What a thoughtful host KSTP-TV meteorologist Ken Barlow is, even when he is having a bad day.
As one of my Twitter followers, he knows how much I disdain Tom Brady and the Patricheats, so Barlow made an effort to conceal ownership of a helmet worn by the multi-Super Bowl winner. The helmet has a prominent place in Ken and Theresa Barlow's family room. The huge Patriots fan had a little fun with this in our video.
Barlow was feeling depressed when I dropped by to talk about his role in bringing awareness to mental health. He powered through and joked that instead of looking into the camera lens, "I'll look at you. Then I can see your 'Shut the hell up' eyes." That's a look that plays across the faces of TV news people when they have enough tape on a subject.
Barlow has bipolar 1 disorder and anxiety. "It's a roller coaster. I don't want [people] to think just because they see me on TV for those three minutes that my life is perfect, because it's not," he said. "It's really hard. ... I call us, when I go out and speak, 'bad asses' because we face challenges a lot of people can't even imagine."
Q: When you are having a bad day, what else do you do besides look at those nice notes people wrote to you when you spoke at Hosanna Church in Lakeville in 2012?
A: When I'm having a bad day, Theresa is my biggest supporter. She has seen this play before and she knows how it's going to end — it's going to end OK. She reminds me that tomorrow is going to be a better day. If I want to lie around because I'm depressed, I should just relax and not overthink it.
Q: Are Americans finally losing their discomfort with mental illness? When you opened up in 2012, that was unusual.
A: Some actors in Hollywood had said stuff about it, like Carrie Fisher, but a lot of people couldn't relate on the local level. When I came forward, a lot of people were surprised because they can watch me on TV and say, "I'd never know he was depressed or manic." I heard from literally thousands of people around here and Wisconsin saying, "I'm so glad you came forward; now I'm more comfortable." I think it's becoming more acceptable; it's just not there yet.