moments sum up her influence.

MAKES HER SEXUAL ABUSE CLAIM, 1986

In the kind of confession that later became her show's modus operandi, Oprah said to her audience that she was raped when a child.
Oprah Winfrey  The show was about sexual abuse and Winfrey spoke candidly
Not only did it begin her own unofficial campaign for victims of abuse, it also paved the way for a string of people - the famous with an addiction, the ordinary with a story to tell - to sit on her sofa and confess.
Author Bonnie Greer, who left her hometown of Chicago in the year that Oprah began her ascendance in the city, says: "She has made mainstream that warm but tell-it-like-it-is persona of the African American woman.
"It has always been there in American culture, but Oprah brought it onto TV in the afternoon. She pioneered 'victim' culture in the good and the bad sense.
"She tapped into, in a time of the recession of the late 80s and early 90s, something that Americans needed reassuring about: our survival mechanism and our goodness.
"Oprah passed out the things of this world to her audience because she wanted to demonstrate that 'goodness' and 'honesty' has its rewards here on earth."

THE WAGON OF FAT, 1988

Oprah Winfrey and the wagon of fat Slimmed down but not for long
Wearing her size 10 jeans, a slimmed-down Winfrey pulled a wagon of fat on to the stage to represent the 67lbs she lost in four months by eating nothing but Optifast.
But the weight crept back on and it was the start of two decades of yo-yo dieting and battling the bulge.
Tim Teeman, US correspondent for the Times newspaper, says: "If Oprah will be remembered for anything, it will be her body shape, which mirrored America's obsession with its own body shape.
"You could say it doesn't give out the right message but it does give out the real message. The way Oprah did weight is a real reflection on people's own struggles with it."

MICHAEL JACKSON OPENS UP, 1993


A troubled early life

  • 1954: Born in Mississippi to a teenage mother
  • 1960: Moved to inner-city Milwaukee
  • 1967: Ran away from home
  • 1968: Pregnant at 14 but lost the baby
  • 1971: Moved to father in Nashville and earned a place at Tennessee State University, working part-time at a local radio station
  • 1976: Anchored TV news in Baltimore
  • 1983: Hosted morning show in Chicago
  • 1985: Co-starred in The Color Purple
  • 1986: Talk show renamed and goes national
Winfrey's largest television audience came when she interviewed Michael Jackson at the height of his fame.
About 62 million viewers were taken inside Neverland to reveal a man who seemed to be trapped in childhood, before the child abuse allegations that ruined his reputation.
During the 90-minute interview, he told her he suffered from a skin-pigment disorder and he denied sleeping in an oxygen chamber and buying the bones of the Elephant Man.
It was the first time Jackson had spoken at length in many years and it was considered a huge coup for Winfrey's show, making headlines around the world and helping to cement her growing reputation.

ELLEN DEGENERES COMES OUT, 1997


Bonnie Greer

She has levelled the public discourse to the level of soap opera in which there is ultimately nothing but good and evil”
End Quote Author Bonnie Greer
American stand-up comedian, television host and actress Ellen DeGeneres came out publicly as a lesbian in an appearance on the show.
As well as underlining Winfrey's reputation as confidante-in-chief, it also relaunched the career of DeGeneres, who went on to host her own chatshow.
Winfrey's inspiration to other women has been much debated.
"She is feminist in that she has made her own empire and her example has caused other women to do the same," says Greer.
"She is clearly a force of nature, very intelligent and savvy and has done some good. Everyone wishes her well, and so do I.
"But she has levelled the public discourse to the level of soap opera in which there is ultimately nothing but good and evil."
Despite her admissions about weight and abuse, and her ability to get others like DeGeneres to open up, it is surprising how little we know about Winfrey herself, says Greer.
"Everybody close to her is locked down. Omerta. She is the one public figure in America that we know everything about and nothing. Quite a feat in the land of free speech."

THE BIG CAR GIVEAWAY, 2004

All 276 members of the studio audience went home with a Pontiac car, complete with heated leather seats, worth $28,400 (£17,200).
Oprah Winfrey with car winners 'You get a car, you get a car, you get a car'
It was a huge deal, says AOL television critic Maureen Ryan, formerly of the Chicago Tribune, because it marked the start of Winfrey's fairy godmother period, showering her audience and guests with gifts.
The show had already evolved into one marked by a New Age spirituality, she says, but this took it in a more materialistic direction.
In post-Katrina New Orleans, this altruism was an obvious force for good, as Winfrey seemed to be able to do more than the authorities in helping those in need, says Ryan. But the constant gift-giving became a bit of a turn-off.
"You would tune into Oprah's Favorite Things [the annual product giveaway] and the hysteria was like the Beatles at Shea Stadium, because people were going to get all these free things from Oprah."

TOM CRUISE ON THE SOFA, 2005

Maybe the most memorable Oprah moment was Tom Cruise in a fit of giggles, jumping up and down on her sofa as he proclaimed his love for new girlfriend, Katie Holmes, now his wife.
Tom Cruise and Oprah Winfrey Cruise received flak for his strange behaviour
His antics have since been mocked, dissected and parodied. This is the moment that defines his career, ahead of Top Gun, Cocktail or Mission: Impossible, says Teeman.
"Oprah looked absolutely terrified, thinking 'What is he doing?' His career did plummet for a while but he has come back."
Celebrities go on Oprah to expel a demon or make a confession of love, he says, and they know she won't give them a hard time because it's a love-in.
"It should have been an open goal for Tom Cruise but it became a train wreck."

JAMES FREY CONDEMNED, 2006

One of Winfrey's most profound influences has been in the world of publishing, with her book club credited with making millions for authors whose books appear in it.
James Frey with Oprah Winfrey Relations with Frey have been repaired
Nowhere was her power more brutally wielded than in the case of James Frey. His gritty memoir A Million Little Pieces, which told the story of his recovery from drug addiction, became a bestseller after featuring on her show.
But in 2006, after doubts were cast on how faithful Frey had been to events in his own life, Winfrey invited the author back for questioning, which led to a fiery exchange and Frey's public dressing down.
Despite Winfrey recently expressing some regret about how she handled it, the lesson here is not to cross her, says Teeman. Her show is all about goodwill, and the price for betraying that trust is humiliation.

SOUTH AFRICA SCHOOL OPENS, 2007

Winfrey's Leadership Academy, near Johannesburg, was opened in 2007 at a cost of $40m (£25m).
Oprah Winfrey opens her school Winfrey opened the school for girls
She had pledged to build the academy after meeting former South African President Nelson Mandela in 2002. Winfrey personally interviewed many of the South African girls from low-income families who applied for the initial 150 places at the school.
Last year, the former matron of the school was cleared on charges of abusing girls there.
Winfrey expressed her disappointment at the verdict but said she was proud of the girls for having the courage to testify.
Her philanthropy is famed, and her Oprah Winfrey Foundation has donated millions of dollars to projects in the US and abroad, while her public charity Oprah's Angels has raised about $80m (£50m).

BACKS OBAMA, NOT CLINTON, 2007


Winfrey used a rally in Iowa to back Obama
At a rally in Iowa in 2007, Oprah Winfrey gave her support to Barack Obama who at the time was vying for the Democratic presidential nomination with Hillary Clinton.
Winfrey's backing was viewed as highly significant in a closely fought contest because of the huge influence she wields. But her choice was questioned.
"When she backed Obama for president her audience, which is middle-aged white women, supported Hillary Clinton and so she found a lot of push-back by people who thought she was choosing her race ahead of her gender," says Eric Deggans, TV critic of the Petersburg Times in Florida.
Her immense popularity in the black community took a knock when she condemned rap music for its misogynistic lyrics.
She has always walked that tightrope of being authentically black but not so much to turn off the mainstream audience, says Deggans.
Nelson Mandela with Oprah Winfrey Nelson Mandela, like Maya Angelou, is a hero
But Winfrey has showed, in the same way as Bill Cosby did before her and Barack Obama afterwards, what is possible for an African-American.
"By reaching such heights in television, Oprah has shown you can become an iconic figure as a black person.
"She became a voice for middle-aged white women in a way that no-one else has, and for black people to see an African-American accepted so wholeheartedly is very important."

STAR-STUDDED FAREWELL, 2011

The recording of one of Oprah Winfrey's final shows at the United Center in Chicago became a night filled with tears, appreciation and A-list celebrities such as Tom Cruise, Will Smith and Madonna.
"A clear part of her appeal has always been someone who collects star friends," says Deggans.

Tom Hanks pays tribute to Winfrey on one of her final shows
"The thing about Oprah that's really interesting is that she has been able to create this brand that is an embodiment of many contradictions.
"She's your down-to-earth friend whose pals are Julia Roberts and Tom Cruise. She's the spiritual leader who is a workaholic and does an episode a year about all the expensive stuff she loves.
"She's a spiritual leader who doesn't choose a specific church. She's a woman who stands up for motherhood and family values but doesn't have kids."
These contradictions appeal to women, he says. "They appreciate the fact they can turn on Oprah and see someone who seems like their best friend but gives them access to this amazing world."

Friday, May 27, 2011

Settlement reached in Eddie Long case

Bishop Eddie Long preaches on Good Friday at New Birth Missionary Baptist Church. Four young men have sued Long, the church and the LongFellows Youth Academy alleging Long coerced them into having sexual relations. The parties have been involved in mediation.
The Atlanta Journal-Constitution
4:49 p.m. Thursday, May 26, 2011
An attorney involved in the sexual misconduct lawsuits against Bishop Eddie Long said the "matters have been resolved."
Barbara Marschalk, who represents New Birth Missionary Baptist Church and LongFellows Youth Academy, said she  anticipates " the lawsuits will be dismissed, with prejudice, by close of business tomorrow."
B.J. Bernstein, who represents the four men who sued Long, New Birth and LongFellows, also confirmed the lawsuits had been settled.
Neither side  would comment further and settlement terms were unknown. Susan S. Raines, a professor of conflict management at Kennesaw State University, said it is not uncommon in civil damages cases  for the terms to be private among the parties.
According to Bernstein's office, neither she nor the plaintiffs -- Maurice Robinson, Jamal Parris, Anthony Flagg and Spencer LeGrande -- would be available for an interview "on this matter, now or in the future. "
Long, pastor of the Lithonia megachurch, which has an international following, has denied the men's allegations through a spokesman.
Mediation between the plaintiffs and one of Atlanta's best-known religious leaders began in February and have often been contentious. Exactly one month ago, DeKalb Judge Johnny Panos said a settlement was within "field goal range."
Panos acknowledged the discussions had been "benevolently intense," likening them to a tennis match, "with a lot of back and forth." Some of the mediation sessions were epic, sometimes lasting through the night.
Without a settlement,  the case  would have likely gone to trial this summer or fall.
After the charges first surfaced last September, Long vowed to mount a vigorous defense, comparing himself to the Biblical character David in a fight against Goliath.
"This thing I'm gonna fight," he told his congregation the Sunday after the accusations went public.
But since those initial remarks Long has said little about the case or of his accusers.
Return to ajc.com for updates.

America's Tomorrow: An Interactive Map of Our Nation's Future


Source: Woods & Poole Economics, Inc. Washington, D.C. Copyright 2010. Woods & Poole does not guarantee the accuracy of this data. The use of this data and the conclusion drawn from it are solely the responsibility of PolicyLink. See their methodology here.



PolicyLink time-lapse map charts growth of people of color in the U.S. from 1990 through 2040; Viewed over 100,000 times across 135 countries in less than 24 hours
NEW YORK, May 19, 2011 /PRNewswire-USNewswire/ -- PolicyLink has released "The Map of America's Tomorrow,"a new interactive time-lapse map showing – for the first time – the growth of people of color in America from 1990 through 2040. Census projections have long shown that people of color will soon be our nation's majority. And yet there's been no visualization of what this future will actually look like – until now.
In less than 24 hours, the map has received over100,000 views (and counting) and has been viewed in 135 countries. Harlem Children Zone's Geoff Canada used it as the centerpiece for a presentation he gave on "How to End Poverty" at the Google Zeitgeist Festival in London this week. The Daily Beast's Andrew Sullivan has also joined in, describing the video yesterday as "The Browning of America."
"This map makes crystal clear just how dramatically the face of America is changing – and how quickly," said Angela Glover Blackwell, Founder & CEO of PolicyLink. "Already, nearly half of all young people are of color, and by 2042, people of color will become our nation's majority. Clearly, this snapshot of our future has struck a chord, leaving no doubt that we must invest in and start building the foundation of tomorrow's America today. Let's start now."
This map is the first installment of "America's Tomorrow: Equity in a Changing Nation" – a new multimedia series exploring America's changing demographics and the leaders who are making a difference.
To view the map and follow the series, visit www.PolicyLink.org/AmericasTomorrow. The map also includes an embeddable HTML link for quick and easy posting.
Geoff Canada Presenting Map at Google Zeitgeist Festival:
http://youtu.be/18G40N06cYo?t=14m50s
PolicyLink is a national research and advocacy institute advancing economic and social equity. Founded in 1999, PolicyLink helps create sustainable communities of opportunity that offer access to quality jobs, affordable housing, good schools, transportation, and the benefits of healthy food and physical activity. The organization is based in Oakland (Calif.), with offices in New York City, Los Angeles, New Orleans, and Washington, D.C. www.policylink.org. Twitter: @Policylink.
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Suburban lacrosse players accused of using racial slurs

  
Officials at a suburban school district are apologizing for some students who allegedly used racial slurs against members of another high school team.

Rashad and Sharad Crosby are the only two African-American players on the Naperville North freshman lacrosse team. They say they were on the receiving end of the slurs on Friday, just before a game against Wheaton Warrenville South High School.
The boys' mother brought the incident to the attention of Wheaton Warrenville School District 200. Her sons say they are still hurt by the slur.
Officials for Wheaton Warrenville School District 200 apologized to the boys' mother and launched an investigation into the incident.

(Copyright ©2011 WLS-TV/DT. All Rights Reserved.)

McCain launches new bid to get pardon for boxer Jack Johnson


usatoday.com

Republicans John McCain and Pete King are renewing their fight to get a presidential pardon for Jack Johnson, the world's first heavyweight boxing champion who was imprisoned a century ago because he had relationships with white women.
Both chambers of Congress in 2009 passed a resolution by McCain, an Arizona senator, and King, a New York congressman, urging President Obama to grant a posthumous pardon for Johnson. The lawmakers were told by the Obama administration that pardons are not granted to dead people.
Still, the two Republicans -- both lifelong boxing fans -- said they believe a new precedent should be set. Johnson was convicted in 1913 of violating the Mann Act, which made it illegal to transport women across state lines for immoral purposes.
The lawmakers are reintroducing the resolution "to send a clear message to rectify this unacceptable historical injustice," McCain said in a statement. "A full pardon would not only shed light on the achievements of an athlete who was forced into the shadows of bigotry and prejudice, but also allow future generations to grasp fully what Jack Johnson accomplished against great odds."
Johnson's relationships with white women and his boxing victory in 1908 over Tommy Burns in what was billed as the "Fight of the Century" angered whites at the time. Johnson held the boxing title until 1915, leading to the search for the "Great White Hope" who could beat him. Johnson died in 1946.
The resolution introduced Tuesday would seek to "expunge a racially motivated abuse of prosecutorial authority" and recognize the "athletic and cultural contributions of Jack Johnson to society."
King, chairman of the House Homeland Security Committee, said Obama should "do the right thing" and grant Johnson a pardon. "Jack Johnson is a trailblazer and a legend, whose boxing career was cut short due to unjust laws and racial persecution."
McCain and King have been introducing resolutions urging a pardon for Johnson since 2004.
Obama has granted pardons only twice since becoming president. Last week, he pardoned eight people for non-violent federal crimes that included marijuana violations and abetting the possession and sale of illegal alligator hides.

Study: College Majors Are Highly Segregated By Race, Gender


News One

PHILADELPHIA– The choice of undergraduate major in college is strongly tied to a student’s future earnings, with the highest-paying majors providing salaries of about 300 percent more than the lowest-paying, according to a study released Tuesday.

Based on first-of-its-kind Census data, the report by Georgetown University in Washington also found that majors are highly segregated by race and gender.
College graduates overall make 84 percent more over a lifetime than those with only high school diplomas, the study said. But further analysis of 171 majors shows that various undergraduate majors can lead to significantly different median wages.
Petroleum engineering majors make about $120,000 a year, compared with $29,000 annually for counseling psychology majors, researchers found. Math and computer science majors earn $98,000 in salary while early childhood education majors get paid about $36,000.
“It’s important that you go to college and get a (bachelor’s degree), but it’s almost three to four times more important what you take,” said Anthony Carnevale, director of Georgetown’s Center on Education and the Workforce. “The majors that are most popular are not the ones that make the most money.”
“What’s it Worth? The Economic Value of College Majors” analyzes data from the 2009 American Community Survey, whose results were released last year. It’s the first time the Census asked individuals about their undergraduate majors, enabling researchers to tie in salary data, Carnevale said.
The study found that white men are concentrated in the highest-earning majors, including engineering and pharmaceutical sciences, while women gravitate toward the lowest-earning majors like education, art and social work.
The report also categorized the 171 majors into 15 fields, discovering different majors led to different industries. About 43 percent of law and public policy majors end up in public administration, but only 13 percent of social science majors do. A higher portion of social science majors end up in finance, researchers found.
Other findings:
- The most popular major group is business, accounting for 25 percent of all students. The least popular are industrial arts and agriculture, with 1.6 percent each.
- White men have higher median earnings across all fields except three. Asians pull down the top median salaries in law and public policy ($55,000), psychology and social work ($48,000), and biology and life science ($53,000).
- The field with the highest concentrations of whites is agriculture and natural resources (90 percent), while the highest concentration of Asians is in computers and mathematics (16 percent). Law and public policy has the highest concentration of African-Americans (14 percent) and Hispanics (10 percent).
- Fields with virtually no unemployment: geological and geophysical engineering, military technologies, pharmacology and school student counseling.
- Fields with the highest unemployment, ranging from 16 percent to 11 percent: social psychology, nuclear engineering, and educational administration and supervision.
The data is important considering the high cost of a college degree and the significant loan burdens taken on by some students to obtain one, Carnevale said.
“We don’t have a system in the United States where we align what you take with career prospects,” Carnevale said. “Nobody ever tells you when you go to college what happened to the other people who took it before you.”
The researchers’ longitudinal look at lifetime earnings seems to echo a more short-term analysis of the job market by the National Association of Colleges and Employers.
The Bethlehem, Pa.-based group reports that engineering majors account for seven of the top 10 highest-paying majors for the class of 2011. The other three are computer science, information science and business systems networking/telecommunications.
Chemical engineering heads the list with an average salary offer of nearly $67,000, according the group’s spring survey.
Still, Rachel Brown, director of the career center at Temple University in Philadelphia, noted that the average person changes careers three to five times in a lifetime. And while median salary is certainly something students should be aware of, it shouldn’t be the deciding factor, she said.
“Take that into consideration, but look at the whole picture,” Brown said. “What are you doing every day? What are the job responsibilities? What are the values of the occupation in general? Advancement potential?”
Answering those kinds of questions is how Drexel University junior Meaghan Donchak chose her major of corporate communication and public relations.
Donchak, 22, of East Windsor, N.J., said she knew her strengths were reading, writing and communicating. But even after settling on public relations, her own research showed such work at nonprofits paid less than corporate or government work, and she adjusted her track accordingly.
Donchak hopes her career will allow her to travel, meet people and live comfortably. The Georgetown study found communications and journalism majors earn $50,000 annually, rising to $62,000 with a graduate degree.
“The most important thing is not the money. It’s really hard to convince people of that, especially people our age,” Donchak said. “It’s doing what you love to do. You don’t want to wake up every day dreading going to work.”

Black-White Life Expectancy Gap Expands, Recession May Be To Blame

Black Unemployment



For nearly two decades, the expected life spans of black and white Americans steadily narrowed, offering a hopeful indication of both racial progress and medical success: Everyone was living longer, and the gap was closing.
Then came 2009. For all Americans, the average life expectancy again nudged up for the year, reaching 78 years and two months according to preliminary figures from the Centers for Disease Control. But black Americans saw no improvement in life expectancy, remaining at 74 years and three months.
Some experts construe this unanticipated widening of the black-white life expectancy gap as a product of the Great Recession. The recession extracted brutal economic costs from nearly every slice of American society, particularly from African Americans. Nearly two years after the recession’s official end, black unemployment remains at 16.1 percent compared to the 8 percent of white Americans unable to find work. And it’s the stress that can come with a job loss that some experts say may explain the new size of the life expectancy gap.
“We should regard this one year data as an alarm,” said Kofi Kondwani, an assistant professor in community health and preventative medicine at the Morehouse School of Medicine. "In a country where there are already multiple measures of health that show vast differences between the black and white population, any increase in the life expectancy gap may be an indicator that our efforts to deal with health disparities may not be working.”
The federal researchers who compile the data reacted more cautiously, noting that one year's change in the data might eventually be explained by myriad factors not related to black unemployment. Still, they said they were eager to see the data for 2010 and would focus on the again-widening black-white gap.
“If we did see the black white life expectancy gap widen in a second year then we are going to be very concerned," said Bob Anderson, the CDC’s chief of death data. "Freak out is probably not the right term but that would definitely set some priorities around here.”
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Looking at data along demographic lines can reveal some of the factors that affect life expectancy. Suicide is more common among the white population, and homicide is more common among the black population, said Kondwani. Thus social forces associated with a recession -- such as the disproportionate share of black and Latino workers who remain unemployed or who have lost homes to foreclosure -- could reasonably be assumed to affect different slices of the population in particular ways, he said.
Those inclined to pin the blame for the widening life expectancy gap on the recession point to one key factor that generally accompanies unemployment or worries about the ability to pay the bills: stress.
When people experience stress, the body produces hormones such as adrenaline and cortisol that produce short bursts of energy useful in weathering a crisis. When stress is sustained, the body continues producing these hormones, which tend to be associated with medical problems such as depression, high blood pressure, heart disease and strokes, said Uma Rao, a Professor of Psychiatry and Behavioral Health Sciences at Meharry Medical College.
“You have heard the expression fight or flight,” said Rao. “Well, what happens to the body when it senses it must fight and can not flee for a long period of time is just as real. And it can be ugly.”
TOO STRESSED TO WORK
All of that sounds uncomfortably familiar to Bernadette Lacy. At 45, she is looking for a job that will replace her once enviable income and career. She is a heart attack survivor.
Through most of the last two decades, Lacy made a good living working for political marketing companies and then government contractors. She loved the challenges that her work brought. She earned more than she ever expected as a woman without a bachelor’s degree.
“I got pretty successful,” said Lacy, who is black. “I went from earning maybe $12 an hour as a temp to earning $80,000 a year at my main job.”
Lacy is a single mother who says she has never received child support. So, even as she was thriving at her full-time job, she worked a second job -- mostly in retail --so she could manage the things she felt her son deserved, such as the fees required for him to play football and the savings she stashed in his college fund. Her second job helped to ease the cost of renting an apartment in Montgomery County, a Maryland suburb outside Washington, DC. She worked so much that she missed every one of her son’s freshman year football games.
About six years ago, Lacy embarked on a particularly arduous project, managing electronic medical records for the Navy.
“It was a very, very stressful environment,” Lacy recalled.
Her doctor eventually diagnosed her with high blood pressure and ordered her to sharply curtail her work schedule. Either that, or she might not live long enough to see her son into adulthood.
These were the factors that prompted her to temporarily stop working in late 2008 amid the worst economic downturn since the Depression.
She felt confident she would be able to resume work once she was healthy. She had a stellar record and intact security clearances, which made her eligible for a host of government work. She never had difficulty finding a job.
Less than two months later, in January 2009, Lacy’s blood pressure was under control, but everything in the working world seemed to have changed. The financial crisis has brought hiring to a virtual standstill. Food and gas prices were soaring, slicing through Lacy’s savings at a faster pace than she had anticipated.
“It seemed like, six weeks earlier there had been so many jobs I could have had my pick of the litter,” said Lacy. “That dried up so fast it was astonishing.”
At the peak of her job search, Lacy says she sent out 35 to 40 resumes every day. She worked with headhunters. She called old contacts.
“I was applying for all sorts of stuff, everything from the fields where I had worked to scrubbing floors," She said. She cashed out her retirement savings and used it to pay the bills. " I was really just trying to maintain some normalcy for my son,” she said.
In the spring of 2010, Lacy was granted an interview with another government contractor. But all the worrying about money, work and daily rejections had rattled her nerves and her confidence. During a group interview, one person asked Lacy a question about her approach to managing others. Lacy’s mind went blank, she said.
"I could hear myself saying 'uh, uh.' Then I think I made some little joke and nobody laughed," Lacy said. "Honestly, I can say I blew it. That was truly embarrassing because I have high expectations for myself, just some standards for how I want to perform."
JOHN HENRYISM
What was happening to Lacy is not unique, said Sherman James, an epidemiologist and public policy professor at Duke University in North Carolina. Sustained adversity can lead to medical problems, he said.
James and other epidemiologists have found evidence that such problems are particularly acute among African Americans. He suggested many are so aware of negative racial stereotypes that they labor extra hard and worry exceedingly about their performance in an effort to counter damaging generalizations.
Some academics call this “high-effort coping.” Sherman prefers the term “John Henryism,” a reference to an American folk legend. As the story goes, John Henry worked building railroads, and his employer decided to try to replace him with a machine. Henry was so determined to demonstrate the unique abilities of humans that he agreed to face the machine in a contest. He beat the machine but then died of exhaustion.
Workers who have lost jobs though no fault of their own are extra prone to develop health problems, according to a 2009 State University of New York-Albany study. The study found that 83 percent of people who were healthy when they lost their jobs reported some sort of health problem one year later.
Lacy thought her job was stressful. But struggling to overcome unemployment was even worse, she said.
In May 2009, she used some of her savings to visit her doctor. Before the doctor took her blood pressure, she knew it was elevated. Inside an exam room, Lacy was asked to remove her shoes. She bent over to untie them and developed a massive headache.
Before she left the office, Lacy’s doctor warned her again in stern and serious tones that she needed to bring her blood pressure down.
But for Lacy, a bigger concern was finding a job. Many night she sometimes herself crying.
“There were a lot of lonely days and a lot of lonely nights,” Lacy said.
Lacy soon developed sciatica, a painful nerve condition associated with stress. Lacy thought she could just improve her diet and exercise, but her doctor told her she would also need to limit her stress, or she would run the risk of a heart attack.
She continue to pursue job interviews, and she refused to take her prescribed painkillers so her mind could stay sharp for them.
As last summer gave way to fall, Lacy realized she would soon have to give up her apartment for lack of rent money. She sent her son to live with his godfather so that he could continue attending his suburban school. Lacy moved in with an aunt in Washington, D.C.
“Being separated from my son for economic reasons, that really tore me apart,” Lacy said. "Every Sunday when I would drop him off I would just feel so low because I knew we wouldn’t be in this situation if I had a job.”
Some experts argue that a weak economy perversely lowers the death rate, because people out of work are less likely to engage in certain high-risk activities.
“The reality is that traffic accidents go up when the economy improves and go down when it is bad,” said Christopher Rhum, a health and labor at the University of Virginia Charlottesville. “People drive less, drink less and exercise more."
But Rhum acknowledged a link between the recession and elevated rates of depression and anxiety.
The CDC last month released a study that found suicides appeared to increase during the Great Recession, the Great Depression and other recessions in between. In 2009 suicide increased slightly but just enough to move self-inflicted harm into the top 10 causes of death.
Lacy feels certain that unemployment and searching for work made her health much worse.
About three weeks into her family’s new living arrangement, lacy had a heart attack.
She was 43 years old and lying in the emergency room.
“I noticed that they seemed to be wheeling in more and more machines,” said Lacy. “The doctor comes over to me and very gently, very kindly says, ‘Ms. Lacy, I am sorry to tell you this but you are having a heart attack', ” said Lacy. “I knew exactly how stressed out I was.”
Since then, she has changed her diet and lost 15 pounds. She is eating more salad and preparing her meals at home. And she is eligible for Medicare because of her health.
She is still searching for full time work while working part-time in retail, the pursuit of an ample paycheck still gnawing at her peace of mind.