Remembering Jack Calfee

by Sam Kazman on February 18, 2011 · 1 comment

in Health and Illness, Precaution & Risk, Regulation

The sad news of Jack Calfee’s death came out of the blue yesterday morning.

I first met Jack about two decades ago. FDA reform had not yet become a hot topic, but it soon would be, and then several years later it would go into reverse after the drug recall overreactions, and now it’s emerging again as a serious issue. Through it all, I found Jack’s writing and advice to be invariably useful. The same was true of his older work on tobacco and advertising regulation, which I continue to use to this day. And because Jack himself was so invariably cheerful and personable, I never hesitated to pester him with out-of-the-blue requests for information that I figured he’d have at his fingertips. And usually he did.

His death is a terrible loss. I’m glad to have known him, and I know I’ll keep using his work — even if, sadly, I won’t be using his phone number.

Image credit: dellacalfee’s flickr photostream.

Fran Smith February 22, 2011 at 6:31 am

You're right, Sam. His death is a great loss. His seminal book "Fear of Persuasion" is one of the best studies on advertising's benefits for consumers. http://www.aei.org/book/80

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