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When Giants Ruled - (Communications and Media Studies) by Hy B Turner (Paperback)

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Highlights

  • When Giants Ruled takes the reader behind the scenes of a century of newspaper life.
  • About the Author: Hy B. Turner, the "Iron Man of Journalism" had a long career as a journalist in New York and elsewhere
  • 268 Pages
  • History, United States
  • Series Name: Communications and Media Studies

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Book Synopsis



When Giants Ruled takes the reader behind the scenes of a century of newspaper life. It relates how Benjamin Day, a job printer desperate for more money, started The Sun and inadvertently established the first successful daily for the masses. His main rival was James Gordon Bennett the Elder, whose innovations and success culminated in the most unusual war in journalism: an attempt by rival publishers to halt his efforts to revolutionize the press and to exterminate his Herald.

During the Civil War, with only Lincoln excluded, no person had greater sway upon the nation's thinking than Horace Greeley. Venom spewed between Bennett and Greeley reached unprecedented heights until Charles Anderson Dana became overlord of Park Row and tangled with the crusading Joseph Pulitzer. Bennett's eccentric son did not wait for news to happen; he made it. The devastating circulation war between Pulitzer and William Randolph Hearst reached a climax with the Spanish- American War. Hearst's sensationalism remained foremost with the masses until Joseph Patterson produced the most successful tabloid of the twentieth century. An epilogue connects the Park Row era to today's New York press.



Review Quotes




During the heyday of New York journalism, most of the city's newspapers--New York Sun, New York Herald, New-York Tribune, The New York Times, New York World, The Graphic, etc.--had offices in the same part of downtown New York, a part known as Park Row. In his readable account of the 90-year period from Benjamin Day's Sun in the 1830s to the tabloids of the 1920s, Turner looks at a roster of "giants" that includes names familiar to every student of journalism history: Day, the Bennetts, Greeley, Raymond, Dana, Pulitzer, Hearst, Ochs, Brisbane, Munsey, Patterson, MacFadden. Only the New York Post, The New York Daily News, and The New York Times still publish in New York, none on Park Row. The stories of these men are already well known, having been recited in most traditional histories of newspaper journalism--e.g., Frank Luther Mott's American Journalism (1945) and Edwin Emery and Henry Ladd Smith's The Press and America (1954). But Turner has included many details and stories that others understandably ignored, often relying on original sources, including the newspapers themselves. Endnotes are terse but useful. The bibliography is less useful than it might be, since it includes nearly every book written about newspaper journalism. Upper-division undergraduates; graduate students; professionals.-- "--Choice"

"Those Giants ruled a collection of hotshots, sleazeballs, reformers and buccaneers who set the style for today's multi-media melees. Hy Turner has written a page-turner, a treat for anyone who cares about news, about history, about good stories.-- "--The New York Times"

"When Giants Ruled makes the present-day reader nostalgic for the old broadcast newspapers. . . ."-- "--The Chicago Tribune"



About the Author



Hy B. Turner, the "Iron Man of Journalism" had a long career as a journalist in New York and elsewhere

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