Chuck Shepherd: News of the Weird

Chuck Shepherd started “News of the Weird” as a newspaper column in 1988, and was picked up by the Universal Press Syndicate in 1989. Similarly, a year after I started I was offered a contract by their biggest competitor, Creators Syndicate, almost certainly as way to compete with the very popular NotW, but I turned it down.

Similarly to True, Chuck wrote a capsule summary of various stories he found, usually with several under a single title, though no taglines. When I started my newsletter, he wrote to say he was not very techie, and could I subscribe him to True? When I started Premium, he was one of the first to sign up.

Chuck was addicted to weird news: he even bought at least one of my books.

It’s not shocking that he noticed weird news, considering he was a Florida Man, living on an upper floor of a high-rise condo building in Tampa. I was aware that he retired rather abruptly on July 7, 2017: “Weird News is forever,” he wrote atop that last offering, “but this is my last ‘News of the Weird’ column, as I am now exhausted after almost 30 years in the racket. In this final edition, I remember a few of my favorites. My deep thanks to Andrews McMeel Syndication and to readers, who started me up and kept me going. Y’all take care of yourselves. —Chuck Shepherd”

So much so he wrote in his blog, “The reason for retiring is that I am simply exhausted, i.e., so many stories to process, slower-firing synapses with which to process them. In fact, my synapses don’t so much ‘fire’ these days as they kinda ‘lurch’.”

Almost 30 years! He didn’t give an exact start date, but said his last column was his 1,534th, which puts it at 29-1/2 years, implying a start date of around February 12, 1988. Even though Chuck read True, I decided to not read NotW since I didn’t want to be influenced by it in any way.

About Chuck

A reporter asked Shepherd in 2010 if he was weird himself. “No,” he replied, “but I know I’m going to die that way. Some arrow falling off a weather vane atop a building as I walk through town will strike me and get me, something like that. I lead a very boring life — and I always did.”

The last NotW header during Chuck’s tenure.

He fought in the Vietnam war, got his law degree, and was a federal bureaucrat — including a “White House wonk” during the Carter administration. (That must’ve been weird!) After that he taught business at George Washington University, but gave that up in 1992 because NotW was doing so well.

And sure enough, when he worked for the feds, he pasted weird stories to his office door. I didn’t have a door at JPL, but I had a bulletin board!

The reporter asked, is he sure he’s not done anything weird enough to be in his own column? “I’ve done a lot of shit in my life,” he admitted, but no. “That worries me from time to time, because that is one of the definitions of a life well lived, or at least things people remember you by.”

Just How Weird?

One of his favorite stories, he said, was from February 1994 (months before True started), and involved a fellow Florida Man. In a pretrial motion, Donald Leroy Evans, 38, of Ft. Lauderdale asked for permission to wear a KKK robe during his trial on a murder charge, as well as be referred to in legal documents by “the honorable and respected name of Hi Hitler.” No, really: the Associated Press reported that Evans thought Adolf Hitler’s followers were saying “Hi Hitler” rather than “Heil, Hitler.”

The best (and largest) stand-alone pic of Chuck I could find.

I’m pretty sure I clipped that same story for my bulletin board at JPL. Evans was not only convicted in that case, he was convicted in other murder cases, too, and ended up on death row at the Mississippi State Penitentiary. Apparently other inmates didn’t like “Donny” much (really: that’s the name he went by) — another death row inmate stabbed him to death in the shower in 1999. Bye, Hitler!

Anyway, back to Chuck: he revealed he got death threats too. (It’s been awhile for me, at least.) And he also had an ever-growing list of things that he considered no longer weird. By 2010, as the newspaper business shrank, he was down to 200 newspapers; still a decent number, but the trend was clear.

Winding Down

“I don’t know what Universal’s plans are for the column,” Chuck said at his retirement, “and I am not part of that discussion.” That’s the main reason why I turned down syndication: I wanted to be the owner of my own work, and have a say in what happens all along the way, and at the end.

What happened was, the NotW column continues, credited to “the Editors at Andrews McMeel Syndication” (the continuation of Universal, which was founded in 1970 by Jim Andrews and John McMeel).

Chuck’s end, I found out this past week, came in September, with “The Editors” noting atop one of the columns:

EDITOR’S NOTE: It is with great sadness that we share the news of Chuck Shepherd’s death on Thursday, Sept. 8[, 2022]. Chuck was the originator of News of the Weird in 1988; he stopped writing the column in 2017. His great wit and eye for the “weird” made the column a huge success and a favorite among newspaper readers. Andrews McMeel Syndication is proud to have worked with Chuck for so many years.

As I have acknowledged Herb Caen of the San Francisco Chronicle as my major influence, Chuck said that “News of the Weird’s DNA was shaped and formed by the 1970s-era sage, Bob Maslow.” I unfortunately don’t know who he was.

As far as I know, Chuck’s cause of death was not an arrow that fell off a weathervane. Sorry, Chuck. Shepherd was about 75.

P.S.: Yes, I do intend to beat the NotW record! I have already pledged to go to 30 years, and surely longer.

P.P.S.: True’s 1,535th issue was written on 12 November 2023. In the time between this tribute and that day, Kit and I made a radical change in our lives in becoming full-time digital nomads, wandering the world while we continue in our professions. Onward!

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9 Comments on “Chuck Shepherd: News of the Weird

  1. Years ago, there was a little publication called “The Shopper”, which was basically a small newspaper of just ads, with a few other articles to grab your attention. One of those was “News of the Weird” which I enjoyed enormously every time I picked up a Shopper, looking for a dresser, table, car, whatever. Usually you’d find them in a rack in various restaurants, if I recall correctly. Nowadays, with the overwhelming presence of the Internet, I never see any of those old ad papers any more. Truly a pity.

    Reply
    • I remember the Shopper. Every Saturday a van would drive around our neighborhood with the side sliding door open and someone would throw Shoppers out into our driveways as they passed. Eventually people stopped picking them up (especially senior citizens who physically couldn’t walk to the end of the driveway and bend down) and they became an eyesore sitting there for days or weeks at a time, so city council passed an ordinance prohibiting distribution of unsolicited newspapers. Rather than maintain a subscription list, the deliveries stopped completely shortly afterward and I’ve never seen them again since then.

      Reply
  2. I’m glad I’ve got your promise to continue in writing. 😉

    I’ve said it in the newsletter too (Premium, at least!) -rc

    Reply
  3. Our office (owner/boss) subscribed to it as well as other interesting items for the whole staff/office, workers or whoever came in the door (and we had people come by just to read them… it’s a small town) and it helped everyone get along and talk. It got me interested in “True”.

    Reply
  4. We had a book of his columns; my brother and I read it over and over. I don’t remember the publication date on it, but I remember the first time I read it being about six or seven (that doesn’t mean it wasn’t from earlier than that, just that that was when I managed to get my tiny little mitts on it). It finally got confiscated because my brother was reading it during Spanish class and he never got it back, but it always had a lasting impression on me.

    Clearly the teacher was too entertained by it to give it back. -rc

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  5. I was saddened to learn of Chuck’s passing. I was one of his early contributors before his column was syndicated and for several years after. It was great fun finding ‘news’ that he could use in his column and then seeing it printed.

    I lost touch w/ Chuck as the years went by and life happened. I was very glad to find “This is True” — a worthy replacement for News of the Weird. I pray that you keep it going for many, many years. It is like an addiction and I wouldn’t want to be without the “news” of the strange things people do and say.

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  6. Oh my, I’d forgotten about Chuck and NotW. I used to subscribe to the printed version of News of the Weird from 1991 to 1993, issues #5-22. At the time I was in the habit of clipping weird stories and photocopying the growing collections to send out to people I knew. I sent copies of these collages to Chuck and he sometimes stuck little hand written notes in the issues thanking me and telling which stories he was going to use!

    Back in the day the newspapers had big broadsheet pages with every available space crammed with some kind of content. Many odd spaces contained the weird offball items. Strangely enough, many people told me they had never paid any attention to such items until they saw them in these collections….

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  7. Saddened to hear of Chuck’s demise, I first met him at the University of South Florida’s Florida Suncoast Writers Conference in 1992, I believe. Afterward, we kept in touch occasionally, which led to the biggest impact I had on him: I was responsible for his very first TV show appearance in the mid-1990s. Only public access, and due to his relatively weird schedule (Remember the days when weird news stories mostly broke during the wee hours, and Chuck usually slept days) he was fighting sleep the entire time, but it was a milestone!

    I ran into him here and there in the years since, often at book fairs, but also at gatherings of like-minded locals with an interest in the bizarre and thinking about things often taken for granted. He is definitely missed, as are many others in the Tampa Bay area whose words are no longer available to add to our lives.

    The world needs more like him.

    Reply

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