Judy Oetting was truly ‘one of a kind’
TONY DODERO
I knew the news wasn’t going to be good.
Our publisher, Tom Johnson, called a special meeting Thursday
morning for the newspaper staff.
“Judy Oetting passed away,” he told the assembled employees, many
breaking into tears. As Tom tried his best to tell the story of her
final hour, he too began to choke up. It was a somber moment for us
all.
My thoughts went back to minutes earlier when I passed by her
darkened office to attend the meeting and how hard it was to fathom
that she won’t be there, laughing and holding sway over her
advertising minions, any longer.
Yes, there will be a real emptiness at the Daily Pilot for months
and maybe years to come.
Normally, I devote this space to matters of the newsroom. But Judy
meant so much to the employees of the Daily Pilot and the newspaper
itself that it would be impossible for me to not mention her this
week.
Newspaper editorial and advertising departments have long had a
big wall between them. And the Daily Pilot has been no different.
Judy respected the reason for that wall, yet still found a way to
talk over it in a neighborly sort of way.
During that meeting, Tom told all of us Judy’s story at the Daily
Pilot. He told how she climbed the ranks from a legal clerk to run
the retail and classified advertising department of the daily
newspaper.
It really is a great story.
It was through the combined efforts of Judy, the news department
and the advertising department that we created some awesome special
sections: the 103 Most Influential list; the Toshiba golf section;
most recently the Summer Along the Coast; the Coastal Football
Preview; and the Daily Pilot’s first Community Events Calendar.
And that doesn’t include all of her advertising-driven special
features about business, exclusive homes with views and weddings.
Most notably, though, Judy and her staff ratcheted up the size and
scope of our Saturday Real Estate section, making it the largest such
section of any newspaper in the county.
Personally, I’ve known Judy for 14 years. In that time, I
witnessed her command of the advertising department. Together, we
shared many tense and exciting moments as part of the senior
management team at the newspaper.
We also shared a love for the same sports teams, the Rams, who
moved to St. Louis, near her Missouri hometown, and the Lakers. Of
course, she also loved the St. Louis Cardinals and I’m a Dodger fan,
so two out of three isn’t too bad.
And, boy, did she love to tease people. With me, it had to do with
my growing family. After my third child, Nathan, who shares the same
birthday as Judy on Oct. 14, she insisted I wouldn’t be stopping
until I had five kids. I hope you are wrong about that one, Judy.
Sure, we had our differences over the years, but through it all, I
think she and I were only looking out for what was best for the
newspaper. And I never stopped learning from her.
But enough about me. I asked some of her co-workers to give me
some memories to jot down.
One who answered back was Danette Goulet, the Pilot’s city editor
who spent a newspaper-related conference weekend with Judy south in
the town of Fallbrook.
“When I think of Judy, two scenes flash through my mind,” Goulet
said. “First is her sitting in front of the video poker game in the
Pala Mesa casino where she, on this occasion, seemed to be holding
court. [We] found her, and sat next to her despite her protests that
we would ruin her luck. A casino security guard, whom she was on a
first name basis, stood near by teasing her occasionally. She laughed
and gave us all advice about how to play our hands as we pestered
her. I now always play video poker when I’m in a casino.
“The other is something I can’t quite believe I won’t see again.
Her sitting at one end of the conference table every Monday morning
(at the paper’s weekly manager meeting), smiling teasing, laughing
and complaining.”
Another admirer was Pat Tool, who works in our advertising
operations department, which literally put him in the middle of any
fights that could break out between advertising and editorial.
“I worked with Judy in various capacities during her time here at
the Pilot,” Tool said. “She was always a good person to work with
both professionally and personally. Always up front, used expletives
properly and always with the best interests of the Pilot and the
people involved in mind. I will miss her.”
And from Managing Editor S.J. Cahn:
“Judy was one of a kind,” he said. “She also was kind. In some
ways I think of that as one of her secrets -- until you got to know
her, you wouldn’t realize just how caring and giving she was. I only
got to know her well within the past year. I feel wonderfully lucky I
got to know her as well as I did and very sad our friendship only
lasted as long as it did.”
Although funeral services will take place for Judy in her native
St. Charles, Mo., home, the Daily Pilot is planning a celebration of
her life this coming Friday at one of her favorite spots, the
Spaghetti Bender in Newport Beach. We’ll also have a team in her
honor at this year’s American Cancer Society Relay for Life on May 14
and 15 in Newport Beach.
As I said, Judy’s story is a nice one to tell. Here’s to seeing
her in the next chapter.
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