Presidents and the Press : The Nixon Legacy

Presidents and the Press : The Nixon Legacy

Presidents and the Press : The Nixon Legacy

more information about Presidents and the Press : The Nixon Legacy

Editorial Reviews
Book Description
Drawing on personal experience, White House Memoranda, contemporary news reports, and interviews with media insiders, this book by the editor of Jack Anderson's syndicated column, tells the fascinating and chilling story of how news reaches - or doesn't reach - our newspapers and television screens. "Sometimes," says one disgruntled journalist, "it seems like Richard Nixon never left town."

In his memoirs, Nixon observed that presidents should try to master the art of manipulating the media while avoiding the appearance of doing so. This revealing book demonstrates that each of Nixon's successors has met the press with tactics borrowed from his philosophy.

A brief historical review of the relationship between the Chief Executive and the national press corps shows that although the notion of using sophisticated public relations tactics to control the flow of information to the press had been around since the 1950s, it was Richard Nixon who "brought PR out of the closet, put the seal of approval on television and imagery as political tools." Lively chapters on the Nixon presidency outline his media team's grand strategy of appeasement, evasion, and intimidation of the press in the 1968 and 1972 campaigns, the Usberg case, Watergate, and other crises of his tenure.

Comparing the Ford, Carter, and Reagan administrations' approach to the press, Spear finds that all have retained some basic elements of the Nixon news-management strategy: an "Office of Communications" that functions as the President's public relations agency, a news monitoring operation, the practice of appeasing reporters with handouts and photo opportunities, the use of television to "endrun" the press and take the President's message direct to the people, threats to cut off reporters' access, and the vigorous suppression of leaks to the press.

Joseph C. Spear has been an investigative journalist for seventeen years. As editor and chief of staff for syndicated columnist Jack Anderson, he is primarily responsible for covering diplomatic and foreign affairs and has broken some of the major news stories of our day. Among his prominent work are in-depth and long-term columns on FBI surveillance of American celebrities and on Nicaraguan dictator, Anastasio Somoza. His own articles have appeared in many national magazines.

Presidents and the Press : The Nixon Legacy,Joseph C. Spear,The MIT Press,0262192284,History - General History,Television - General,United States - 20th Century,Nixon, Richard M,Performing Arts / Television / General

Fun Book:

  1. Prime-Time Families: Television Culture in Postwar America
  2. Principles of Fluoroscopic Image Intensification and Television Systems: Workbook and Laboratory Manual
  3. Process and Practice of Radio Programming
  4. Public Broadcasting and the Public Interest (Media, Communication, and Culture in America)
  5. Q's Guide to the Continuum
  6. Radio and Television Regulation : Broadcast Technology in the United States, 1920-1960
  7. Radio-Television-Cable Management
  8. Roswell, High Times - An Unofficial and Unauthorized Guide
  9. Science Fiction Audiences; Watching Star Trek and Doctor Who (Popular Fiction)
  10. Science Fiction Television (The Praeger Television Collection)

Fun Book

Fun Book

Recommended Books

  1. Captain America: The Winter Soldier, Vol. 2
  2. The Architecture of John Lautner
  3. Francis Poulenc
  4. Colonias and Public Policy in Texas and Mexico : Urbanization by Stealth
  5. Escaping the Poverty Trap
  6. Managing Plant Genetic Diversity
  7. Indus Ethnobiology: New Perspectives from the Field : New Perspectives from the Field
  8. Interpolating Cubic Splines
  9. Madburger
  10. Mark of the Dragon
  11. Miniature Horses: A Veterinary Guide for Owners and Breeders
  12. Ikebana : Japanese Flower Arranging for Today's Interiors
  13. Like Rolling Uphill: Realizing The Honesty Of Atheism
  14. Prelude to Terror: the Rogue CIA, The Legacy of America's Private Intelligence Network the Compromis
  15. Law Relating To Animals