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Author Archives: Bob Stepno
Does “Foreign correspondent” deserve quotes?
https://archive.org/download/otr_chanduthemagician/49-02-03_BLACK_STEPS.MP3 “I never thought we’d really know a foreign correspondent!” the two youngsters gush, in an early scene of this 1949 radio drama.“Oh now children,” says their mother. “Stop acting as if he’s a foreign correspondent in the movies.” The … Continue reading
Posted in 1940s, adventure, foreign correspondents, stereotypes, villains
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Editor takes on publisher’s pal: Big Town 1937
I’m finally catching up with the first year of “Big Town” with Edward G. Robinson… the long-running series that eventually adopted a “flaming sword” slogan paraphrased at the top of this blog. I have long been curious about the series’ … Continue reading
Posted in 1930s, Big Town, crime, detectives, Drama, editors, ethics, journalism, tabloids, technology
Tagged 1930s, newspapers, reporters
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Minnie Pearl with the news
https://archive.org/download/GrandOleOpryOtr/023-GrandOleOpry09-25-43.mp3 In a rare crossover between my personal research interests in Old Time fiddle music and Old Time Radio, I stumbled onto the Grand Ole Opry of September 25, 1943, with Cousin Minnie Pearl being introduced as “our girl reporter … Continue reading
Posted in 1940s, folklore, local news, newspapers, women
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A Clue in the Clouds
https://archive.org/download/OTRR_Casey_Crime_Photographer_Singles/Casey44-02-2633TheClueInTheCloudscaseyPressPhotographer.mp3 Long before the advent of Amazon AWS or Microsoft Azure, “The Clue in the Clouds” was a technology-rich episode of “Casey, Press Photographer,” more often known as “Crime Photographer,” one of the longest-running old-time radio dramatic series to feature … Continue reading
Posted in 1940s, Casey, newspapers, photographer, reporters, women
Tagged 1940s, Casey, newpaper, reporters
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Who was that masked reporter?
A 19th century cub reporter faces an extra challenge on a big story in the “Race to the Wire” episode of The Lone Ranger. His competition is the villainous Jay Collins, so mean he is rumored to have killed another … Continue reading
Newspaper fights exploitation of immigrants
It was 1938 when the Daily Sentinel and publisher Britt Reid — as The Green Hornet — took on a Citizenship-Insurance Racket. A corrupt ward politician, Joe Desmond, runs the scam, tricking naive immigrants into paying $100 for what they … Continue reading
Posted in 1930s, crime, editors, GreenHornet, journalism, newspaper crusades, Police, political corruption
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The Future of News Could Be Risky
“Inside Story” by Richard Wilson, was a 1957 episode of the science fiction series “X-Minus-One.” It featured a reporter for “Galactic News Service” (GNS) investigating a mysterious epidemic on a colonized planet. (Curiously “X-Minus-One” was for part of its run … Continue reading
Posted in 1950s, adventure, journalism, reporters, science fiction, sensationalism, undercover
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