Execupundit.com
Commentary by management consultant Michael Wade on Leadership, Ethics, Management, and Life
Tuesday, February 10, 2026
The Decline of Unifying Events
Remember the ancient days of pre-cable television?
Those days when there were special programs that everyone watched for free?
Ones that everyone talked about because everyone had seen them?
These were the big ones:
- The Olympics from the Opening Ceremony all the way through to the Closing Ceremony. We were immersed in stories about the serious contenders and the very long shots. ABC Sports coverage was legendary.
- The World Series. All the games or, at least, most of them in the days when the games were played during the day. I recall a television being wheeled into elementary school classes for some brief viewing during the school day.
- The Super Bowl. I recently tried in vain to find the game without paying for a subscription.
- Political Conventions once had gavel-to-gavel coverage. You got to know the famous, the infamous, and the fairly obscure political figures. For those of us who are political junkies, that was a Golden Age.
It was great to see personalities such as Everett Dirksen, Edward W. Brooke, Jacob Javits, Margaret Chase Smith, Harold Washington, Sam Yorty, and Richard Daley in a less-formal setting.
This may seem like a minor complaint, but when you take away (or make it difficult to find) that "free" coverage, you've removed some major unifying events.
The national community is diminished.
Monday, February 09, 2026
10 Books for High School (and College) Students
These books can be life-changers.
I wish they had been around when I was in high school.
[Photo by Eric Vo at Unsplash]
But It Was a Dry Heat
Tucson became the head-quarters of vice, dissipation, and crime. It was probably the nearest approach to Pandemonium on the North American Continent. Murderers, thieves, cutthroats, and gamblers formed the mass of the population. Every man went armed to the teeth, and scenes of bloodshed were of every-day occurrence in the public streets. There was neither government, law, nor military protection. The garrison at Tucson confined itself to its legitimate business of getting drunk or doing nothing. Arizona was perhaps the only part of the world under the protecting aegis of a civilized government in which every man administered justice to suit himself, and where all assumed the right to gratify the basest passions of their nature without restraint. It was literally a paradise of devils.
- From Adventures in the Apache Country: A Tour Through Arizona and Sonora with Notes on the Silver Regions of Nevada by John Ross Browne [New York: Harper & Brothers, Publishers, 1871.]
Sunday, February 08, 2026
Saturday, February 07, 2026
Great Half-Time Music
The theme from "The Big Country."
Question
I've heard about a Bad Bunny performance but is there a football game this weekend?