Imatge de l'autor

David Brinkley (1920–2003)

Autor/a de Washington Goes to War

7+ obres 1,306 Membres 8 Ressenyes 1 preferits

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Inclou aquests noms: David Brinkley, DAVID Y BRINKLEY

Obres de David Brinkley

Obres associades

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Entertaining and acerbic look at Washington, D.C. in the 1939-1945 period. Brinkley was there for a portion of the time, from 1943 as a White House correspondent for NBC News. Much of what he didn't see first-hand comes from contemporary accounts and memories by those he interviewed. Congress does not come off at all well in this analysis, with the possible exception of Speaker Sam Rayburn. One interesting angle explored in the book is the massive bureaucratic muddle that engulfed the government as it went on to war, and how it was never really resolved.… (més)
 
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EricCostello | Hi ha 1 ressenya més | Mar 29, 2018 |
Narrato dal giornalista David Brinkley, questo documentario di ABC News, mostrato su PBS, utilizza ampi filmati televisivi originali del processo del 1944 del criminale nazista Adolf Eichman a Gerusalemme per esplorare la storia dei campi di concentramento, la psicologia delle persone che li ha costruiti e l'Olocausto.
 
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MemorialSardoShoahDL | Hi ha 1 ressenya més | Jan 17, 2018 |
This was a quickie fill-in book which I've had on my shelf for a while; it finally made its way to the top. When I originally picked it up wherever I picked it up, I thought it would be a brief memoir of some sort - but what it actually is is a collection of a number of the one-to-two-minute closing commentaries from This Week With David Brinkley from 1981 - 1996. Something a little lighter, so that viewers did not come away from the show too down-hearted after all of the talk of recession and murder and drugs.

And some of these are very light-hearted - like the story of the boy (in New Haven, CT - I don't think I remember that) who ran away, and took up residence at the bottom of his apartment building's elevator shaft. He leeched power for a small TV and, I believe, a hot plate, and was only discovered because building residents wondered why the elevator smelled like hot dogs every night. Some are more thoughtful than cheery, such as a note on the death of Benny Goodman in 1986.

But they aren't all filler and light-hearted; in fact, most are opinion pieces on events in Washington and more localized politics. At first I wasn't too thrilled by the then-timely now-contextless commentaries - but then I realized that a great many of them are still timely, and for the ones that aren't it's strangely fascinating to read about something that was screamingly urgent and vital twenty years ago which is barely a blip on most radar now. Perspective. And it's oddly comforting to read something like this, from December 26, 1982:

We might all hope that 1983 is a good year in all respects, 1983 standing alone, because it doesn't need any troubles of its own. It will inherit enough from 1982, and none of them will go away at midnight this Friday. The year 1983, for example, will inherit a recession spread around the world - 12 million unemployed, the first soup kitchens we have seen in a generation. It will inherit a Washington establishment spending close to $200 billion it does not have; a Congress that would like to bail itself out by raising taxes but can't; a Social Security system that if not rescued will very soon run out of money; and various industries - automobiles, steel, and so on - devastated by imports at least equal in quality but lower in price. And more. Our town here, Washington, regardless of who is in power, cannot fix all of this. But after a generation of promising to solve every social economic ailment, it has led people to expect Washington solutions, and so it will try a number of them. The good news is that the mathematics of probabilities shows that if they try hard enough, sooner or later, by accident or otherwise, somebody will do something right. It does seem that it's time, preferably in 1983, for the probabilities to go our way.

Make all the numbers, dates and dollar amounts, bigger: Things don't really change. Comforting, and also scary.

August 3, 1986

Next week Congress will be voting to set a new and higher federal government debt limit, to give the Treasury power to borrow still more money.


Sound familiar?

That happens quite a bit in this book. It's sharp and smart and often funny, and surprisingly relevant. I was wishing for more like the boy in the elevator shaft, but what I did get was, in its way, more useful.

Longer review on my blog.
… (més)
½
 
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Stewartry | Oct 20, 2011 |
An interesting, if chronologically jumpy, autobiography of a figure that had some influence on me as a wee tot. Not exactly enthralling but worth putting some effort into just for the historical information through the filter of one of the original news media figures from the first days of television. In fact I mostly read it so I could relate one of my prized memories of childhood. We watched NBC Nightly News as a family after dinner back then most nights, probably because locally channel 5 came in by far the clearest through the rooftop aerial. So, I'm about four at the time and I recognize a face and voice on the TV. I looked up to my mom and, with pride and excitement, said, "Hey mom! That's Henry Kissinger. Grandpa says he's a lying ¢@$#sucker!" That didn't go over very well and both of us got in big trouble.
There are some interesting anecdotes about pioneering TV broadcasts of news and how it differs greatly from reading teletypes on the radio. In retrospect there were simple solutions but it was hard to get the ball rolling. Some people just ignored the camera and continued on speaking to the assembled crowd and radio microphones as usual, whereas others came to realize that it was better to let the pictures speak for themselves and only interject requisite explanations. One of Brinkley's favorite praises that he received was that he was a great talker that didn't talk too much.
… (més)
 
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DirtPriest | Hi ha 1 ressenya més | Sep 17, 2010 |

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Obres
7
També de
2
Membres
1,306
Popularitat
#19,653
Valoració
½ 3.7
Ressenyes
8
ISBN
29
Preferit
1

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