Up all night Ted Turner, CNN, and the birth of 24-hour news

Lisa Napoli, 1963-

Book - 2020

The wild inside story of the birth of CNN and dawn of the age of 24-hour news. How did we get from an age of dignified nightly news broadcasts on three national networks to the age of 24-hour channels and constantly breaking news? The answer-thanks to Ted Turner and an oddball cast of cable television visionaries, big league rejects, and nonunion newbies-can be found in the basement of an abandoned country club in Atlanta. Because it was there, in the summer of 1980, that this motley crew somehow, against all odds, launched CNN. Lisa Napoli's Up All Night is an entertaining inside look at the founding of the upstart network that set out to change the way news was delivered and consumed. Mixing media history, a business adventure story,... and great characters, Up All Night tells the story of a network that succeeded beyond even the wildest imaginings of its charismatic and uncontrollable founder, and paved the way for the world we live in today.

Saved in:

2nd Floor Show me where

070.43/Napoli
1 / 1 copies available
Location Call Number   Status
2nd Floor 070.43/Napoli Checked In
Subjects
Published
New York, NY : Abrams Press [2020]
Language
English
Main Author
Lisa Napoli, 1963- (author)
Physical Description
306 pages : illustrations ; 23 cm
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references and index.
ISBN
9781419743061
  • March 2001
  • Chapter 1. The Little Girl in the Well, 1949
  • Chapter 2. The Lunatic Fringe
  • Chapter 3. Girdle 'Round the Earth
  • Chapter 4. Watch This Channel Grow!
  • Chapter 5. Captain Outrageous
  • Chapter 6. "No News Is Good News"
  • Chapter 7. Every Drop of Blood
  • Chapter 8. Reese's Pieces
  • Chapter 9. Until the End of the World
  • Chapter 10. Duck Hunting with Fidel
  • Chapter 11. The Little Girl in the Well, 1987
  • Afterword: June 2000
  • Appendix: Timeline
  • Notes
  • Bibliography
  • Acknowledgments
  • Index
Review by Kirkus Book Review

The origin story of CNN, the success of which demonstrated the public's "voracious appetite for news it didn't even know it had." At the center of this tale, of course, is Ted Turner (b. 1938), the unpredictable Atlanta-based billboard advertising tycoon who refused to believe the countless observers who argued that a 24-hour news network was a crazy idea that would never last. Throughout the 1970s, Turner began acquiring obscure, underperforming radio and television properties. As he gradually learned about the dissemination of news, he wondered whether the burgeoning cable-TV technology could become the foundation for nonstop news from around the world. With masterful reporting and clear prose packed with memorable anecdotes, Napoli, who began her career in 1981 as an unpaid intern at CNN in New York and whose previous book chronicled the lives of Ray and Joan Kroc, crafts a multipronged business thriller: How will Turner raise adequate money to back the risky venture? Will his lack of diplomacy, bizarre personal behavior, and sometimes-offensive beliefs sabotage his ability to hire anyone capable of making his vision a reality other than visionary Reese Schonfeld (co-founder of CNN and the Food Network)? Is there enough news to fill the screen 24/7? Will an adequate number of potential viewers install cable TV to sustain CNN beyond the first year? As the author develops the journalistic and financial angles related to the development of CNN, she skillfully works in tangential ventures, such as Turner's strategic purchase of the Atlanta Braves and his travels to Cuba, where he met with Fidel Castro. The narrative starts to wind down in 1987, when Turner sold a major stake in his empire to Time Warner. (His marriage to Jane Fonda receives little attention.) AT & T purchased Time Warner in 2019, "but CNN survives," writes Napoli in closing, "and not even the mighty phone company can obliterate its founding story, nor the spirit of exploration that created it." A page-turning hybrid of biography, media analysis, and business history. Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.