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Obituary: MSP Magazine publisher Burt Cohen, 94-and-a-half, was humble, self-aware and unfailingly witty

Obituary: MSP Magazine publisher Burt Cohen, 94-and-a-half, was humble, self-aware and unfailingly witty

Yahoo14-05-2025
Reading Burt Cohen's obituary — which he wrote himself, before he died May 10, aged 94 and a half — gives you a pretty good sense of the guy.
'He was given plenty of advance notice of his imminent death, but his lifelong habit of procrastination meant he didn't write this obituary until pretty much the last minute, thereby sacrificing fact checking, proofreading and style,' he wrote. 'Readers please note.'
This, said his son Jeff Cohen, is indeed what Burt Cohen was like when he wasn't behind the typewriter, too. (Because, yes, he wrote nearly everything on a typewriter including, famously, his Twitter posts.)
'He was able to have serious, reflective conversations, but always maintained a wry sense of humor,' Jeff Cohen said. 'When he was engaged with you, he was really there.'
Cohen was the founding publisher of Minneapolis-St. Paul Magazine as it exists today, having taken over a fledgling publication in 1978 and quickly working to build its reputation and make it profitable and sustainable. Later, he also helped launch Twin Cities Business as its founding publisher. And even after retiring, he continued writing a monthly column (print only, of course) in Minneapolis-St. Paul Magazine that was, like his obituary, both kind-hearted and witty.
Besides these columns, he also wrote a lot of thank-you notes, Jeff Cohen said. Whether you were a receptionist or the leader of a company, Burt Cohen recognized your personhood and appreciated what you brought to the table, Jeff Cohen said.
'He was big in terms of writing hand-written thank-you notes,' Jeff Cohen said. 'Just that spirit of appreciation, whether it was (for) a little thing or not. And in that moment of appreciation, there's a relationship, however brief, that's established, and a sense of connection. There's a pleasure in knowing the people in your community who you interact with.'
(And, to be clear, Burt Cohen also appreciated what you brought to the table in a literal sense: He loved food and eating with people, Jeff Cohen said; Burt Cohen and his wife, Rusty, threw a great dinner party, and for just the family, Burt Cohen would make favorites like fried salami sandwiches.)
In his self-penned obituary, Cohen notes that he 'died not of flabbiness, as had been widely predicted, but of advanced aortic stenosis, after choosing to reject the surgical procedure that would have corrected the problem,' which he compared to putting new tires on an old car.
'Almost every other body part or function was deteriorating at an accelerating rate and wouldn't have supported new tires for very long,' Cohen quotes himself as saying, in a self-aware, almost satirical style. 'The two exceptions were my appendix and my hair follicles, which were still performing well, and I feel bad they had to go with the rest.'
This, too, was classic Burt Cohen, Jeff Cohen said.
'He was really good at dealing with reality, and accepting what is,' Jeff Cohen said. 'That's another legacy I take from him — rather than what we wish would be, accepting what is.'
Burt Cohen was born Nov. 13, 1930, in Minneapolis. He was preceded in death by his wife of 70 years, known as Rusty, who died in 2023. He is survived by three children, Michael, Jeffery and Susan; two grandchildren and two great-grandchildren; and, per Burt Cohen's own reckoning, 'despite his off-putting personality, by so many, so many, so many precious friends.'
Memorial services are at 11 a.m. Thursday, May 15, at Temple Israel (2323 Fremont Ave. S., Minneapolis), with shiva at 7 p.m.
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Is he worried that AI is coming for his job one day? "I hope it doesn't take it until my kids get through college!" Sign in to access your portfolio

Analysis-Just in time? Manufacturers turn to AI to weather tariff storm
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"AI is really a powerful enabler for supply chain resilience, but it's not a silver bullet," says Minna Aila, communications chief at Finnish crane-maker Konecranes and member of a business board that advises the OECD on issues including supply chain resilience. "I'm still looking forward to the day when AI can predict terrorist attacks that are at sea, for instance." Konecranes' logistics partners are deploying AI on more mundane data, like weather forecasts. The company makes port cranes that are up to 106 metres (348 ft) high when assembled. When shipping them, AI marries weather forecasts with data like bridge heights to optimise the route. "To ship those across oceans, you do have to take into consideration weather," Aila says. RISING COSTS By keeping inventories low, firms can bolster profit margins that are under pressure from rising costs. Every component or finished product sitting on a shelf is capital tied up, incurring finance and storage costs and at risk of obsolescence. 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Is he worried that AI is coming for his job one day? "I hope it doesn't take it until my kids get through college!" Error in retrieving data Sign in to access your portfolio Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data

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