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A Reporter's Life by Walter Cronkite
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A Reporter's Life (original 1996; edition 1996)

by Walter Cronkite (Author)

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1,4361312,816 (3.77)10
Overview: He has been called the most trusted man in America. His 60-year-long journalistic career has spanned the Great Depression, several wars, and the extraordinary changes that have engulfed our nation over the last two-thirds of the 20th century. When Walter Cronkite advised his television audience in 1968 that the war in Vietnam could not be won, President Lyndon B. Johnson said: "If I've lost Cronkite, I've lost middle America." Now, at the age of eighty, Cronkite has written his life story-the personal and professional odyssey of the original "anchorman" for whom that very word was coined. As a witness to the crucial events of this century-first for the Houston Press, then for the United Press wire service, and finally for CBS in the fledgling medium of television-Cronkite set a standard for integrity, objectivity, enthusiasm, compassion, and insight that is difficult to surpass. He is an overflowing vessel of history, and a direct link with the people and places that have defined our nation and established its unique role in the world. But Walter Cronkite is also the man who loved to drive race cars "for the same reason that others do exhibitionist, dangerous stunts. It sets us apart from the average man; puts us, in our own minds, on a level just a little above the chap who doesn't race." He is also the man whose "softheartedness knows no rational bounds" and who always had "great problems at the theater, tearing up at the slightest offense against animals and people, notably the very old or the very young." He is the man who could barely refrain from spitting on the defendants at the Nuremberg Trials, and who could barely announce President Kennedy's assassination over the air for the sobs in his throat. Walter Cronkite helped launch the juggernaut of television, and tried to imbue it with his own respect for quality and ethics; but now he occupies a ringside seat during the decline of his profession and the ascent of the lowest common denominator. As he aptly observes, "They'd rewrite Exodus to include a car chase." Still, the American people know the difference. They know that for decades they have had the privilege of getting their news from a gentleman of the highest caliber. And they will immensely enjoy A Reporter's Life.… (more)
Member:jimcripps
Title:A Reporter's Life
Authors:Walter Cronkite (Author)
Info:Knopf (1996), Edition: 1st, 384 pages
Collections:Your library
Rating:
Tags:biography, reporting, reporter

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A Reporter's Life by Walter Cronkite (1996)

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Showing 1-5 of 13 (next | show all)
An inside look at the US from the 1920's to the end of the twentieth century, and great insight into what made Walter Cronkite the most trusted man in the country in the 1960's and 1970's. I thoroughly enjoyed this story and that surprised me, as I thought I would be reading another somewhat boring "look at me" type of book. His time overlaps my time, having grown up in the sixties, so I am sure I have a bias here. It is one of the few books of the thousands that I have read that I would revisit. Excellent writing style, very engaging. ( )
  Cantsaywhy | May 21, 2023 |
Interesting but often boring.
  kevindern | Apr 27, 2023 |
Cronkite the cocktail-party raconteur is well represented in this memoir, which is long on self-effacing stories about his radio and wire-service days.
  rynk | Jul 11, 2021 |
Walter Cronkite’s autobiography fascinates on at least two levels: 1. the storied life of a well-traveled and internationally acclaimed television journalist; 2. the prominent figures that played a part in his life due to his position and popularity.

One anecdote involves the discovery of shady dealings. He worked for a newspaper and made the mistake of changing something on a page he didn’t usually work on. The firestorm that followed shocked him, until he learned that the numbers on the page were communicating the winning numbers in the Mafia’s Numbers Racket.

Cronkite was a radio announcer and was famous for being able to fill in details when the communications went down during a football game. He could make up plays and then smoothly dovetail his made up events with the actual progress when the communications came back online.

One of Cronkite’s first brushes with celebrity was the coronation of Queen Elizabeth II in 1953. Due to the limitations of technology at the time, some of the interesting anecdotes involve the ways they had to improvise to get film from the live event to the studio in time to show footage during the evening broadcast. This was especially challenging getting footage from England to New York on the same day.

TV made Cronkite the famous figure that he became. So it is with some irony that he marks the end of democracy with the beginning of TV. Politicians and political conventions suddenly became sanitized and dishonest when cameras were trained on them. The exposure of the democratic process could appear ugly to the untrained eye. It’s like some dishes, they are excellent, but it’s not a good idea to watch the chef create it.

By sanitizing the process itself, the end product became sanitized. The end product is the political reality today. The goal was to look polished for the camera, not to honestly work the process to the best possible outcome. “The conventions were reduced to marketing tools. From that day forward, the image on the tube has been the most important aspect of a political campaign, and politics and television have gone skipping hand in hand down this primrose path” (182–183).

Despite the demise of democracy, Cronkite remained an optimistic personality and a revered leader, or at least an accurate reflection, of mainstream American public values. His many decades of journalistic writing gave him a way with words that shows in the present autobiography. It’s an exciting travelogue through the figures and events of the twentieth century, which he covered so well for the CBS Evening News. ( )
  Coutre | Dec 23, 2020 |
Walter Cronkite’s A Reporter’s Life is an excellent biography of one of America’s outstanding journalist. Born in St. Joseph, Missouri in on November 4th, 1916 Cronkite began his journalism career as a campus correspondent at the Houston Post. He later worked as a local radio station reporter in Oklahoma City as a sports broadcaster. Cronkite went on to have a career at the United Press where he was a correspondent for eleven years. The 1940’s World War Ⅱ saw him as a correspondent in Europe, and he became the chief of the Moscow bureau.
In the 1950’s Cronkite joined CBS News in Washington as a correspondent, and in the 1960’s he assumed duties of the “Evening News.” It was while at CBS he broadcast national political conventions, Queen Elizabeth’s coronation, assassination of John F. Kennedy, civil rights movement, and the Vietnam War. After stepping down as anchorman and managing editor he became a special correspondent at CBS. Cronkite later hosted public affairs and cultural programs for PBS and produced documentaries for the Discovery Channel, PBS, and other networks.
Cronkite was critical of the role media was playing in America. He saw this problem caused by the growth of media monopolies, shrinking budgets, having sound bites of politicians, and the lack of what news should be in a democracy. He spelled out the limitations and strengths of TV as a news source, stated politicians had greater beliefs in their images portrayed, but not the content and analysis of the stories. Cronkite saw the decision of the American government not to have correspondents accompany the troops in the Persian Gulf War as a problem if Americans were to know the true meaning behind such conflicts. ( )
  erwinkennythomas | Apr 1, 2020 |
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Dedication
    For the 22 million who were there Monday through Friday . . .

    And for Betsy, who has been there every night

    And for the children and grandchildren, who have made something very special of a reporter's life:

    Nancy

    Kathy and Bill, and their William and Jack

    Chip and Deborah, and their Walter IV and Peter
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If, as they say, the threat of the hangman's noose has a powerful way of focusing one's attention, the same can be said of pregnancy.
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(Click to show. Warning: May contain spoilers.)
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Overview: He has been called the most trusted man in America. His 60-year-long journalistic career has spanned the Great Depression, several wars, and the extraordinary changes that have engulfed our nation over the last two-thirds of the 20th century. When Walter Cronkite advised his television audience in 1968 that the war in Vietnam could not be won, President Lyndon B. Johnson said: "If I've lost Cronkite, I've lost middle America." Now, at the age of eighty, Cronkite has written his life story-the personal and professional odyssey of the original "anchorman" for whom that very word was coined. As a witness to the crucial events of this century-first for the Houston Press, then for the United Press wire service, and finally for CBS in the fledgling medium of television-Cronkite set a standard for integrity, objectivity, enthusiasm, compassion, and insight that is difficult to surpass. He is an overflowing vessel of history, and a direct link with the people and places that have defined our nation and established its unique role in the world. But Walter Cronkite is also the man who loved to drive race cars "for the same reason that others do exhibitionist, dangerous stunts. It sets us apart from the average man; puts us, in our own minds, on a level just a little above the chap who doesn't race." He is also the man whose "softheartedness knows no rational bounds" and who always had "great problems at the theater, tearing up at the slightest offense against animals and people, notably the very old or the very young." He is the man who could barely refrain from spitting on the defendants at the Nuremberg Trials, and who could barely announce President Kennedy's assassination over the air for the sobs in his throat. Walter Cronkite helped launch the juggernaut of television, and tried to imbue it with his own respect for quality and ethics; but now he occupies a ringside seat during the decline of his profession and the ascent of the lowest common denominator. As he aptly observes, "They'd rewrite Exodus to include a car chase." Still, the American people know the difference. They know that for decades they have had the privilege of getting their news from a gentleman of the highest caliber. And they will immensely enjoy A Reporter's Life.

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