My folks moved to Coral Springs when I was in college, so I delivered the Fort Lauderdale News (and weekend Sun-Sentinel) during summer breaks. I had the extreme northwest route, which included Parkland and five mobile home parks. Back then, Holmberg Road was a two-lane road with about two dozen houses on it. Even in 1977, the Sun-Sentinel was a huge paper on Sundays. We'd get main sections and inserts by the bundle, and usually they'd be in 40 papers to the bundle. On Sundays, they'd be in 8s and 12s. My brother and I would have to make two trips because all 288 Sunday papers wouldn't fit in the back of the AMC Hornet.
After graduation, I couldn't find a radio job, so called up my former route supervisor, and he said the Sun-Sentinel was looking for an sports agate clerk. So I got in at the ground floor just before things really got going there, at $5.50 an hour which was the same pay for a down route carrier but way easier on the car.
The office had CRTs, which was a step up from my time at the Contra Costa Times, which was still scanning from IBM Selectrics into computerized copy. However, I learned quickly what a union shop was when I went to paste up to check on some of the agate I had sent, put my hand on the work table and a guy threw a knife between my fingers and told me the next time he'd file a grievance. From then on, I learned to ask nicely if I could touch the copy.
I also remember someone handing me the phone one busy fall Saturday night and suddenly taking dictation (this was before Trash 80s) from an inebriated Craig Barnes in Tallahassee at an FSU football game. He had a strong Southern accent and talked way faster than I could type, and was getting increasingly irritated at my incompetence. So I tried my best to summarize as he went, but I'm certain when he got back and read the story, he wondered which of us was drunkest.
I also remember getting sent out for Buffalo wings one Saturday night and driving about 12 miles on Commercial Blvd. looking for a hole-in-the-wall place and thinking, "I graduated with a bachelor's degree to be a go-fer?" I quit not long after that and eventually got my own career going, but have wondered had I stuck it out, I might have had a much different career path.