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Reporting Live

par Lesley Stahl

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Lesley Stahl's job offer from CBS came with an ultimatum -- "if you can't start tomorrow, forget it." The year was 1972, and opportunities for women in network television were rare. With the same determination that would define her career, she promptly departed Boston, went to Washington, and began her ascent to the top of broadcast journalism. In a male-dominated world, Stahl established herself as a "scoopster" and a "door kicker," breaking some of the most important stories in Washington, including Watergate. She would cover the next three presidents, witnessing the disintegration of Jimmy Carter's presidency, the rise and fall and rise again of Ronald Reagan's, and the unpretentious, regular-guy quality of George Bush's. In telling her story, Stahl touches on themes that have defined the later part of this century: the changing role of the press in politics, television's coming of age, and the dilemma of the professional woman. With witty anecdotes, wise observations, and never a hair out of place, Stahl provides an insightful and entertaining look at her world and ours from behind the reporter's microphone.… (plus d'informations)
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Great reference for what was actually happening in political reporting in the golden years of 1945-1989 before the media was taken over by the Ailes/Murdock machine. Stahl is autobiographical here, recounting her career reporting from Washington DC from Nixon through Bush I, with Jimmy and Rosalynn Carter, Ronald and Nancy Reagan, and George and Barbara Bush in their real and reported persons. Real attention to the ladies of the period.

If you need a very candid "reality check" on how genuinely awful Ronald Reagan was as a President, this will provide. The "image" repeated so often today was ever a fiction -- it was then, it is now. Of course, Nancy Reagan was not that bad as President. Stahl documents Nancy's description of the Cabinet as "a nest of vipers". ( )
  keylawk | Feb 17, 2012 |
This book was mildly interesting. It was a behind the scenes look at Lesley's career. The chapters were broken up by Presidents. Nixon and Watergate, the Carters, the Reagan had two chapters, and the Bushes. Most of the interesting stuff was her talking about which reporters hit on her and who she dated. If you call that interesting. Some of her opinions of various reporter's egos, and what went on in building stories were potentially interesting by not really told all that well.

Needless to say, I was soon bored with it all and stopped reading about a third of the way through the book. It will be on sale at the next garage sale for around fifty cents. ( )
  kkirkhoff | Jul 20, 2006 |
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Lesley Stahl's job offer from CBS came with an ultimatum -- "if you can't start tomorrow, forget it." The year was 1972, and opportunities for women in network television were rare. With the same determination that would define her career, she promptly departed Boston, went to Washington, and began her ascent to the top of broadcast journalism. In a male-dominated world, Stahl established herself as a "scoopster" and a "door kicker," breaking some of the most important stories in Washington, including Watergate. She would cover the next three presidents, witnessing the disintegration of Jimmy Carter's presidency, the rise and fall and rise again of Ronald Reagan's, and the unpretentious, regular-guy quality of George Bush's. In telling her story, Stahl touches on themes that have defined the later part of this century: the changing role of the press in politics, television's coming of age, and the dilemma of the professional woman. With witty anecdotes, wise observations, and never a hair out of place, Stahl provides an insightful and entertaining look at her world and ours from behind the reporter's microphone.

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