Search Type
  • All
  • Subject
  • Title
  • Author
  • Publisher
  • Series Title
Search Title

Download

This I Believe the Living Philosophies of One Hundred Thoughtful Men and Women in All Walks of Life

This I Believe the Living Philosophies of One Hundred Thoughtful Men and Women in All Walks of Life( )
Author: Murrow, Edward R.
ISBN:978-0-343-29106-8
Publication Date:Oct 2018
Publisher:Creative Media Partners, LLC
Book Format:Paperback
List Price:USD $17.95
Book Details
Pages:228
Physical Dimensions (W X L X H):6.14 x 9.21 x 0.48 Inches
Book Weight:0.72 Pounds
Author Biography
Murrow, Edward R. (Author)
Edward R. Murrow's achievements as a pioneer of journalism in the new media of radio and television continue to resonate in broadcasting today. His legacy is particularly relevant to the debate within the television industry between those who advocate making news broadcasts entertaining and those who want to uphold the values of serious journalism.

Murrow was born in Greensboro, North Carolina, and grew up in Washington state. His youthful travel for the National Student Foundation gave him an internationalist outlook. He joined CBS in 1935, and four years later was working in London as European news chief when World War II broke out. "I'm standing on a rooftop looking out over London. . . ." So began Murrow's first live radio coverage of the London Blitz. His dramatic and descriptive nightly broadcasts "laid the dead of London at our doors," as poet Archibald MacLeish (see Vol. 1) said at a dinner honoring the 33-year-old Murrow when he returned to America a star in late 1941.

Murrow had an admiring boss, William S. Paley, the founder of the Columbia Broadcasting System (CBS). Together they made CBS the best news broadcaster in America. Murrow's See it Now television broadcasts brought important events into the living rooms of America. On one memorable occasion in 1954, he attacked Joseph McCarthy, the Senate demagogue who was exploiting the postwar fear of Communist subversives in high places.

Murrow's dark good looks framed in cigarette smoke and his evocative phrasing made him a success in the hearts as well as the minds of his viewers. Murrow the dignified newsman on See it Now represented the serious side of broadcast journalism. But Murrow the star was the popular host of Person to Person, a live interview show featuring celebrities in their homes---with a two-way hookup between him and his subject.

As the audience for network television expanded, so did profits, and Paley and Murrow grew apart. In a speech to broadcast journalists



Rate this title:

Select your rating below then click 'submit'.






I do not wish to rate this title.