Disgraced Reporter Jayson Blair Now a Life Coach

Date: Thursday, August 20, 2009, 4:24 am
By: Matthew Barakat, Associated Press

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Since his plagiarism scandal, former New York Times reporter Jayson Blair has been working as a life coach in northern Va. (AP)

McLEAN, Va. (AP) — Jayson Blair knows his new profession — life coach — smacks some people in the face like a bad punchline.

"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."

Oberschneider, director of Ashburn Psychological Services, took an interest in Blair after seeing him lead a support group for people with bipolar disorder that Blair founded in his hometown of Centreville after being diagnosed himself.

Oberschneider said he took a long, hard look at Blair before hiring him, in large part because of his past, which included substance abuse. But he was impressed at the rapport Blair had established with members of the support group.

"Very few people can go through what he did and come back," Oberschneider said. "He really is a success story."

Blair says his empathy for his clients is his biggest asset.

"They know I've been in their shoes," he said. "I think it can feel a little more authentic."

Blair said clients rarely know his history at first, but it inevitably comes up within a session or two as Blair relates his own experiences. Never has a client refused to work with him because of his past.

"I am open about all the details of my problems and that allows people to know who they are listening to," Blair said.

The job itself can be varied. Blair might have 25 or so clients at any given time. Some might be seeking career counseling, including corporate executives from the Dulles technology corridor seeking advancement — a natural for Blair, who schmoozed his way through newsroom politics to land a premier reporting gig in his mid-20s without a college degree.

Others might have substance abuse problems, and some might simply have motivational issues.

Blair said he has thought about going to school for a psychology degree, but isn't sure if it would be the best fit for him.

"I don't really think too much about the long term," he said. "I like the idea that I can help people avoid some of the mistakes I made."


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Jiggy5 your comment: “Granted you will get BAW members who are sympathetic to him…” is one reason why I used the word “we”. The second reason is based on 30 years of leadership experience where good leaders always use the conciliatory “we” rather than the accusatory “you” when trying to make a persuasive point. Apparently “you” haven’t been following the news stories on BAW relative to MV. They have all been supportive. So I was trying to make the point that to be fair what is good for one must be good for the other. I wish we could inform or disagree without spewing so much hate.


by   
Drwill911
August 22, 2009, 3:43 pm
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I am wondering why your comment: “Michael Sick. MO-Fo is a sick, lying, twisted, lame excuse for a human being” is so full of contempt? I’m wondering why you used Don Imus as a comparative reference? Have you ever held as much contempt for George W. Bush,**** Chaney, et al, who are personally responsible for the deaths of thousands of US soldiers and hundreds of thousands of Arabs compared to a man who killed a few dogs? Why do the same people who go crazy over a dog being killed stand in protest for a man to be executed in prison? How can one be both pro-life and pro-death penalty? Those two


by   
Drwill911
August 22, 2009, 3:41 pm
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…moral values occupying the same mind is enough to make one crazy or may, rather, be an indication of people that are crazy. Only crazy people hold this kind of hate. They are the ones who act on that hate end up on death row. Yet, they also are the SAME ones who want others to be lenient with them when they were merciless to others in the same situation. The writer John Donne left a profound warning for hate filled man that says it better that I can: “Each man's death diminishes me, for I am involved in mankind. Therefore, send not to know for whom the bell tolls, it tolls for thee.”


by   
Drwill911
August 22, 2009, 3:41 pm
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I don't believe in the concept of a "life coach." What exactly makes a person qualified to be anyone else's life coach? I believe that we all have to inquire within to find our own paths. Other people can't give you the answers that you need to seek within yourself.


by   
CAmira
August 21, 2009, 11:30 am
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BE a preacher, dang, use your noodles. Black people are suckers for anyone who memorizes one bible verse. If I had to do it all again, knowing what I know now, I would have attended the prestigious Rev. Ike School of Divinity in New York....iamout.


by   
Jazflutesmith
August 20, 2009, 1:57 pm
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