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Showing 1 - 5 of 5 matches in All Departments
This is a ride on the Google wave, and the fullest account of how it formed and crashed into traditional media businesses. With unprecedented access to Google's founders and executives, as well as to those in media who are struggling to keep their heads above water, Ken Auletta reveals how the industry is being disrupted and redefined.
It is said that journalism is a vital public service as well as
a business, but more and more it is also said that big media
consolidation; noisy, instant opinions on cable and the Internet;
and political "bias" are making a mockery of such high-minded
ideals. In Backstory, Ken Auletta explores why one of America's
most important industries is also among its most troubled. He
travels from the proud New York Times, the last outpost of
old-school family ownership, whose own personnel problems make
headline news, into the depths of New York City's brutal tabloid
wars and out across the country to journalism's new wave, chains
like the Chicago Tribune's, where "synergy" is ever more a mantra.
He probes the moral ambiguity of "media personalities"--journalists
who become celebrities themselves, padding their incomes by
schmoozing with Imus and rounding the lucrative corporate lecture
circuit. He reckons with the legacy of journalism's past and the
different prospects for its future, from fallen stars of new media
such as Inside.com to the rising star of cable news, Roger Ailes's
Fox News. The product of more than ten years covering the news
media for The New Yorker, Backstory is Journalism 101 by the
course's master teacher.
A titanic struggle is taking place - not just among corporate
titans, but among entire industries across the globe. At stake is
control of the world's fastest-growing industry: communications.
The contestants are the huge Hollywood studios, the television
networks, and telephone, publishing, and computer companies. The
prize is not only vast wealth, but a virtual lock on the
dissemination of information worldwide. The Highwaymen is a
riveting and compelling look behind the scenes at the vanities and
visions of such chief players as Rupert Murdoch, Ted Turner, Time
Warner, Disney, Viacom, and Microsoft. An astounding tale of greed,
enterprise, and corporate achievement, The Highwaymen is an account
of the explosive landscape of telecommunications, and as such
provides an indispensable guide to today's world.
What happened to network television in the 1980s? How did CBS, NBC, and ABC lose a third of their audience and more than half of their annual profits?
Ted Turner revolutionized television. Foreseeing cable's potential in its infancy, he parlayed a tiny UHF station in Atlanta into a national superstation, invented CNN, and transformed sports teams and the MGM film library into lucrative programming. Ken Auletta, the most respected media journalist in America, enjoyed unparalleled access to the outspoken and defiant Turner in writing this book (named one of BusinessWeek's Top Ten Books of 2004), capturing the visionary businessman as he built and lost his improbable empire."
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