20-Some Odd Years Later

      “Why don’t you come intern at Bay Weekly?” editor Sandra Martin said from behind her instructor’s desk at University College, where she taught editing to me and a classroom of students. It seemed an innocent enough suggestion to this then-20-something-year-old in search of a career back in the mid-1990s. 

     “It’ll be a stepping stone,” Martin said. With visions of The Washington Post, Baltimore Sun and glossy magazines dancing in my head, I signed on to work nights and weekends as a writer. Soon after, I resigned from my nine-to-five day job to produce advertising and layouts for this small but feisty newspaper in a shoebox-sized office in Deale, Maryland. Little did I know that I’d still be with the paper in 2019.

      Bay Weekly was indeed a stepping-stone for my contemporaries. Many coworkers, friends — even my brother Don, a writer from the early days — moved on to interesting organizations or big dailies. But for me, Bay Weekly grew into a home away from home.

     Perhaps publisher Bill Lambrecht won my heart every Tuesday night by appearing with a Volkswagen Bug-sized smoked ham or turkey to share for dinner. The Martin-Lambrecht-Knoll family of Bill, Sandra, Nathaniel, Alex and Lisa kept us well fed in those early days. Good thing, too. Our stomachs had to be full and happy while producing the good news of Bay Weekly. 

     Now 25 years older, I’m left wondering where the years went. I’ve burned through five computers, three office chairs, one card table and two wooden desks in four different offices.

    I’ve enjoyed quite a few walks with beloved office dogs, including Max and Moe, the yellow labs. By far my favorite pooch, Max weighed as much as me but was as gentle as a ladybug. 

     If I mention Max, I must mention his polar opposite: Nipper the Jack Russell terrorist, who either bit or tried to bite half the population of Anne Arundel and Calvert counties. (I still have a tooth mark in my boot from a tussle with dear Nipper.)

     Today, Chester the much calmer, sweeter pit-lab mix naps under my desk, keeping me company.

     Bay Weekly has been — and continues to be — a place of learning and challenges. Every day is filled with hard work tempered by a feeling of satisfaction and accomplishment. The result is tangible: a newspaper materializing at our fingertips at the end of each week.

      But wait … I know, I know. I’ll admit this because you’ve seen them, and you’ll remind me when I bump into you at the grocery store. We’ve put a few excruciating mistakes into print. But more often the pages of Bay Weekly are filled with stories about local folks that I never would have had the pleasure of meeting anywhere else. They’re also filled with local businesses and the people who run them. Our clients have trusted Bay Weekly to promote their businesses and create their advertisements. Some of you go back to the earliest days of Bay Weekly while others are newer additions. It’s nice to count all of you among my friends and neighbors.

     So here we are at the beginning of a new era. Bay Weekly is about to continue its life under the guidance of the good folks at Chesapeake Bay Media. We all love the news, legend and lore of Bay Weekly, stories that introduce each of us to our neighbors and remind us how amazing life is on the Chesapeake Bay — and most importantly, why we need to work to preserve it.

    Here’s to the next 25 years of Bay Weekly.

 

Production manager and mainstay Betsy Kehne moves with Bay Weekly to Chesapeake Bay Media in 2020.