RECOMMENDED
BOOKS, ARTICLES AND WEB
SITES
Updated: 1-2009
Alphabetized
List -- Journalists in Television
TELEVISION
Alley, Robert S. and Irby
B. Brown, Love Is All Around: The Making of the Mary Tyler Moore
Show (a Delta Book published by Dell Publishing, Bantam Doubleday Dell
Publishing Group Inc., New York, 1989, 235 pages paperback). The same authors
also wrote Murphy Brown: Anatomy of a Sitcom (Dell, 1990, 304 pages).
Each book discusses the making of the television programs "from original
idea to script, casting and pilot." Plot summaries included. Brooks,
Tim and Earle Marsh, The Complete Directory to Prime Time Network
TV Shows, 1946-Present, Seventh Edition, completely revised and updated, Ballantine
Books, New York, 1999, 1392 pages. This is a comprehensive book
covering all the prime time network television programs including ones featuring
journalists.
Daniel Douglass K., Lou Grant: The
Making of TV's Top Newspaper Drama (Syracuse
University Press, 1996) explores the history of the medium's
most-respected journalism series and how it depicted the profession.
It contains an overview of journalism dramas up to the debut
of Lou Grant as well as a synopsis of each of the 114
episodes that aired from 1977-1982.
McMane, Aralynn Ann Abare, "Hello,
Handsome, Get Me Rewrite: Toward an Understanding of the Portrayal
of the Female Journalist in Film and on Television."
1991.
Meehan, Diana,Ladies of
the Evening: Women Characters of Prime-Time Television, The Scarecrow Press, 1983,
192 pages.
Ryan, Joal, "Lou Grant Made Me
Do It (How Hollywood Portrayals of Reporters Affect Budding
Journalists," American Journalism Review,
November 1996, Volume 18, Number 9, Page 13. Sympathetic
portrayals of journalists in motion pictures such as All
the President's Men and on television series such as
Lou Grant often inspire budding reporters to seek
careers in journalism. Although Hollywood's depictions of
the profession may not be realistic, they do not necessarily
lead to disillusionment later on. Three journalists describe
the way such portrayals influenced their career choices and
how they have successfully adapted their glamorous expectations
to the real world of journalism.
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