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October
/ ISBN 0-8093-2232-3 / cloth / $24.95t From Edward R. Murrow to "Sixty Minutes" and CNN, the television news correspondent has become a fixture of American journalism in the latter half of the twentieth century. The correspondent's role has changed, however, as centralized control, changing technology, "infotainment," and profit margin have influenced the way that television networks operate and television news is reported. In spite of the flood of literature dealing with the American television networks, the evening anchors, and prime-time personalities, little has been written about the "the foot soldier of network news." Live from the Trenches fills that gap, providing the first examination of television news correspondents and their work, with much of the analysis coming from the correspondents themselves. The correspondents: Joe S. Foote is the dean of the College of Mass Communication and Media Arts at Southern Illinois University at Carbondale. He is the author of Television Access and Political Power: The Networks, the President, and the Loyal Opposition. Before entering teaching, he served as press secretary for Speaker Carl Albert and as administrative assistant to Congressman Dave McCurdy. |
"America may not want to believe it, but it has never had a greater need for its professional press corps. Reporters and news organizations may not want to hear it, but the country has never had a greater need for serious, no-nonsense reporting. We would like you to meet some old-fashioned reporters. Read their stories and hear their message. You'll miss them when they're gone." Ted Koppel, |