Writing Boots

On communication, professional and otherwise.

Ghosting One Person Is a Crime Against Humanity

06.10.2026 by David Murray // Leave a Comment

I wrote this so many years ago that “ghosting” was a new term at that point. Some things I’ve written seem overheated in hindsight. The longer I live, the more understated this piece seems to me. Good thing, because it’s also one of the essays in my book, An Effort to Understand. —DM

Some crimes receive too much punishment, and other crimes don’t receive enough. For instance, every boozer knows that hungover driving is twice as dangerous as buzzed driving, but perfectly legal.

Similarly, you can lose your livelihood for making a pass at a colleague. But you can commit the arguably more abusive act of “ghosting” someone you said you liked or loved, and no one can hold you accountable.

Ghosting is a new word, but not a new concept. 

Growing up, we all heard stories of people whose parents (usually fathers) disappeared or “ran off” when they were young. 

And long before Tinder, ghosting was one of the 50 Ways to Leave Your Lover: “Slip out the back, Jack.”

It was how I resigned my first job in Chicago—near the end of my first week as the “night waterman” at a public golf course. After four endless midnight-to-eight shifts with a deranged Vietnam veteran as my only companion, I simply turned off the alarm on the fifth night and didn’t go in. I remember writhing in my bed as I listened to the voice of the disappointed superintendent, who had hired me (and paid to have me drug tested) earlier that same week. He said he’d send my check in the mail.

I only had to feel that way once to realize I would never do that to anyone—boss, friend, lover or even enemy—ever again. I think it’s one of the most violent things a person can do to another, to break off a relationship without telling why, or saying goodbye.

And yet it’s become a near standard practice in online dating, where people see one another as profiles first, sex partners second and people only on the off chance that things happen to go really well. A dear friend of mine got ghosted not long ago and it made me feel just about the same way I bet I’d feel if the bastard had hit her. Not just protective of her, but protective of us—people with consciences who are supposed to be doing what Kurt Vonnegut said we were all put here to do: “Help each other through this thing, whatever it is.”

If you feel strongly enough to break off a relationship—or quit a job or resign a client or end any significant partnership—I believe it’s something close to a Law of Communication that you should explain why you’ve done it. So the other person can learn something from hearing you say it, and so you can learn from hearing yourself say it—and so you don’t make another person more generally cynical and lonely and despairing in the reliability and goodness of other people, you nihilistic, cowardly, no-account creep.

Littering is against the law. Harassment is against the law. Reckless endangerment is against the law. Torture is against the law. Fraud is against the law. Ghosting should be against the law.

Categories // Uncategorized

A Humble-Yet-Hubristic Suggestion for Speechwriters Struggling to Find Work

06.09.2026 by David Murray // Leave a Comment

I’ve been seeing a lot of LinkedIn posts lately, and I’ve been getting a lot of calls, from speechwriters who are struggling to find clients or jobs.

More than usual.

Is this because speechwriting work is harder to find than it was five years ago, or 10 or 15?

Maybe. Those big fat corporate speechwriter jobs are sure rare these days, and all speechwriting jobs are more broadly complicated affairs that involve varied executive communication duties.

But the difficulty also might be because speechwriters approach the problem differently than they did before. They network too much with other speechwriters, it seems to me. Other speechwriters will take your calls. But they don’t usually have work to give you.

I founded the Professional Speechwriters Association about 15 years ago, in response to some speechwriters who came to me and said they needed a home, a community, a place to go to find solace or advice or job leads.

That was also around the time LinkedIn started to become something more than a place to post your online résumé … started to become a place where writers started trying to preen before headhunters and potential hiring managers in hopes of getting their good brains noticed.

Before that, you know what hungry speechwriters did to drum up work? They called the switchboards of corporations and asked to speak to someone in public relations. And they asked that person if the company ever needed any speechwriting help, in-house or freelance. I knew a guy who made dozens of such calls weekly and kept track of the results and even boasted at speechwriting conferences about his pavement-pounding prowess.

That seemed miserable to me, and I often told him so. Life just shouldn’t be this hard. Speechwriting is cool and can be very cool. But if it’s hellishly hard for you to get work in this strange and tiny field, consider another field! Or another communication specialty, that has more members.

On the other hand, back in the day you had these other speechwriter types, who I referred to as fighter pilots. These speechwriters were more likely to call the corporate switchboard and ask for the CEO, and leave a phone message or send a note: “Liked your op-ed in WSJ today. Seems like you could turn that in to a great keynote. I have a few ideas and am happy to talk anytime. Let me know.”

With more frequency than you’d think, such brassiness was rewarded. Sometimes it still is. Got a message from a modern-day speechwriting fighter pilot just last week, who emailed a Fortune 100 CEO directly. “He got right back,” my man reports.

Look: I’m glad I founded the PSA, which tells members on the website, “Come out of the cold, and into the fold.” I’m also glad members learn their trade at our Speechwriting School and gather ideas and friends at our World Conference and wear our logo on their LinkedIn profile and distinguish themselves by winning the Cicero Speechwriting Awards that we sponsor.

But speechwriting will never be certified public accounting. That’s a disadvantage, because there’s no established career track around here. But it’s also an advantage, because there are few set standards for how speechwriters and leadership communication consultants should act, how they should define themselves, what their lanes should be.

And what limiting mores there are, are usually set by the communicators who surround leaders, not by the leaders themselves. So consider going around those people.

Know a leader you admire in an industry you care something about? They’re on LinkedIn too. Reach out directly; demonstrate your knowledge and your point of view and ask something like: Are you happy with the quality and volume and frequency of your voice in the marketplace these days? Because I think you can do more and I’d love to exchange some thoughts on Zoom.

Take your shot.

Little to lose and a lot to gain. Or so it seems to me.

Let me know how it goes.

Categories // Uncategorized

Old Fart Editor & Publisher of Vital Speeches says: No Reading Speeches Off Your Cellular Telephone

06.08.2026 by David Murray // Leave a Comment

Communication folks will want to listen to the New York Times interview with Scott Pelley, about his firing from “60 Minutes.” The fairness of that decision aside, this is an executive communication disaster of Hindenburgian proportions. Pelley’s eloquent description of new “60 Minutes” producer Nick Bilton’s introduction to the staff—first a supremely insulting email, then an all-staff meeting at which Bilton read a statement *from his phone*—this is just brutal. Almost exquisitely so. And speaking of reading speeches off phones, here’s a Writing Boots encore … —DM

***

My old pal Steve Crescenzo was on a Zoom call with a prospect the other day, a young woman. “About ten minutes into the 30-minute call, she appeared to wipe her mouth. But it LOOKED like she was hitting off a joint,” Steve wrote on LinkedIn. “I ALMOST made a joke. Something like: ‘Ha ha. For a second it looked like you were vaping or smoking a pot pen or something! Ha ha ha!’ Thank GOD that for once I kept my mouth shut (a rare occasion). Because about six minutes later, she did it again! She WAS vaping! I’ll be damned! I have read all the articles about how insidiously addicting these vape pens are. And just about EVERYONE of a certain age does it. But how do we feel about doing it on a business call?”

On behalf of exactly everyone over the age of that young woman I can say: We don’t dig it.

Nor, I’ll add while I have you here, do we dig people reading a speech off a cellular telephone. My wife and I found ourselves at Chicago’s great Gene Siskel Film Center one night last month, to see a documentary by Frederick Wiseman. As you might predict, our 55-year-old asses were among the youngest in the room—except for the stripling Siskel Center staffer, who introduced the film with a 10-minute lecture delivered with a series of frequent glances at his phone.

Young man, I know there’s nothing inherently wrong with reading from notes on your phone. And if you’re conservation-minded, a lot that’s right with it. Still, lad: Know that your audience cannot accept this. We have lived many long years in a world where, if you had something important to say to a large group of people, you either memorized it because you were a genius or you wrote it down on a piece of paper, and referred to that. None of us will live long enough to learn to happily receive a lecture that’s read off a phone.

Luckily, you and your generation will outlive us, and for the latter part of your professional careers you will be able to read speeches with a phone in one hand and a vape pen in another. But by then, you’ll have your own bugbears, and your own vague yet strong sense that no one takes anything seriously enough any goddamn more.

Categories // Uncategorized

  • 1
  • 2
  • 3
  • …
  • 1497
  • Next Page »

Now Available

Order Now

SIGN UP TO RECEIVE BLOG UPDATES

About

David Murray writes on communication issues.
Read More

 

Categories

  • Baby Boots
  • Communication Philosophy
  • Efforts to Understand
  • Happy Men, and Other Eccentrics
  • Human Politicians
  • Mister Boring
  • Murray Cycle Diaries
  • Old Boots
  • Rambling, At Home and Abroad
  • Sales Mode
  • Sports Stories
  • The Quotable Murr
  • Typewriter Truths
  • Uncategorized
  • Weird Scenes Inside the Archives

Archives

Copyright © 2026 · Log in

  • Sign Up for Blog Updates
  • About David Murray
  • About Soccer Dad
  • Pre-order Soccer Dad