Product Details
Category - Non Fiction / Biography & Autobiography
Format - Hardcover
Condition - Good
Listed - A year ago
Views - 15
Ships From - California
Seller Description
Book jacket is discolored and has tears Book itself is in excellent condition Random House Publishing Group, 1967- Language Arts & Disciplines - 325 pages First Edition This discourse on the importance of television in society presents Friendly's uncannily prescient views on the corrosive effect of money on the news business, the sensationalization of news reporting, and the viewing public's appetite for quality broadcasting. With Edward R. Murrow, Fred Friendly practically invented television journalism. Through telling anecdotes and penetrating analysis, he recalls his collaborations with Murrow, from their stinging documentary on Senator Joseph McCarthy to CBS's pioneering coverage of the burgeoning civil rights and anti-Vietnam War movements. Friendly also recounts his resignation as president of CBS News in 1966, when the network ran reruns of I Love Lucy instead of Senate hearings on the war in Vietnam. Following that controversial decision, he began writing this memorable book.
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