Whirlwind : my life reporting the news
(2025)

Nonfiction

Book

Call Numbers:
NEW MEMOIR/KURTIS,B

5 Holds on 3 Copies

Availability

Locations Call Number Status
New & Popular Biography & Memoir NEW MEMOIR/KURTIS,B On Holdshelf
New & Popular Biography & Memoir NEW MEMOIR/KURTIS,B On Holdshelf
New & Popular Biography & Memoir NEW MEMOIR/KURTIS,B Due: 2/3/2026

Details

PUBLISHED
Lawrence : University Press of Kansas, 2025
DESCRIPTION

x, 294 pages, 24 pages of plates ; 24 cm

ISBN/ISSN
9780700640041, 0700640045, 9780700640041
LANGUAGE
English
NOTES

Includes index

Preface: Whirlwind -- The Topeka tornado -- Learning lessons and chasing dreams -- Finding my way -- Richard Speck -- Chicago on fire -- Four days in August -- Tokyo Rose -- The trial of the Chicago Seven -- Charles Manson -- Earthquake -- Angela Davis -- Juan Corona -- A new kind of news -- The last days of Vietnam -- The phone call -- The massacre -- Saving a life -- Agent Orange -- American faces -- CBS morning news -- Murrow's shadow -- The plane that fell from the sky -- Muhammad Ali -- Back to Chernobyl -- The snchorman -- Wait, wait . . . don't tell me! -- The journey continues

"Starting with his coverage of the largest tornado in Kansas history, legendary correspondent, anchorman, and producer Bill Kurtis details his whirlwind career reporting American history as it unfolded, from the Chicago Seven to Charles Manson to Agent Orange. A fast-paced, entertaining, and inspiring story about the potent combination of talent and luck in the network era of television.From his beginnings as a kid from Kansas working at local radio and television stations to pay for college and law school, Bill Kurtis had a hunger for telling stories and finding the truth. With passion, skill, and just the right amount of luck, Kurtis's reporting of the infamous Topeka Tornado of 1966 launched him into a whirlwind career in broadcast journalism. Only four years later, after passing the Kansas bar exam, Kurtis had already reported four of the largest trials of the twentieth century: Richard Speck, the Chicago Seven, Charles Manson, and Angela Davis.During his career as a West Coast correspondent for Cronkite's CBS Evening News, anchorman and foreign correspondent at the revolutionary local newsroom at WBBM-TV Chicago, co-anchor with Dianne Sawyer at CBS Morning News, and beyond, Kurtis brought history to the American people in real time.Recounting moments in his remarkable career as a television journalist, Kurtis brings us into some of the most iconic moments of the '60s, '70s, and '80s. He was in the streets during the riots at the 1968 Democratic National Convention in Chicago; he uncovered the truth about the deadly effects of Agent Orange during the Vietnam War; he was the first US television journalist to return to Chernobyl after the infamous nuclear disaster; and much more. Kurtis also offers an insider look at how television evolved from an emerging news source to the dominating force in American media.A natural storyteller, Kurtis remembers his career with honesty and insight and gives a rare picture of American history and broadcast journalism"-- Provided by publisher

"Recounting moments in his remarkable career as a journalist and broadcaster, Bill Kurtis brings us into some of the most iconic moments of recent American history - the riots at the 1968 DNC; the trial of Charles Manson; uncovering the truth behind the effects of Agent Orange during the Vietnam War; and more. Throughout this first-hand account of history as it unfolded, Kurtis also offers an insider look at how television news evolved from second-rate reporting to the dominating force in American media"-- Provided by publisher