Fr. 31.50

Capturing the News - Three Decades of Reporting Crisis and Conflict

English · Paperback / Softback

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Description

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Anthony Collings found himself in his share of difficult situations in his thirty-four years as a newsman. Like being captured by AK-47-toting Syrians in Lebanon in 1981 while looking for missiles that threatened a new outbreak of hostilities with Israel, or being "detained" by the KGB in Moscow in 1967 during his first foreign posting for the Associated Press filing stories about Soviet dissidents.
Name a hot spot, and Collings has likely been there. From AP correspondent to Newsweek bureau chief to CNN reporter, he covered the Middle East, Rome, Moscow, London, Paris, and Washington. Now he has gathered stories about his work in a book that is both a journalist's memoir and a commentary on the current ethical crises in the news media and how to address them.
Brimming with entertaining stories about journalism, especially the chaotic early years at CNN when he and his colleagues established the first major cable news network, Collings's book reveals the dangers and pressures of covering the news and the difficulties of overcoming obstacles to the truth. He recalls smuggling tapes out of Poland after the Communists had imposed martial law; flying dangerously near Libya's "Line of Death"; interviewing world figures from Brezhnev to Kaddafi and Arafat; and winning awards for covering Iran-Contra and the Oklahoma City bombing. Collings brings fresh insights to the Oliver North affair and examines how the press was suckered in its coverage of the Jessica Lynch prisoner-of-war story in 2003. He voices his concerns regarding oversimplified reporting of complex issues and poses provocative questions about covering terrorism.
In this book, Collings presents an insider's appraisal of the American news media's failings and accomplishments. Easy to read, informative, and thoughtful, Capturing the News will enlighten general readers interested in how journalists cover current affairs, while offering newsmen food for thought about the craft and ethics of journalism.

About the author










Anthony Collings is the author of Words of Fire: Independent Journalists Who Challenge Dictators, Druglords, and Other Enemies of a Free Press. He now teaches communication studies at the University of Michigan and lives in Ann Arbor.

Product details

Authors Anthony Collings
Publisher University of Missouri Press
 
Languages English
Age Recommendation from age 14
Product format Paperback / Softback
Released 30.04.2015
 
EAN 9780826220615
ISBN 978-0-8262-2061-5
No. of pages 200
Subjects Humanities, art, music > History > General, dictionaries
Social sciences, law, business > Media, communication > Journalism

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