Patrick Lafayette: The measure of a man

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  • Date: Sun, 23 Sep 2007 21:00:55 -0400

Jamaica Gleaner
Sunday, September 16, 2007

Patrick Lafayette: The measure of a man

By Avia Collinder, Outlook Writer

Caption: Patrick Lafayette with wife, journalist and counsellor Indi 
Mclymont-Lafayette, daughter Leila and son Djvan. - contributed 

A chat with broadcaster Patrick Lafayette is a rollicking ride, a tour de force 
of delight and a conversation layered with laughter. Lafayette seizes every 
opportunity to poke fun at all and sundry, but also, always, he speaks from the 
heart.

Lafayette's internal life, from the way he tells it, is so rich with reward 
that one envies him the new vision acquired since he lost sight in both his 
eyes.

A crack to the skull during a game of stick ball at age 11 could have been the 
beginning of sorrows if a male with less mettle was the recipient of that blow.

By age 16, a diving accident led to a detached retina and complete blindness, 
but by then he was well on his way to creating for himself another way to look 
at life.

The boy who has always loved the radio was a teen curfewed to the precincts of 
home because of his lack of sight. The radio, when at home, was his primary 
means of entertainment.

calling radio stations

Patrick spent his time speed dialling on the old-style rotary telephone with 
joyful abandon, calling Fae Ellington and Marie Garth. The teenager was banned 
from radio (he was winning all the competitions) on four occasions, each time 
using four different names and his gift of mimicry and impersonation to 
dominate these afternoon radio shows.

Later he was to use this gift of mimicry to produce, single-handedly, the 
three-part docu-drama Mas Joe - The Christmas Adventure, which is still 
available on CD.

Today, known for his velvet smooth and undeniably sexy voice, the broadcast 
announcer, who has been in the business for 23 years, hosts his own weekday 
show, Kool Rhythms, which airs on KOOL 97 FM from 1:00-5:00 p.m.

The 46-year-old also produces - collaborating with several valued radio 
colleagues - audio biographies which chronicle the history of the Jamaican 
music and which have been aired to significant acclaim abroad.

Lafayette produced his audio features for XM satellite radio, the British 
Broadcasting Corporation (BBC), Choice FM in London, as well as for 
distribution to over 50 stations in the United States and Europe.

reason for success

His disability, Patrick says, initiated for him from the teen years a lifelong 
study in human nature and how to relate to people. It's his best-kept secret 
and the reason for his success.

"I take a little more time out to listen to people. You pay more attention to 
things," he explains.

Any hope that he could see again was summarily squelched soon after his 
blindness. His parents had asked his eldest brother, Cornell, then doing 
medicine at the University of the West Indies, to leave school and take Patrick 
to the United States to see what could be done about his eyes. The brothers 
departed, but nothing was found to reverse his condition.

While there, the teenager was fully rehabilitated and instructed in the 
survival skills of the blind.

Patrick and Cornell remained in the States where Patrick attended Marist 
College, Poughkeepsie, New York, between 1980-84, completing a B.A. in mass 
communication.

Lafayette says he had wanted a career in medicine. Blindness put paid to that, 
but he was to discover that it was no hindrance to his love of the radio and 
all things technical.

In New York, he discovered audio books and read voraciously, sometimes as many 
as 56 each month, popping novels in and out of his player, experiencing a world 
in which the imagination reigned supreme.

His blindness, he said, also had the effect of exponentially increasing his 
reading. Made to feel exquisite pain while the Internet lines were knocked out 
by Hurricane Dean, a blackout in communication is something he would rather not 
experience again.

read the classics

On the Internet, Patrick also eviscerated the Gutenberg Library, a free 
storehouse of knowledge with information from Aristotle to Zulu kings. "I have 
gone through the top 1,000 classics of literature, from Treasure Island through 
Uncle Tom's Cabin to the Greek classics and French literature," he says.

Later he was to also access and fully enjoy the Library of Congress with its 
extensive data base.

JAWS (Job Access with Speech - the voice to speech technology which enables the 
sight-impaired to read and communicate with high levels of efficiency), he 
said, has changed his life. It empowered him to communicate with efficiency 
equalling any sighted worker.

Using this technology since 1989, he brought it back to Jamaica and trained 
many individuals who have subsequently succeeded as visually impaired 
professionals.

It was in 1984 that, fresh from finishing his communication degree at Marist 
College in Poughkeepsie, New York, Patrick first returned to Jamaica to start 
work at Capital Stereo (the name was later changed to FAME FM).

Lafayette launched his broadcasting career as an announcer/engineer/producer 
with such duties as announcing radio programmes, station breaks, commercials 
and public service announcements.

He also commented on musical selections; conducted interviews and moderated 
panel discussions of interest to audience; observing indicators and adjusted 
controls to maintain constant sound modulation, cueing sports and news 
announcers; maintaining a log of programmes transmitted; and selecting 
recording to be played based on programme speciality.

Wife Indi Mclymont-Lafayette, journalist and counselling psychologist, who 
first met her husband as a production assistant at FAME in 1997, notes that 
soon after working with Patrick one quickly forgets that he is blind.

On many occasions when problems arise with equipment he is often only one of 
several engineers present, he is the one called to troubleshoot.

In 1989 he moved on to KLAS radio, KLAS FM, in Mandeville, as 
announcer/engineer/producer, then Lafayette took a brief break from radio to 
pursue computer training and to reconsider his priorities.

A lover of computers, Lafayette worked at Communications Associates in Miami, 
Florida, between 1990-1992, where he analysed the computer needs of current and 
prospective clients.

creative director

He then went on to Mike Jarrett Communications in Kingston in 1992 where, as 
creative director, he oversaw copywriting; produced commercial jingles, 
infomercials and documentaries for radio and television.

Lafayette left Mike Jarrett to complete certification at Baruch College in 
Manhattan between 1992 and 1993, in WordPerfect and Lotus Applications.

This was the springboard, in 1994, for his engagement at Chuckles Resort in 
Negril as a senior computer analyst. There he established computer network; 
organised front office/back office reservations programme and instructed staff 
on the use of applications.

Although he had allowed a brief disenchantment with media to separate him from 
radio, by 1997 Patrick was back in its arms, returning to Fame FM radio.

At the same time, he was also working at the Abilities Foundation in Kingston 
where he was information technology instructor, instructing students with 
combined disabilities in the use of computer applications.

Lafayette was one of the founding persons at Kool 97FM in 2001, where he hosted 
a daily show and worked as operations coordinator. In 2004, however, he acted 
as station manager until 2005 before resigning from the post to start his own 
production company, Twin Audio Network. 

freelance broadcaster

Today, the broadcaster is s a freelancer. His show on Kool 97 FM features a 
delicious riveting blend, including reggae, Latin and gospel - as the spirit 
moves.

"I have had the experience where a track was about to come to an end and I just 
reached into my pack for another disc and it was the perfect fit," he reflects.

He has refined his 'sensing' abilities to a high art.

Indi states that her husband can describe the features of individuals when they 
speak. Quizzed about this ability Patrick simply states: "God is great, he has 
taken one and given back a thousand."

He labels discs, he notes, in Braille, but has no need to list every track. He 
knows them all by heart. His memory, though unassisted by sight, is 
photographic.

"If you tell me a list of 50 numbers now, in 50 years you can come back to me 
and I will repeat them to you."

Indi giggles at this boastful claim, but she agrees that her husband is an 
astonishing man who, she says, she fell in love with because of his compassion 
for his listeners.

Patrick comments: "My tutor in radio at Marist, an extraordinary man, told us 
that ego had no place on radio. Radio is about people. It's not about you."

He says he met and married Indi (she made him wait for three years) at a time 
when he was jaded about relationships. "Indi was different," Patrick recalls. 
He was impressed by her marked intelligence. "She was also a bit old-fashioned 
and deeply spiritual." According to Lafayette, while he waited for his 
bride-to-be, he received only pecks on the cheek.

The couple are now parents of six-year-old Leila and five-year-old Djvan, and 
celebrated seven years of marriage and 10 years of togetherness in August of 
this year.

Indi states that Lafayette taught her to cook some dishes, but she has had to 
lay down the law about cleaning up after sorties into the kitchen.

research together

The couple is also a working pair, doing research together for his audio 
biographies and developing counselling programmes to reclaim the lives of 
Jamaicans, old and young alike, who feel alienated.

Patrick, along with Indi, who is currently the administrative manager and 
editor for the PANOS Institute, work with children who are affected by HIV/AIDS.

"We need to do something for these children," Lafayette states, noting that 
sometimes all they need is a "hug".

Lafayette is also challenging the telecoms sector to remove the charge for SMS 
text messaging for the deaf, as this is the only way they can communicate.

Indi Mclymont-Lafayette says that as a couple, they would also like to extend 
their counselling services to couples in mixed marriages, many of whom are 
pressured by society for their "strange" choice of partner.

For Patrick, prejudice is a spectre long laid to rest. He is primarily 
concerned, he says, about getting rid of certain ideas Jamaicans have about 
growing children and also in developingpersonal self-esteem in everyone who 
hears him.

"My greatest yearning is for Jamaica and Jamaicans to realise the great gifts 
we possess. We are a blessed and gifted people. This refers not only to talent 
but also to bonding and unity. If we had this unity we would see the strength 
that we possess."

Lafayette's youngest listener recently celebrated her second birthday, calling 
his show every week to babble happily to 'Patick'. He babbles right back.

The broadcaster's melodious voice, his wicked wit and his intuitive style in 
sharing music enthrals listeners and have also won for him a dedicated 
following who very willingly and very quickly forget that he is blind.

By all indications, Lafayette is no less dedicated to them, collecting 'sons 
and daughters' whom he keeps as 'mentees' as long as they need to be.

In addition to training several noted radio personalities, Lafayette has also 
mentored young men in the computer field (he is a computer professional), 
prevented a number of suicides and saved numerous marriages.

The broadcaster concludes, "I was given a break, so my thing in life is to give 
another guy a break. If you even affect one person, the ripple effect from that 
is a great thing." 


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