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Lone Star: The Extraordinary Life and Times of Dan Rather
 
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From Publishers Weekly Drawing on some eighty interviews, Weisman, a former CBS newsman himself, presents an insider view of how Rather evolved into one of the most polarizing figures in American news media. Many different personalities emerge along the way (hard-working reporter becomes lazy anchor; loyal and hospitable gives way to vindictive and paranoid), but one trait runs consistent throughout: the Texas native's "penchant for going with his gut." From his frontline reports in Vietnam to his famously direct questioning of Richard Nixon, Rather's instincts delivered him the most prestigious post in television news, and an unprecedented salary to go with it. Those same instincts, unfortunately, also led to his inexcusable walk-out during a telecast from Miami, his embarrassingly combative 1988 interview with Bush I, and, ultimately, his career-killing involvement with a 60 Minutes segment about Bush II's alleged transgressions as a National Guardsman. Weisman never doubts his subject's commitment to CBS, but again and again his work demonstrates how Rather's personal affect, ambition and, yes, salary, steered the network's once-vaunted news division in the wrong direction. This clear-eyed biography should satisfy anyone interested in the legacy of TV news. Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved. Review Dan Rather refused to be interviewed for "Lone Star: The Extraordinary Life and Times of Dan Rather," telling author Alan Weisman that "there's nothing in this for me." Not so. This short, pugnacious and highly entertaining biography thumps many of Rather's enemies, of which there is no shortage. Weisman, a retired CBS News writer and producer, takes a brief look at Rather's rise from humble Texas stock. Rather grew up sickly but tough in the same Houston-area neighborhood that produced racing legend A.J. Foyt. His struggle with rheumatic fever led to one of his lifelong mottos: "Never stay down." Rather had a wolverine's tenacity from the start and sometimes got more credit than due, as when Walter Cronkite hailed him for first reporting JFK's death from Parkland Hospital when in fact Robert Pierpoint was the man on the scene. Cronkite was not destined to remain a Rather fan. Cronkite, by Weisman's acerbic telling, is an arrogant blowhard "who still believes that the anchor chair should have been retired with him in 1981." According to Weisman, Cronkite piled on Rather during the "Memogate" scandal, which in Weisman's reading was a fairly minor error that sparked a gross overreaction. Weisman spends lots of ink thumping journalistic deities who, in the words of Bill O'Reilly, "slimed" Rather. Off to Alcatraz Former "60 Minutes" boss Don Hewitt is scorned for calling Rather a "coward" for not resigning following his disputed report on President George W. Bush's military service. Weisman also notes that as the "Memogate" storm began brewing, Andrew Heyward railed that any guilty parties would be "phoning in from Alcatraz." This, writes Weisman, "from the president of the News Division who had approved the story prior to air." CBS chief Les Moonves is another target. "Memogate," Weisman says, provided Moonves ``with a convenient excuse to do what he wanted to do anyway: go younger.'' Rather was 73 at his departure and, according to Weisman, Moonves wanted more young, smiley faces on the air. The author doesn't give Rather a free pass, though. This, after all, is the fellow of "Kenneth, what is the frequency?" fame who was also known for antic on-air observations such as, "This race is as hot and tight as a too- small bathing suit on a too-long ride home from the beach." No wonder radio wiseguy Don Imus once said, "I want to be watching when he cracks." Disappearing Act Rather also stoked his own legend by vanishing for almost six minutes during the start of his Sept. 11, 1987, newscast. Weisman wonders if he "left the set to make a point to his superiors"—that he was upset with the diminishing stature of the news division. Even Rather's critics may sympathiz
Submitted On:
09 Sep 2007
File Author:
Weisman, Alan
File Size:
2.45 MB