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Category Archives: women
A ‘dangerous woman’ of the press
By Bob StepnoDoris Johnston (later Doris Macauley), “a courageous woman correspondent who refused to give in to the Japs” is featured in this April 1945 episode of “Soldiers of the Press,” titled “Hideout.” Despite compressing more than a year on … Continue reading
Posted in 1940s, foreign correspondents, reporters, women, World War II
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A woman with a scoop
http://youtu.be/jE-7pvbz4ns “Scoop? You couldn’t scoop the insides out of a cantaloupe.” — her editor. The 1935 Bette Davis film promoted by that trailer, Front Page Woman, was brought to radio four years later with Paulette Goddard in the title role … Continue reading
Posted in 1930s, reporters, women
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Something Green for St. Patrick’s Day
The band played an Irish jig whenever derby-wearing Michael Axford entered the scene in The Green Hornet Strikes Again, the 1941 movie serial closely based on the Green Hornet radio program. Cop-turned-reporter Axford, played by Wade Boteler in the … Continue reading
Posted in 1940s, adventure, GreenHornet, movies, radio, reporters, undercover, women
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Radio celebrated women journalists in fact and fiction
Happy International Women’s Day… First, here’s a dramatized version of a real woman reporter covering a real crime story — with a young woman criminal for good measure. Farther down the page, you will find links to other radio programs … Continue reading
Posted in 1930s, 1940s, 19th century, cavalcade, Hearst, Hildy Johnson, historical figures, Lois Lane, women
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Emotional woes and courage of a newspaper family
“Bad enough to give up something that’s meant your whole life, running a newspaper, but when I can’t even get a copy of it to read!” — Bob Drake, publisher No wonder publisher Bob Drake has a temper tantrum when … Continue reading
Posted in 1930s, 1940s, editors, journalism, publishers, romance, soap opera, women
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Journalists make good neighbors
This week’s “Betty and Bob” episode, Anita Rusack escapes from her father, finds the journalist couple providing a refuge — and sandwiches — for the young daughter of their neighbor, who apparently went mad after the death of his wife. … Continue reading
Posted in 1930s, 1940s, editors, newspapers, publishers, women
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Could there be a newsroom romance brewing?
There isn’t much newspapering yet in this third Betty & Bob episode, but there is a hint of soap opera romance to come, as Chet meets Claire. Claire is the young and “expecting” widow of The Trumpet’s star reporter, who … Continue reading
Posted in 1930s, 1940s, publishers, reporters, romance, soap opera, women
Tagged editors, newpaper, radio, soaps
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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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Another journalist named Bob: Newspaper life as soap opera
“Running a newspaper is our line of duty” — Betty Drake, co-publisher of The Trumpet, pioneer soap opera heroine “Betty and Bob,” one of radio’s first soap operas, eventually twisted its troubled-marriage plot around to journalism — not surprising, considering … Continue reading
Posted in 1930s, 1940s, newspapers, publishers, radio, soap opera, women
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