The Origins of Television News in America by Mike Conway

The Origins of Television News in America by Mike Conway

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The Origins of Television News in America by Mike Conway

Documents that process, challenging common myths - including the importance of a popular anchor, and television's inability to communicate non-visual stories - and crediting those whose work was critical in the formation of television as a news format.
«Did you know Ed Murrow once wished aloud that television had never been invented? That was just one of many things I learned from this fine account of the beginning of TV newsMasterful research and a pleasure to read.» (Bob Schieffer, CBS News chief Washington correspondent and moderator of ‘Face the Nation’)
«Mike Conway skillfully reconstructs a lost chapter in the history of television: how a few creative and dedicated CBS employees invented television news in the 1940s. In the process, Conway upends the widely held view that TV news possessed few virtues until Ed Murrow and Fred Friendly launched See It Now in 1951. This book is essential reading for historians of journalism and broadcasting.» (James L. Baughman, University of Wisconsin)
«This book is a remarkable piece of serious scholarship. Mike Conway has told a fiercely accurate story of the development of the industry. His rich detail (and) his authentic descriptions of events of long ago come to life for me as vividly as if they happened only yesterday.» (Chester Burger, CBS Television News, 1946-1954)
«Anyone who laments the passing of the old guard in TV news will greatly benefit from reading this superbly-researched, insightful account of the founding of the field at CBS News, by the most respected emerging scholar in the field of journalism history, Mike Conway. While our landscape is littered with memoirs by CBS news pioneers, this book provides a serious, scholarly examination of the medium’s early era and its influence. It offers the underlying rationale for broadcast innovations and some indispensable perspective on what passes for news today. The author explains what made TV news tick – and how it translates to the modern day.» (Mike Murray, University of Missouri-St.Louis, Editor-in-chief, ‘Encyclopedia of Television News’)
«Did you know Ed Murrow once wished aloud that television had never been invented? That was just one of many things I learned from this fine account of the beginning of TV news. Masterful research and a pleasure to read.» (Bob Schieffer, CBS News chief Washington correspondent and moderator of ‘Face the Nation’)
«Mike Conway skillfully reconstructs a lost chapter in the history of television: how a few creative and dedicated CBS employees invented television news in the 1940s. In the process, Conway upends the widely held view that TV news possessed few virtues until Ed Murrow and Fred Friendly launched ‘See It Now’ in 1951. This book is essential reading for historians of journalism and broadcasting.» (James L. Baughman, University of Wisconsin)
«This book is a remarkable piece of serious scholarship. Mike Conway has told a fiercely accurate story of the development of the industry. His rich detail [and] his authentic descriptions of events of long ago come to life for me as vividly as if they happened only yesterday.» (Chester Burger, CBS Television News, 1946-1954)
«Anyone who laments the passing of the old guard in TV news will greatly benefit from reading this superbly-researched, insightful account of the founding of the field at CBS News, by the most respected emerging scholar in the field of journalism history, Mike Conway. While our landscape is littered with memoirs by CBS news pioneers, this book provides a serious, scholarly examination of the medium’s early era and its influence. It offers the underlying rationale for broadcast innovations and some indispensable perspective on what passes for news today. The author explains what made TV news tick – and how it translates to the modern day.» (Mike Murray, University of Missouri-St.Louis, Editor-in-chief, ‘Encyclopedia of Television News’)
The Author: Mike Conway is an assistant professor at the Indiana University School of Journalism. He worked in television and radio journalism for close to twenty years.
SKU Unavailable
ISBN 13 9781433121838
ISBN 10 1433121832
Title The Origins of Television News in America
Author Mike Conway
Series Mediating American History
Condition Unavailable
Binding Type Paperback
Publisher Peter Lang Publishing Inc
Year published 2012-11-30
Number of pages 397
Cover note Book picture is for illustrative purposes only, actual binding, cover or edition may vary.