The shock of
losing his position was exacerbated soon after at a local mall.
"I was in a consumer electronics store, and passed by one of those
walls filled with televisions. The
theme music for Pulse Plus! came on, and I had a visceral reaction.
I broke out in a sweat. 'That's
my theme music, and I'm not in the studio!'
I was very much shaken by that and realized I'd become some sort of
programmed, Pavlovian dog. I
suddenly felt that my life had become somewhat distorted.
The only thing I was interested in was being a TV anchorman.
There really wasn't any other aspect to my life…making friends…having
a girlfriend." In fact,
Shuster had recently met a young woman at an art show and was about to embark on the first
serious relationship of his life. But
he couldn't quite shake the anchorman DNA out of his blood so fast.
"I
thought immediately of Dan Rather's invitation to 'stay in touch.' I phoned him
in New York and he was very welcoming. Dan
was in a rush when I called and he asked me to write him, which I did. He responded in writing, encouraging
me to go to St. Louis, Houston, or Detroit, where he had weak lead-ins.
He offered to contact the news directors if I decided to try."
Scott lets his hair down and takes some time off
A $30,000
cushion from profitable stock market investments allowed Shuster the time to
kick back, travel, and 'get a life.' "There
was a tremendous relief in not wanting to be a local TV anchorman anymore,"
Shuster explains. "I felt that
the job didn't hold any more surprises for me.
Dan Rather didn't take that news well.
He said 'Nobody's going to take you seriously anymore if you leave the
air like that.' He's known as the hardest working guy in television, but I
didn't get it…why would anybody criticize me for taking a few months
off?" Scott and his girlfriend
traveled to Mexico four times, meandered around the south, and got a dog.
For the first time since the age of 15, he enjoyed 18 months of not
having to work.
It was 1975, and Shuster was only 26 years old.