Stop! Don’t hit that back button just yet. If jefftheotherone.com is not the website you intended to visit, you may still be in the right place … sort of.
My name is Jeff Johnson, I’m a broadcaster, journalist, producer, editor, media manager and content creator. I’m also a web developer/designer. Or, at least, I was for more than 25 years. During that time, I built more than 150 websites, most of them using the WordPress content management system. The chances are really good that if you’re reading this now, you were trying to visit one of those pages. So, what happened?
Have you ever heard the saying, “Somethin’s gotta give?”
In 2018, I was diagnosed with viral throat cancer. Though I survived treatment and am currently cancer free, war … er, I mean, cancer treatment is hell. I have some pretty severe aftereffects from radiation and chemotherapy that will be with me for the rest of my life.
You find out what really matters
The OTHER Jeff Johnson
when you only have enough strength
to do what really matters.
So, near the end of 2020 – or, as we like to call it, “the year of the ‘rona” – I decided to shut down most of my personal websites and focus on what really matters: my faith, my family, my career and giving people a hard time for not using the Oxford comma when they should.
Oh, yeah … and my inspirational speaking. That is my vehicle for sharing my story of overcoming a disabling injury in my young adulthood, surviving throat cancer later in life, and discovering at age 55 that I’ve been living with – and unknowingly having to constantly overcome the challenges posed by having an Autism Spectrum Condition commonly referred to as Asperger’s Syndrome. But, enough about me.
What about what you were seeking online?
The domain name you entered or clicked a link for may be for sale. If you’re interested, visit my Afternic listings here.
Otherwise, welcome to my new and (currently) only website. Feel free to look around, pull up a chair, read a bit and ask yourself, “Why does a guy who claims to be ‘an ardent defender of the Oxford comma’ not always use it?”
You’ll be glad you did!