“Hence the advice that JR receives from a pal:
‘When you Suck at writing, you become a journalist.’
No comment.”
Anthony Lane, concluding his review of “The
Tender Bat” in The New Yorker (January 17, 2022)
**
TORCHY BLANE, FICTIONAL REPORTER
Glenda Farrell played Torchy Blane, a daring female
reporter in a series of popular films; which later
was credited by comic book writer Jerry Siegel as
the inspiration for the DC Comics reporter, Lois Lane.
WIKIPEDIA -GLENDA FARRELL
**
A REAL JOURNALIST
"In the summer of 1960, I was working nights
at the New York Post, an afternoon tabloid,
trying to learn my imperfect craft. I started
each shift at one a.m. and finished most mornings,
at eight. Then if I had a few dollars in my
pocket, I would go to the Page One, a saloon on
Greenwich Street, and wait for the first edition,
which arrived fresh off the presses at nine. At
the bar, in the company of older professionals,
I received a good part of my professional education.
They examined headlines, often with a bilious eye.
They scrutinized stories, including my own. They
issued fierce criticisms, savage, often hilarious
indictments. They told me what I should never
do again, and I tried hard not to repeat my
latest published barbarism. I was never happier."
Pete Hamill. Downtown: My Manhattan (New York:
Little, Brown and company, 2004)
**
ANOTHER REAL JOURNALIST-- MOLLY IVINS
In her syndicated column, which appeared in
about 350 newspapers, Ms. Ivins cultivated
the voice of a folksy populist who derided
those who she thought acted too big for their
britches. She was rowdy and profane, but she
could filet her opponents with droll precision.
After Patrick J. Buchanan, as a conservative
candidate for president, declared at the 1992
Republican National Convention that the United
States was engaged in a cultural war, she said
his speech “probably sounded better in the
original German.”
Katharine Q. Seelye. from the obituary for
Molly Ivins, Columnist, in The New York Times
Feb. 1, 2007
**
CARL BERNSTEIN BEGINS HIS CAREER IN NEWSPAPER
REPORTING AS A COPYBOY AT AGE 16
“People were shouting. Typewriters clattered and
chinged. Beneath my feet I could feel the rumble
of the presses. In my whole life I had never heard
such purposeful commotion as I now beheld in that
newsroom. By the time I had walked from one end
to the other, I knew that I wanted to be a
newspaperman.”
Carl Bernstein. A Kid in the Newsroom (NY:
Henry Holt& Company,2021)
**
CLAY FELKER & THE BIRTH OF THE NEW JOURNALISM OF GAY TALESE, TOM WOLF , AND GAIL SHEEHY
“The New Journalism would grow into a movement.
But the form wasn’t really all that new. Clay
had stumbled upon it back in the Duke library
when he came upon bound volumes of the Civil
War-era Tribune. Horace Greeley’s famous
nineteenth-century newspaper. He began to read
gripping accounts from the Virginia battlefield,
not from a disinterested correspondent but vivid
stories with narrative structure written by
soldiers in the trenches.”
Gail Sheehy. Daring: My Passages (New York:
HarperCollins, 2014)
**
DESI ARNEZ & LUCILLE BALL LEARN FROM WALTER WINCHELL THAT LUCY IS PREGNANT (p.117)
In 1950, Lucy and Desi travelled to New York City.
“She arrived on Friday and made clandestine
arrangements for a pregnancy test, using her
hairdresser’s name to avoid publicity. That
Sunday night she and Desi were relaxing in
their dressing room. Desi fell asleep to the
clack of Lucy’s knitting needles and staccato
of Walter Winchell doing his radio broadcast.
The next few moments were right out of a
vaudeville skit, but they were real.
“After ten childless years of marriage,”
said Winchell, “Lucille Ball and Desi Arnaz are infanticipating!”
Lucy dropped her knitting and woke up her
husband. “We’re going to have a baby!”
Desi rubbed his eyes. “How d’ya know?
We aren’t suppose to hear until tomorrow.”
“Winchell just told me.”
“ How d’ya like dat?”
Actually they were delighted, even though
the couple resented Winchell’s notorious practice
of bribing doctors, nurses, and medical technicians
to get inside information on ailing or pregnant
celebrities.”
Stefan Kanfer. Ball of Fire: The Tumultuous Life and Comic Art ofLucille Ball (New York:
Alfred A. Knopf, 2003)
**
WALTER WINCHELL
Walter Winchell
In a pinch'll
Quote a joke or a quip
Or repeat gossip from a hot tip.
LJP
Here’s a Winchell line I read in the early 60s & have never forgotten: “I’m not saying all folk singers are Communists but all Communists are folk singers.”
My father debated Patrick Buchanan on Firing Line. During the break, he turned to Buchanan and said, “So, Buchanan, what’s your next topic–basket weaving?”
Golden.
LikeLike
These were such fun – nostalgic reminders of the great ones.
LikeLike
Thank you. you have any memories about your parents getting their first TV set?>
LikeLike
Here’s a Winchell line I read in the early 60s & have never forgotten: “I’m not saying all folk singers are Communists but all Communists are folk singers.”
LikeLike
LOVE THIS QUOTE!
LikeLike
Thank you, Louis.
LikeLike
My father debated Patrick Buchanan on Firing Line. During the break, he turned to Buchanan and said, “So, Buchanan, what’s your next topic–basket weaving?”
LikeLike
WOW! Can you write a few sentences about your father’s debate with Buchanan for my next TV BLOG>\?
Hope you are feeing better.
Love,
Loiis
LikeLike
Learned about that Lucy/Desi via Walter Winchell watching a documentary of their lives = it was very good!
Sent from Mailhttps://go.microsoft.com/fwlink/?LinkId=550986 for Windows
LikeLiked by 1 person