Why did I love this book?
This is the book that made me want to become a journalism historian. Halberstam, a legendary journalist himself, serves up a delicious mix of the petty power struggles within news organizations and the weighty decisions they make. Takes you inside CBS News, Time Inc., the Washington Post, and the LA Times at the height of their influence.
It’s reporters vs. editors, journalists vs. politicians, and the competing drives of ambition, patriotism, and professional values playing out behind the scenes. Some people think it’s too long, but I devoured every page.
1 author picked The Powers That Be as one of their favorite books, and they share why you should read it.
Crackling with the personalities, conflicts, and ambitions that transformed the media from something that followed the news to something that formed it, The Powers That Be is David Halberstam's forceful account of the rise of modern media as an instrument of political power, published here with a new introduction by the author.
Beginning with FDR's masterful use of radio to establish the sense of a personal, benevolently paternal relationship with the American people and culminating in the discovery and coverage of the Watergate break-in, Halberstam tracks the firm establishment of the media as a potent means of shaping both public…
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