Communications Manager @ZF_Group. Former sports writer/editor @detroitnews @flintjournal @TheOaklandPress

Joined September 2010
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Matt Charboneau retweeted
New statement from Scott Pelley:   There has never been anything in America like 60 Minutes.   The Sunday tradition is the most successful program of any kind in history. For more than a decade, its innovative growth on every major online platform has extended its reach to countless millions around the world. This spring, at the end of our 58thseason, 60 Minutes grew rapidly with an unheard-of 9% jump in viewers on CBS.   “60” has been the number-one program in America for decades because our beloved audience finds integrity, quality, and humanity in our stories. When stewardship of the program passed to my colleagues and me, our responsibility was to expand energetically into a new age of media technology while preserving the values our audience expects. Now, the new owner of our network is casting this legend aside, apparently to curry a moment of favor with the Trump administration.   The waste is heartbreaking.   Last month, 60 Minutes lost its DNA when our entire senior leadership and two of our best on-air correspondents were cruelly fired without cause. Good people were silenced because they stood up for our audience. They stood for fairness against the forces of political bias; they stood for professionalism against chaos.   For my part, new management has instructed me to inject falsehoods and bias into a politically sensitive story. I’ve been told to include assertions that are unverified. To date, in every case, I have managed to ignore these instructions or refuse them. Recently, politicians have been invited to choose correspondents for interviews on the broadcast. Giving politicians control over 60 Minutes interviews is not how this is done. Finally, incompetence and unprofessionalism in the new management have wreaked havoc. In a case involving one of my stories, the entire program came within 19 minutes of not getting on the air at all.   At 60 Minutes, we have fought harder than anyone knows to save the program that became an American icon. We owed that to our millions of viewers. I am deeply moved by the thousands of wishes we have received to “keep up the good fight.” Most of the men and women of CBS News are still in that fight. But now the collapse of values at the top has become untenable. The leadership of 60 Minutes is no longer recognizable. The principles I hold dear are gone, and so I must leave as well.   I depart after 37 years at CBS with one emotion—a heart brimming with gratitude for the men and women of CBS News who encouraged and enriched my work, very often at the risk of their own lives. I pray for a day when those people and their ideals are honored again—a day when sanity, competence, and courage return.   Scott Pelley
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NBA action. It’s fantastic !
Replying to @BrickCenter_
Wut👀
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Matt Charboneau retweeted
STATEMENT FROM THE FAMILY For more than forty years, Detroit's sports fans had Pat's full attention. In the months since his diagnosis, we have had it — listening as he has told us his stories: the ones from the press box, TV and radio studio, and the ones from his life. What follows is drawn from those conversations. The words are his. We share it now, on his behalf, as the goodbye he wants to leave for the people who wrote alongside him, the people who shared the microphone with him, the people who listened, and the people who read his work. We are all so proud of Pat and all his accomplishments. While he's leaving a void in our lives and in the community that he so proudly represented, he's made his mark and his legacy lives on. To his audience he was known as "The Book," but to us he was a cherished member of our family. We love you, Pat. — The Caputo Family ——— A TRIBUTE TO A DETROIT LEGEND "I haven't said much publicly since January because I haven't known what to say," he told us. So we'll start where he started. "When I came out of college I had nothing on my resume. I couldn't type. In journalism class I never wrote anything anyone would want to read." The only useful thing he had, he said, was an idea he'd picked up from a textbook somewhere — that "nobody wanted to be a state capital correspondent, so the lane was wide open if you'd take it." That became the only theory he ever had about this business: "Take the job nobody else wants. Out-work them on the part nobody else cares about." A professor took pity on him and got him a tryout in Three Rivers, an hour and a half west of Kalamazoo, and he learned the trade there by photographing the Pet of the Week with a Sears camera. The job didn't last long. The boss called him in one day, he remembered, and explained, kindly, that "I was just horrible." Within a few weeks he had talked his way into answering phones at the Oakland Press sports desk, where he was so desperate to stick around he'd raise his hand for any game nobody else wanted to cover. "Hey, can I do this one? Can I do that one?" They almost always said yes, he said, because nobody else was going to drive to Lapeer on a Friday night in November to see two 4-and-5 teams play. He still couldn't type. Tom Kowalski — who half of his audience grew up listening to and the other half grew up reading — walked into the office one graveyard shift in the spring with his Taco Bell, watched Pat try to figure out a list of high-school track times one finger at a time, and announced to the room: "This guy has got some coordination problems." Pat, telling the story, said Kowalski wasn't wrong. After nine months they hired him full-time to cover high schools. "I was twenty-four years old, and if you'd told me then that I'd get to cover sports and live in my one-bedroom apartment for the rest of my life, I would have been happy." He never had a grand plan that he would have such an amazing career. He had a fear, which is different. "I was scared every day that I was going to lose the job," he said, "so I worked it like I was going to lose it tomorrow." The writing didn't come easy either. People sometimes asked him how he got better at it, and the only honest answer, he said, was "a miracle." He wrote a lot. He asked people he respected to tell him what was wrong with what he'd written, and then he listened to the answers — the part, he noted, that many young writers skip. The awards came later. They were nice. They didn't change anything he knew about himself. His dad used to tell him and his brothers, "Never quit. Just keep coming." He didn't always live up to a lot of things, he said, but he did live up to that one. He got up every day and put the boots on. He didn't grade the day before he started it. If it was a thankless job, he did the thankless job. If it was a good day at the ballpark, he did that too. "I'd like to think I always did my very best," he told us. "And if I get to leave you with anything, let it be that. Whatever it is you're up to tomorrow, do your very best at it. My very best wasn't necessarily anybody else's best. But it was mine, and I gave it." There were things he never imagined as a kid from Michigan he'd ever get to see. "I got to watch games at the L.A. Coliseum and the Rose Bowl. That was a big deal for a kid growing up in Michigan," he said. He got to cover World Series and Super Bowls and Stanley Cup Finals and NBA Championships. He got a vote for the Heisman Trophy. He got a vote for the Baseball Hall of Fame. He took those last two seriously every year of his life, he said, because he knew what they meant. The people he got to know along the way are the part you can't put on a resume. He knew Sparky Anderson. He knew Bo Schembechler, who he said was a great man, and one he respected. Jim Leyland was one of a kind and someone he really enjoyed. He got to know Tom Izzo back when he was an up-and-coming assistant nobody outside East Lansing was talking about yet. Bill Lajoie, the Tigers' general manager when he started covering them, opened the door for a young writer trying to do this job, and Pat said he never forgot it. Lajoie was a mentor to him. He once played nine holes of golf with Don Shula, he said, because his editor at the Oakland Press, Gary Gilbert, called and asked him if he wanted to. He told us about one of the coolest moments of his career — October of '06, in the press box at Comerica Park, watching Magglio Ordoñez hit one off Huston Street to send the Tigers to the World Series. The players came out onto the field with champagne bottles and started spraying the people in the seats. He sat up there with his notebook, he said, and remembered thinking, "boy, they were really proud." The radio gave him something the print column never could. It let him cover the teams with his audience instead of just for them. It let him hear what they thought, take a punch from a caller, give one back, and argue about Detroit sports the way Detroit sports are supposed to be argued about — out loud, every day, on the air, with anybody who picked up the phone. None of that, he said, happens without people. The producers. The engineers. The people whose names the audience never heard, whose hands kept the show on the air every day for two decades. The colleagues who sat across the table from him, the ones he argued with and agreed with and learned from — every one of them, he said, made him better. "I owe all of these people something I don't know how to pay back." The job — the actual job, the going-to-the-ballpark, going-to-the-press-box, sitting-at-the-microphone part of it — was, he said, one of the best parts of his life. Going to a place like Michigan State, when a kid like him had no business believing he'd ever set foot on a campus like that, was another. The family he has, who have loved him through every part of this, is the rest of it. He made his final social media post in late January. He read every comment people sent him on X and on Facebook, he told us. Every single one. He wanted us to know what they did: they reminded him, in his own words, that "I am blessed." A lot of good things came to him in this life. He had always been thankful for that, he said. He had always been appreciative. He's not the guy you build a statue to. He never was. He was the guy who answered the phones, said yes to whatever game came up, learned to type one finger at a time, and somehow forty-plus years went by. "I just got lucky," he said. "I always have been." In these last months he has been surrounded by family who love him, and who he loves right back. They matter more to him, he said, than any of the rest of it. ——— A NOTE FROM THE AUTHOR My Uncle Pat and I shared a special bond. He was my godfather. I was the best man at his wedding. We are both proud Michigan State alums. But truth be told, the bond we shared most closely was the same one he shared with his followers — sports. They were at the core of every conversation. Growing up, we played trivia games — quizzing each other on prospects' high schools, colleges, or where they ranked in Baseball America. Even at Christmas when he was sick, we were playing the game of naming the Tigers' first-round draft picks from the late '80s through last year. In true form, "The Book" got every single one right. I'm going to miss those conversations so very much. — Rob Caputo ——— The Caputo family extend their heartfelt gratitude to everyone who supported Pat throughout his career and during his illness. Thank you so very, very much. God bless. @971theticketxyt @bobwojnowski @stoney16 @MitchAlbom @berniesmilovitz @tigers @Lions @DetroitPistons @RedWingsFeed @MSU_Athletics @MSU_Football @MSU_Basketball @FOX2News @KenKalDRW @TheOaklandPress @dennisfithian @DanMillerFox2 @freep @detroitnews @matthewbmowery @TonyPaul1984
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Matt Charboneau retweeted
Today May 7th we lost Pat to cancer. Pat was surrounded by his family. Thank you for all your support. The Caputo family
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Make it make sense 🤦‍♂️
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The pro-Nebraska crowd in Oklahoma City losing its mind at every call/non-call feels like any Iowa game at Carver-Hawkeye
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Ok, the second the play by play guy called game, things have been unraveling
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Hard to imagine being so careless with the ball won’t come back to haunt Michigan State. So many wasted possessions.
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Matt Charboneau retweeted
Multiple high major coaches are pointing out the fallacy in the argument of High Point coach Flynn Clayman that P5 teams refuse to play top mid-majors. He should look closer to home to see who really doesn’t want to play those teams. sportingnews.com/us/ncaa-bas…
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Matt Charboneau retweeted
I am so thankful for 15 years at @WXYZDetroit. I am really excited for what's next in my hometown, continuing to connect with so many in this amazing community
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Madness 🤯
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Matt Charboneau retweeted
Really cool moment tonight postgame after VCU upset UNC. VCU head coach Phil Martelli Jr. made a point to shoutout the student reporters that made the trip. Lots of great stuff this time of year, but this was a really awesome, genuine exchange.
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Bold! They wanted bold! 🤷‍♂️
OG (@mattcharboneau) tapping in with some predictions for @detroitnews. Spartan fans will probably like a couple of these, I'd bet. Read 'em here: detroitnews.com/story/sports…
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This rivalry is so exhausting
Izzo 15th, 2026. Sparty, originally thought to be a 2 seed, gets a 3 and is in the same bracket with Duke, UCONN and the legendary Rick Pitino. See, that’s how it’s done people. lol
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A tradition unlike any other
Lol I knew they'd put MSU in Duke's region
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Some years the BTT matters, some it doesn’t 🤷‍♂️ … or, more accurately, to some teams it does and some it doesn’t
Michigan State's men's basketball team is the 3 seed in the East Region, opening Thursday against 14-seed North Dakota State in Buffalo. This region's top seed is Duke and goes through Washington, D.C.
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Matt Charboneau retweeted
Michigan State's men's basketball team is the 3 seed in the East Region, opening Thursday against 14-seed North Dakota State in Buffalo. This region's top seed is Duke and goes through Washington, D.C.
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Matt Charboneau retweeted
On the latest episode of the #Tigers Today: I'm joined by @EmilyCWaldon, who opens up about her latest battle with cancer, and what the baseball community's support has meant to her. Also, lots of prospects talk. * Apple: podcasts.apple.com/us/podcas… * Spotify: open.spotify.com/episode/7c1…
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The hot takes are sizzling … time will tell.
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Matt Charboneau retweeted
Hundreds of people are dead. Little girls are dead. Six Americans are dead. Others are risking their lives. Millions across the Middle East are terrified. It's not a video game. It's not a meme. It's not another chance to troll the libs. It's fucking war.
JUSTICE THE AMERICAN WAY. 🇺🇸🔥
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