The Minnesota Star Tribune (nee Minneapolis Star and Tribune; nee StarTribune; nee Minneapolis Star and Minneapolis Tribune) holds special meaning for me, especially since my father passed away last year.
When I was young, he would faithfully read the paper every day after work and spend hours on the weekends perusing the pages. I vividly remember Sunday mornings where, before church, my dad would be kicked back in his recliner, head buried in the paper. Johnny Cash or Marty Robbins would be playing on our old record player/radio console and he’d bounce his black gold-toed socks to the beat.
My dad would read the paper cover to cover, no matter the section and no matter the topic. He revered Jim Klobuchar. He particularly loved the “funnies” and would throw his head back and belly-laugh at The Far Side, Garfield, Calvin and Hobbes, Doonesbury, and occasionally Cathy.
Mr. Fixit was a favorite column of his. In the decades before Google, readers would write to the paper seeking help to life’s most intriguing questions: What is the difference between Grade A and Grade AA butter? What are the origins of the names of the Minneapolis streets that are in alphabetical order (Aldrich through Zenith)? My father cut out and saved several of these columns, put them in clear plastic sleeves and organized them in a huge binder full of other articles and tidbits from magazines such as Popular Mechanics.
My dad – and mom – encouraged me and my brother to read the paper, as well. As a family, we’d toss sections to each other after we were finished with them. The paper was inches-thick on Sundays and full of promise. I’d grab the travel section and drool over the flights to South America, then curl up on the couch with a glorious stack of colorful ads for Dayton’s and Donaldson’s. My mother would place the StarTribune’s weekly TV guide next to the rabbit ears atop our RCA television set (again, some kind of console thing made up with something resembling wood).
There was a time in the mid-1980s when my dad would give me and my brother quizzes on what had been in paper the previous week. I don’t recall how much but we received money for each correct answer.
My dad’s favorite saying, and one my brother and I frequently repeat, is “Article in the paper…” He’d say this before telling us something interesting he recently read, followed up with his own opinion on the topic.
He expected – and assumed – everyone read the StarTribune. When I told him, years after I moved out, that I only read it online he would look at me skeptically, like maybe I wasn’t getting the whole or “real” stories unless I read it organically; that is, in a physical paper.
And so he would cut out an article he thought I’d be interested in or a cartoon he felt may resonate with me. For decades he saved me the Sunday Variety section for the book reviews and crossword puzzles.
When complications from diabetes and high blood pressure put him in the hospital he had my mother save the paper for when he returned home. The news would be weeks old but he didn’t care. He still read every page.
When he passed January of 2025, there were papers he hadn’t touched. I thought how sad they must have felt, waiting for the day my dad would open them up and be held lovingly in his hands.
I miss my dad and I miss our old rambler in Brooklyn Park, where the four of us would read the paper together, my brother and I spread out on the floor with bowls of sloppy cereal nearby.
But I’m so thankful I have those memories. I’m thankful I lived in a time where print dominated our culture and fed our need for news and entertainment.
And I’m thankful that at any time I can close my eyes and remember my dad relaxing in the living room, his face obscured by the StarTribune, and hear the crisp flick of the paper as he turns another page.