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I Watched a Wild Hog Eat My Baby! - A Colorful History of Tabloids and Their Cultural Impact (Hardcover)
Loot Price: R525
Discovery Miles 5 250
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(19%)
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I Watched a Wild Hog Eat My Baby! - A Colorful History of Tabloids and Their Cultural Impact (Hardcover)
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Was R645
Loot Price R525
Discovery Miles 5 250
You Save R120 (19%)
Expected to ship within 10 - 15 working days
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This lively, entertaining, and often funny history of America's
supermarket tabloids is the first book to offer a
behind-the-scene's look at the intriguing world of tabloid
journalism, and especially the unique personalities that made it
such a tremendously successful and influential force in today's
media. Perhaps no one is more qualified to give the complete
insider's account of the tabs than Bill Sloan, who helped guide the
destinies of three major tabloids in their heyday. Sloan profiles
the publishing eccentrics who conceived the first national
tabloids, the greedy owners and screwball executives who called the
shots, the ruthless underworld manipulators who fed off of the
tabloids' phenomenal success, and the money-driven journalists who
did the dirty work. I Watched a Wild Hog Ate My Baby reveals the
whole sometimes-sordid, often-silly, but always-amazing story
behind the multibillion-dollar industry these characters spawned.
Based on candid interviews with the author, the fascinating
personalities who created the tabloids explain in their own words
how and why they built these notorious rags into powerful and often
feared journalistic empires. The late, legendary Enquirer founder
Generoso (Gene) Pope, former Enquirer president Iain Calder, Globe
cocreator and longtime editor John Vader, and many others offer
hundreds of funny, juicy, irresistible glimpses into their zany
business. Sloan traces the development of the tabs from their
beginnings in sleazy, gore-filled sensationalism or soft-core smut
and sex scandals, through the celebrity crazes of Jackie O. and
Princess Di. He also discusses the widespread influence of the
tabloids today on television journalism and the Internet, where the
distinction between news and entertainment is quickly vanishing.
This enjoyable, eye-opening account is must reading for anyone
interested in the people and the trends that shape our popular
culture.
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