• Skip to main content
  • Skip to secondary menu
  • Skip to primary sidebar
  • Skip to footer

Dick Yarbrough

Four-time winner of the Georgia Press Association's Best Humor Column

  • Home
  • Biography
  • Columns
    • 2025 Columns
    • Column Archives
      • 2024 Columns
      • 2023 Columns
      • 2022 Columns
      • 2021 Columns
      • 2020 Columns
      • 2019 Columns
      • 2018 Columns
      • 2017 Columns
      • 2016 Columns
      • 2015 Columns
      • 2014 Columns
      • 2013 Columns
      • 2012 Columns
      • 2011 Columns
      • 2010 Columns
      • 2009 Columns
      • 2008 Columns
      • 2007 Columns
      • 2006 Columns
      • 2005 Columns
      • 2004 Columns
      • 2003 Columns
      • 2002 Columns
      • 2001 Columns
      • 2000 Columns
      • Iraq Columns
      • Letters To My Grandsons
      • Zack Columns
  • Opinion
    • Dicktations
  • Publications
    • Books
    • Newspapers
  • Art
  • Reader Comments
  • News
  • Philanthropy
    • Grady College of Journalism
  • Email

August 24, 2015: Gov. Deal’s Communications Director Ready to Try it on His Own

September 3, 2015 by webmaster Leave a Comment

Unless you are one of the intrepid public servants we keep sending back to the Gold Dome to get you out of our hair, or a lizard-loafered lobbyist lurking around the capitol with free lunch coupons or members of the news media with coffee stains on their shirts and cynicism in their hearts, the name Brian Robinson may be unfamiliar to you.

For four-and-half years, Robinson has served as Gov. Nathan Deal’s communications director. Now, he has decided it is time to go out and start life anew in his own firm, Robinson Republic, where he plans to provide political guidance for corporate clients and to do some campaign work as well. “This is an opportunity to prove to myself that I can make it on my own,” he says. There is no question that he has been battle-tested.

Being the communications director for a governor – any governor – is to walk a high wire without a net. “Gov. Deal has an audience of 10 million people,” Robinson says, “and what he says matters. Everything he does is news.” That can be good or bad depending on what the news is but, regardless, it has been Robinson’s job to see the governor’s message gets through to the public as unfiltered as possible. Not always an easy job. “Fortunately, the governor is comfortable dealing with the media,” he says.

Chris Riley, Gov. Deal’s chief of staff says, “Brian Robinson is fiercely loyal and a guy you want in the foxhole with you when things get tough.” Robinson’s most lethal weapon has been his tart tongue. He has been known to scald the hide off those who would challenge his boss, sometimes to the discomfort of the governor and those in his inner circle.

This is damning with faint praise but one reason I like Brian Robinson is because he reminds me of – well – a younger me. Like Robinson, I have operated my own political consulting firm. Like Robinson, I have dealt with media frenzies in high-profile environments – he with Nathan Deal’s ethics issues during the 2010 gubernatorial campaign and the state’s handling of the ice storms in 2014 and me with the public second-guessing over the planning for the 1996 Centennial Olympic Games and the media hysteria after the Olympic Park bombing. Anybody remember the character assassination of poor Richard Jewell?

Like Robinson, I have made a few over-the-top comments in the heat of battle.

After one of our frequent dustups with then-Atlanta Mayor Bill Campbell, who was more of a hindrance than help in the staging of 1996 Games, I was quoted as saying Campbell “could make a racial issue out of a lima bean.” For the longest, I feared I would be sued for libel by a bunch of lima beans but I think they enjoyed seeing their name in the Washington Post.

My favorite Robinson retort came when gadfly filmmaker Michael Moore demanded his memoir be pulled from all the bookstores in Georgia and vowed to donate royalties to “help defeat the racists and killers” that had executed convicted cop-killer Troy Anthony Davis in 2011. Said Robinson, “We think it’s cute that he thinks anyone in Georgia would buy his book, but if any Georgian does, I’m happy to double the royalties and buy a pack of gum for a charity of Michael Moore’s choice.”

Even a pompous legend-in-his-own-mind like Moore must have quickly figured out it would be wise to let that one pass and not get into a war of words with Brian Robinson. He would have ended up just so much verbal roadkill.

If some have raised their eyebrows at a few of Robinson’s barbs, no one has ever questioned his loyalty and his willingness to aggressively defend his boss against the political slings and arrows aimed at him. I admire that. I was fiercely loyal – and still am – to Billy Payne, ACOG’s CEO.

When it was announced in 1993 that Sydney would get the 2000 Olympic Games, their CEO asked Payne for some staffing advice. Payne said, “The first thing you do is get you a mean S.O.B. to look out for you.” Pointing over his shoulder at me, he said, “That’s mine.”

I once told that story to Gov. Deal who laughed and said, “I guess I have one, too.” He has and a good one. Now, after four-and-a-half years of walking the political high wire for the governor, Brian Robinson is going to try walking it on his own. I wish him well.

Filed Under: 2015 Columns, Columns

Reader Interactions

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Primary Sidebar

Most Recent Column

May 25, 2025: Georgia Cities Get High Marks In Recent Surveys

Dick’s Artwork

Column Archives

Footer

Dicktations: Here’s What I’m Thinking

State Sen.Steve Gooch, R-Dahlonega, has announced he is running for lieutenant governor.  Gooch is the guy who said that approving permits to strip-mine the Okefenokee for titanium dioxide to manufacture, among other things, toothpaste whitener is not a legislative matter.  It is up to the bureaucrats to decide. This, despite overwhelming opposition from Georgians across the state.  File that away and remember it when it comes time to vote.  I know I will. … [Read More...] about A long memory

Reader Comments

Yarbrough received over 1,000 email responses last year – both positive and negative. Though most of the emails he receives support his viewpoints, one thing is for sure: Dick Yarbrough’s column speaks to people and they respond. Here is a sampling of email responses Yarbrough has received in the past:

  • Thanks for writing what we all are thinking.
  • I am annoyed by anybody who presumes to know what Georgians think.  And that, sir, includes you.

Read more comments

Latest News

July 2021: Dick's NEW Edition of his popular book 'And They Call Them Games' -- a look back at the 1996 Olympics Just in time for the 25th anniversary of the Olympic games in Atlanta, Dick's book has been re-released and is available now on Amazon.  If you're a fan of Dick, or the Olympics -- or both! -- you won't want to miss this! > Follow this link to order.   February 2020:  Grady-Yarbrough Fellows Announced for Spring … Read more... about News

Copyright © 2025 · Magazine Pro on Genesis Framework · WordPress · Log in