We flew secretly from Costa Rica over jungle treetops to parlay with then-Nicaraguan rebel, Daniel Ortega. Photo: Tom Belford

I’ve had four outstanding heroes in my working life.

One of them, sailing champion and CNN founder Ted Turner, died this past week at age 87. 

For a lucky six years, I had the enormous privilege of working with Ted, launching his first philanthropic venture (of many to come), a nonprofit created to produce television documentaries on global issues he considered critical – the environment, arms control and population growth.

My first meeting with Ted was a high point in my life. He invited me to his Atlanta headquarters because I had sent him a proposal for this venture. After a couple of hours of conversation, he said let’s do it, picked up the phone and told his chief executive, “I’m sending a guy down, give him $1 million”, hired me to run it, and then drove me to the airport.

As I got out of his car in shock, Ted said, “Quite a day, huh? Bet you didn’t expect that.”

After that I enjoyed (mostly) a book’s worth of ‘quite a days’ with Ted, many of them unexpected. This would be true of everyone who worked with Ted.

He had a motto that described him to a T – “Lead, follow or get out of the way” – variously ascribed to Revolutionary war patriot Tom Paine and to WWII’s General George Patton. Ted didn’t do too much following, and he never got out of the way.

This week’s accounts of Ted’s life have focused on his television and sporting achievements. Less so on his ‘do good’ activities and commitments, which became more and more significant as his fortune grew, culminating in a $1 billion donation to the United Nations … a deliberate (and successful) prod to shame other billionaires to donate their wealth at scale. Alas, I worked with him when one million was a heap!

A man of enormous contradictions, Ted could dish out verbal abuse that would make a marine drill sergeant crumble, flirt seriously with every passing girl on a walk down Park Avenue, or weep watching a nature documentary. In equal measure, it was all Ted.

Whatever his personal ‘idiosyncrasies’, Ted Turner should be remembered for his steadfast determination to the end to make the world a better place.

Unstoppable. Unprogrammable. Unforgettable!

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1 Comment

  1. Thanks for sharing this side of Ted Turner. He was a great philanthropist.
    The stories you must have!

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