Staying Tuned: A Life in Journalism
By Daniel Schorr
Pocket Books, 2001
(From the publisher)
In May 1999 Kevin Klose, president of National Public Radio, invited me to a
meeting of the NPR board and surprised me with a bronze plaque, emblazoned
'Lifetime Achievement Award.' I responded that, ever the copy-reader, I wished
to amend the wording to, 'Lifetime Achievement So Far...'
Thus Daniel Schorr, octogenarian, newsman, and last of the legendary Edward
R. Murrow news team still active in journalism, let it be known that after six
decades of reporting, digging out information, and finding himself the
controversial subject of some stories, he is still fully engaged in the
world-watching that has made him one of America's most honored journalists.
He is both a national and an international eyewitness. At home, he has
covered and analyzed major events from the McCarthy anti-Communist hearings of
the 1950s to the Clinton impeachment hearings of the 1990s. As CBS's chief
Watergate correspondent, he won three Emmys for his coverage of that
scandalduring which he found himself on Nixon's "enemies" list.
Abroad, he opened the CBS bureau in Moscow in 1955, arranged an
unprecedented television interview with Soviet boss Nikita Khrushchev, and was
on hand for every major European event from the founding of NATO to the
building of the Berlin Wall. At home and overseas his no-holds-barred approach
to covering the news landed him in trouble with the authorities. He may be one
of the only journalists investigated by both the KGB and the FBI.
In the 1970s, Schorr's revelations of CIA and FBI misdeeds brought him into
a confrontation with Congress. Refusing to name his sources before the House
Ethics Committee, he was threatened with jail for contempta threat that
was not carried out. He also came into confrontation with CBS, his employer,
leading to his resignation.
A multimedia journalist, Schorr has worked in newspapers, radio, and
television. Today, he runs around less, but is still probing. In Staying
Tuned, he reflects on the role of the media in our society, expressing
concerns about television's assault on reality.
As to how life has changed for him, Schorr says: "In my days as an
investigative reporter, my motto was, 'Find out what they're hiding and tell
those who need to know.' In my more sedentary days, the motto changed to, 'The
people know a lot. Tell them what to make of it.'"
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