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Category Archives: editors
Reporter assaulted, editor insensitive, but she makes him dinner
My headline is about as strange as the introduction to this premier episode of “Bright Star,” which billed it as a genre-crossing “gay new exciting comedy adventure.” You should know this first episode, “The Oil Swindle,” was broadcast in 1952, … Continue reading
Posted in 1950s, comedy, editors, Hollywood, newspapers, publishers, reporters, romance, women
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Eerie control of the press hits small midwestern town
This “Rogers of the Gazette” episode from January 1954, titled “Something’s Going On,” has a terrible pun in the first line and a hint of “Invasion of the Body Snatchers” terror in the plot. (Of course, given that it’s “Rogers … Continue reading
Posted in 1950s, cold war, editors, journalism, newspapers, radio
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Editor’s New Year Help from Investigative Twins
From Dec. 30, 1953, here’s what was regularly billed as “another heartwarming story of a country newspaper and its friendly editor.” The series is “Rogers of the Gazette,” starring Will Rogers Jr. This episode starts with the editor giving a … Continue reading
Posted in 1950s, editors, ethics, journalism, local news, newspapers, reporters, teaching
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America Has Room at the Inn — in Big Town
“The power and the freedom of the press is a flaming sword; that it may be a faithful servant of all the people, use it justly. Hold it high. Guard it well!” Writer Jerry McGill, a former newspaperman, and the … Continue reading
Posted in 1940s, cold war, editors, ethics, international, newspapers, World War II
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Stop the Presses: Reporter Gets Christmas Off
William Conrad, who played a city editor with a dramatic “It’s a newspaper, that’s all…” speech in the Jack Webb newsroom movie “-30-,” appears as an editor again in this Christmas episode of the “Night Beat” radio series in 1951, … Continue reading
Posted in 1950s, editors, newspapers, reporters
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Journalism students cause trouble
My “Portrayals of the Journalist” class eventually will watch the 1958 Clark Gable and Doris Day film “Teacher’s Pet,” in which a young journalism professor spars with a tough city editor who invades her class to expose what a waste … Continue reading
Tabloid Editors Repent!
For students watching the 1931 film “Five Star Final” with Edward G. Robinson as a guilt-ridden tabloid editor, and for anyone looking for an audio alternative to the old-movie experience, here is something close to a radio sequel to the … Continue reading
Posted in 1930s, editors, ethics, sensationalism, tabloids
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Perry White and men in white sheets
Clark and Lois get most of the attention at The Daily Planet, but their editor Perry White had his heroic moments too. One was when his editorials against a white-hooded gang of hatemongers resulted in a burning cross on his … Continue reading
Posted in 1940s, editors, Perry White, Pulitzer Prize, Superman
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Journalists cutting deals, keeping secrets
https://otrrlibrary.org/OTRRLib/Library%20Files/G%20Series/Green%20Hornet,%20The/Green%20Hornet%2038-05-24%20(0239)%20There%20Was%20A%20Crooked%20Man.mp3 Is a newspaper journalist the people’s watchdog or a government lapdog? How observant should a reporter be? And what should a city editor have for lunch? This Green Hornet radio episode, There Was a Crooked Man, is a place … Continue reading
Posted in editors, ethics, GreenHornet, journalism, newspapers, publishers, reporters
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Sabra Cravat, Frontier Editor
In both versions of the movie “Cimarron,” the visual spectacle of the 1889 Oklahoma Land Rush may have stolen the show. But in two radio adaptations, the story all belonged to Irene Dunne‘s portrayal of Sabra Cravat, frontier wife, mother … Continue reading
Posted in 19th century, adaptations, cavalcade, editors, Hallmark, journalism, movies, newspapers, radio, women
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