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Staying Tuned : A Life in Journalism by Daniel Schorr — book cover

Staying Tuned : A Life in Journalism

by Daniel Schorr
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Overview

"In May 1999 Kevin Klose, president of National Public Radio, invited me to a meeting of the NPR board and surprised me with a bronze plaque, emblazoned 'Lifetime Achievement Award.' I responded that, ever the copyreader, I wished to amend the wording to, 'Lifetime Achievement So Far'" Thus Daniel Schorr, octogenarian, newsman, and last of the legendary Edward R. Murrow news team still active in journalism, let it be known that after six decades of reporting, digging out information, and finding himself the controversial subject of some stories, he is still fully engaged in the world-watching that has made him one of America's most honored journalists.

He is both a national and an international eyewitness. At home, he has covered and analyzed major events from the McCarthy anti-Communist hearings of the 1950s to the Clinton impeachment hearings of the 1990s. As CBS's chief Watergate correspondent, he won three Emmys® for his coverage of that scandal -- during which he found himself on Nixon's "enemies" list.

Abroad, he opened the CBS bureau in Moscow in 1955, arranged an unprecedented television interview with Soviet boss Nikita Khrushchev, and was on hand for every major European event from the founding of NATO to the building of the Berlin Wall. At home and overseas his no-holds-barred approach to covering the news landed him in trouble with the authorities. He may be one of the only journalists investigated by both the KGB and the FBI.

In the 1970s, Schorr's revelations of CIA and FBI misdeeds brought him into a confrontation with Congress. Refusing to name his sources before the House Ethics Committee, he was threatened with jail for contempt -- a threat that was notcarried out. He also came into confrontation with CBS, his employer, leading to his resignation.

A multimedia journalist, Schorr has worked in newspapers, radio, and television. Today, he runs around less, but is still probing. In Staying Tuned, he reflects on the role of the media in our society, expressing concerns about television's assault on reality.

As to how life has changed for him, Schorr says: "In my days as an investigative reporter, my motto was, 'Find out what they're hiding and tell those who need to know.' In my more sedentary days, the motto changed to, 'The people know a lot. Tell them what to make of it.'"

About the Author, Daniel Schorr

Daniel Schorr has covered the news for more than six decades. In addition to winning three Emmys®, he has received the Alfred I. DuPont-Columbia University Golden Baton for Exceptional Contribution to Radio and Television Reporting and Commentary, a Peabody personal award for "a lifetime of uncompromising reporting of the highest integrity," and the George Polk Radio commentary award. He has been inducted into the Society of Professional Journalists Hall of Fame. Schorr reported alongside Edward R. Murrow and Walter Cronkite for CBS, started CNN with Ted Turner, and is now senior news analyst for National Public Radio®.

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Editorials

William Safire

Nonfiction sleeper best-seller-to be.
New York Times

Kirkus Review

Compulsively readable... . A marvelous memoir of an enviable life, written with style and real wit.

Judith Viorst

The stories are delicious, the recall is astounding, the insights are witty and shrewd and the writing sings...when there is something to tell, nobody tells it better than Dan Schorr, America's master commentator and moral compass.

Walter Cronkite

This is Schorr's detailed report on why numerous heads of state and other officials have called him a son-of-a-bitch.

Publishers Weekly

Pick a major news event of the post-WWII era and chances are NPR commentator Schorr covered it. He was present at the inceptions of NATO, the Republic of Indonesia and the Berlin Wall. He conducted the first-ever TV interview with Khrushchev, arranged for himself and violinist Isaac Stern to take one of the first tours of Anne Frank's garret, and was Ted Turner's first hire for his fledgling Cable News Network in 1980, a position Schorr accepted after his principles got him into trouble at CBS. The son of Eastern European immigrants, Schorr never intended to become a broadcaster; he wanted to write for the New York Times. But a hiring freeze on Jewish correspondents put the kibosh on that dream, and once he joined the fabled team of CBS-TV reporters headed up by Edward R. Murrow, he never extracted himself from broadcast media. In this engaging, fascinating and often funny memoir, he alternates between offering an up-close-and-personal look at the more memorable events of the 20th century and sharing intimate stories about everyone from Shirley MacLaine to Richard Nixon (who included Schorr on his famous "enemies" list). Uncompromising and occasionally antagonistic, Schorr, like any good old-school journalist, is objective, even about himself. Indeed, the best description of him comes from former CBS boss Richard Salant: "He was not universally loved. But he was very good." Whether his book will be universally loved remains to be seen. But it's definitely very good. 16-pages of b&w photos not seen by PW. (May 8) Forecast: Well-known to TV viewers and NPR audiences, Schorr should get major media attention when he tours N.Y. and D.C., and, engaging as this book is, with a first printing of 35,000, it may even flirt with the bestseller lists. Copyright 2001 Cahners Business Information.

KLIATT

Discharged from the Army at the end of WW II, Daniel Schorr began a career in print and radio journalism that continues today, some 55 years later. His voice, now heard on NPR, is familiar to at least three generations of Americans, and his writing skill, less known to many of us, is vibrantly evident in this autobiography. From post-war Holland to post-Stalin Russia, from Berlin to Washington, Schorr tracked down stories and story-makers with a mixture of imagination and effrontery that drives his narrative. His tales of encounters with Khrushchev are fascinating; his clashes with the Nixon administration are bone chilling. To a young reader brought up in the age of satellite communication, the efforts of the press corps to get news through the censors and out of pre-CNN Moscow may seem antediluvian. Most absorbing, perhaps, is Schorr's account of the creation of the Berlin Wall—how the crisis was born, how the wall went up, and how the Russians and the Allies played cat-and-mouse with armored standoffs. This text can serve as valuable background reading for any course on the history of the second half of the 20th century. KLIATT Codes: SA—Recommended for senior high school students, advanced students, and adults. 2001, Pocket Books, Washington Square Press, 354p. illus. index., Moore

Library Journal

Twenty-four years ago, Schorr published a memoir called Clearing the Air at the height of his journalistic fame. He had just left CBS News after three decades of international and domestic reporting. The spike in Schorr's fame came because he told the story behind a secret U.S. House of Representatives report on covert U.S. government operations in other nations, then refused to reveal to government officials how he obtained the report. Now, at age 85, Schorr covers much of the same ground as in the earlier book, adding about 50 pages of new material. The additions focus on Schorr's six years at Cable News Network, where he became the first prominent journalist hired by founding mogul Ted Turner. In the mid-1980s, Schorr left CNN because of a dispute over editorial independence, moving to a position as commentator on several National Public Radio news segments. Although journalists' memoirs are often pretentious and uninformative because of their outsider status, this memoir is neither. A useful addition to all journalism and politics collections. Steve Weinberg, Univ. of Missouri Journalism Sch., Columbia Copyright 2001 Cahners Business Information.

Book Details

Published
May 28, 2001
Publisher
Simon & Schuster
Pages
368
Format
Hardcover
ISBN
9780671020873

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