Good times. Once upon a time: a gangster-themed fundraiser at the PAC. |
Sometimes you go searching for a story while other times you are standing in your driveway, unpacking groceries from your car when the story drives right up and says hello.
That’s what happened to Rebel Girl on Friday.
She had noticed the car following her up Olive Hill. It had
turned out of Madame Modjeska’s estate, Arden, and she presumed it was a lost
flatlander who she would have redirect and turn around. But it wasn’t. This fellow knew
exactly where he was and who she was. It had been awhile - years! - since they seen each other though
they glimpsed each other and their lives on social media.
He was an IVC alum, one of those returning students who had showed
up in the mid-90s in creative writing and journalism classes, taking them over
and over again. Already an attorney, he
was looking for something new and found it at the little college in the orange
groves. An intrepid reporter on the IVC student newspaper, The Voice, he broke the story of the Holocaust denier on the
college board (good times) which was picked up by news outlets across the
country. Now, over 20 year later, he is
a highly regarded journalist, his byline familiar across the county. He had been at Arden as follow-up to a story
he was writing.
They greeted each other warmly. “You must be dropping by to celebrate the
departure of Roquemore,” she quipped.
He hadn’t heard, so of course, she filled him in.
“Did I ever tell you my Glenn Roquemore story?” he asked.
No, she said, do tell.
It was a doozy. It
went something like this:
Years ago, in 2013, Red Emma, Rebel Girl’s sweetie, was
hired by the former student, by then an editor of a glossy monthly, to pen
profiles of OC residents, not famous people, but extraordinary ordinary
people. Red called this gig the best
writing job he ever had: the pay was good (great, actually at a time when they
needed it); he could choose his own subjects; he was paired with an amazing
photographer and he got to work with an ace editor. Among the people Red
profiled: the Marine who regularly played his full drum kit on a lonely stretch
of Santiago Canyon Road for all to see; the crossing guard at Trabuco Mesa
Elementary School; the local meter reader; the sweet potato seller at the Laguna
Woods Farmers Market. You get the
picture.
Well, a few months into the series, Red’s editor was
contacted by the publisher. The
publisher was known to Rebel Girl because she too had once written for two of
his many magazines, first as a book reviewer, next as a features writer and
monthly columnist. He was and is a
person of stature in the community.
The publisher told the editor that he had received a
communication from one Glenn Roquemore. The two men knew each other from the
kinds of associations two men like that have: chamber of commerce and other
community associations. Roquemore was writing because he was very concerned
about a writer on staff - a leftist writer– he wanted to bring this man to the
publisher’s attention. The spirit of the communication was that something
should be done about this writer who had somehow gotten this job, a position
that clearly, in the mind of complainant, he should not have due to his
political views.
The publisher passed the information on to the editor. The editor took note of it and filed it away.
Red Emma continued to write.
Now you get a new picture. It’s a particularly ugly picture, one
which shows someone using his social and political power to smear, with the
hopes of causing someone to lose his job due to, not his lack of
qualifications, but due to his political views.
What was Red’s relationship to IVC (and Roquemore) at the time? Aside from his
marriage to Rebel Girl, none. He had not
taught at the college in well over a decade. (The circumstances of his departure here, courtesy of one Howard Gensler, who is, we hear, recently departed from Saddleback.) Instead, he taught at UCI where he is
still employed. He was writing for a
number of publications which he continues to do. He edits a literary journal for Santa Monica College. He hosts a radio show. One of Red's guests was UCI's Chancellor Howard Gillman, in conversation about the book, "Free Speech on Campus," he co-wrote with Erwin Chemerinksy. You can check out the interview here. (One might begin to wonder at this point if Glenn also reached out to Gillman about Red's political beliefs...)
Red Emma was making a living doing the work he had been hired to do.
Red Emma was making a living doing the work he had been hired to do.
Last year about this time, when Rebel Girl struggled to
comprehend how Roquemore and others at the college could have failed to
inform her of a threat against her by a former student, she questioned whether
it was incompetence or malice.
She opted for incompetence as malice seemed, so, well, malicious.
She opted for incompetence as malice seemed, so, well, malicious.
But Friday, standing on the dusty road with her former
student, hearing this story of Roquemore reaching out to her husband’s employer
to object and inform about his political beliefs, to make trouble for him,
to -
is there any doubt here? - to get him fired, she wonders if she got it
wrong last year. Maybe it was intentional malice after all. Clearly Glenn is
capable of that. Clearly. How else to explain this quaint throwback to
McCarthyism?
Of course, Red was fortunate that the people Roquemore
sought to enlist resisted his overtures, that the publisher and editor didn’t take his red bait. Why? For all sorts of good reasons, one
surmises, including the fact they are journalists – journalists! JOURNALISTS in
the 21st century. Geez. And
of course Roquemore held no power or sway over them, unlike at the college,
where one longtime staff person who has been working there nearly 30 years recently
expressed their real fear of losing their job should Glenn or Linda see them
walking over to say good-bye to Cessa.
One of Red’s profiles – perhaps the one which brought the
series to Glenn’s attention – was of IVC’s own Professor Virginia Shank, still a fairly new faculty member, already distinguished by her teaching (Teacher of
the Year in 2014), her writing and her distinctive mode of transportation: the
bright blue velomobile. The photo is
fabulous. The photographer shot it
outside IVC’s BSTIC building, and though you cannot see her, Rebel Girl is in
the photo, holding out Virginia’s tie so it appears to be flying in the wind. Her hand was photo-shopped out of the final,
which was only right. The effect is stunning. If Rebel Girl remembers correctly, the tie belongs to Virginia’s late
father. She still wears it.
excerpt:
With her green eyes, red hair, porcelain skin, and stylish retro-Victorian ensembles suggesting both wit, good taste and an eye for vintage clothing-store finery, Virginia Shank unshyly personifies the romantic ideal of the English professor. This young poet and teacher originally from Eden, New York recently earned “Teacher of the Year” at Irvine Valley College, after teaching there only four semesters. The busy little community college in what’s left of an orange grove is lucky to have her. Professor Shank’s curriculum vitae is loaded for serious academic bear: PhD in English from Binghamton, MFA in poetry from University of Idaho, plenty of awards, research and accolades as a student and grad student….
What should a college president have done having read a
glowing profile of a new hire, penned by a former employee printed in a
high-profile magazine distributed across the county? Perhaps penned a note of
congratulation and appreciation to one or both. Perhaps seized the moment to
even extend rapprochement to the latter. Redemption is possible. Things do change. Rebel Girl reminds her students often of this. The semester is long enough to turn things around. So is life.
But what did Glenn do? You know what he did. He tried to get the writer fired.
But what did Glenn do? You know what he did. He tried to get the writer fired.
What's your Glenn Roquemore story?
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