Back at the newspaper as a features writer, he developed his own brand of early stunt journalism, using his press badge as an excuse to try everything from flying in a supersonic Voodoo jet to travelling via submarine for a NATO training exercise. In 1981 Lees entered himself in a demolition derby, and won his very first event – that’s where Nick Danger was born. He also worked for a time as a news editor, but, as Lees puts it, “I wasn’t suitable for desk material.”
Born in Glasgow in 1942, and raised in London, Lees landed his first job out of school with a news agency based out of Heathrow Airport. He interviewed everybody from Elizabeth Taylor to the Beatles (twice). But, to broaden his horizons, Lees moved to Montreal in 1967 and later to Toronto, where he stayed with future CBC television reporter Brian Stewart, and hung out poolside with a young Conrad Black.
The adventures continued when he arrived in Edmonton. Lees has done a lot of bold things in his life. (Just ask him about the time he took a three-week training course with the Canadian Airborne Regiment, and then performed 19 actual parachute jumps, all to get an official – and very cool-looking – maroon T-shirt.) The scariest encounter he’s ever had, though, was near the summit of the Yukon’s Mount Logan, the tallest mountain in Canada.
He’d been climbing for a few days with three friends. But, just before reaching the peak, they got caught by an intense blizzard and couldn’t go on. For four days the pair was stuck inside the tent. Food and fuel ran dangerously low. “We were down to eating scraps of cheese,” Lees says. Eventually the clouds parted, just a little, and they made a break for it. Altogether, they spent 23 nights on the mountain.
Yet in typical Lees fashion, he was as concerned with getting a good story out of the experience. “It was tougher than heck to go back into my office and say, ‘No, I didn’t get to the top,'” he says. “Because up until that time, Nick Danger had never failed at anything. My whole ego was on the line.”