A close-up of the powerful William S. Paley, who built CBS and charmed New York Society with his beautiful wife, Babe. From this humble beginning to his loss of power and his network's fall from grace, this work captures the man behind the scenes--deal maker, image maker, hedonist supreme-- in his steely glory.
Author of six biographies: Elizabeth the Queen: The Life of a Modern Monarch (Random House 2102); For Love of Politics: Bill and Hillary Clinton: The White House Years (Random House 2007); Grace and Power: The Private World of the Kennedy White House (Random House 2004); Diana In Search of Herself: Portrait of a Troubled Princess (Random House 2004); Reflected Glory: The Life of Pamela Churchill Harriman (Simon & Schuster, 1996); In All His Glory: The Life and Times of William S. Paley and the Birth of Modern Broadcasting (Simon & Schuster, 1990). Contributing Editor at Vanity Fair since 1996. Previously cultural news reporter for The New York Times, staff writer for TV Guide, and reporter-researcher for Time Magazine. Awarded the Sigma Delta Chi Distinguished Service Award for magazine reporting in 1982; fellow at the Freedom Forum Media Studies Center at Columbia University from 1986 to 1987. B.A. from Wheaton College and M.S. from Columbia University Graduate School of Journalism.
This is a long (at slightly over 600 pages), but very readable expose of the life of CBS mogul William S. Paley. As the author states at the outset he was a very complicated man filled with contradictions.
We follow him as he raised CBS to be a nationwide radio enterprise and then make the transition to TV. In this Paley was less innovator and much more a juggling entrepreneur – listening too and balancing several ideas before finally taking the plunge. Inevitably, much to the annoyance of his business associates, he would usually take the credit for the success of various operations which were initiated by others. And woe to those who were even mildly involved in a less than successful business activity. Even if Paley was warned beforehand of the dubious nature of the project, he would search for, and blame, the necessary scapegoats.
Reading through the book can be at times like an episode of “Lifestyles of the Rich and Famous” with lists of jewellery, furniture and other luxurious items. There is much in this book on Paley’s two wives, both of whom were entirely different. Frank Stanton, who was a dedicated President of CBS for over 25 years, was treated callously by Paley. The same could be said for William L. Shirer. Edward Murrow and Paley were great friends for a time, but this relationship too crumbled. Nothing lasted forever with Paley. He comes off as self-centered – unable to share the limelight with anyone. He was a collector – of enterprises, money, women and art. At the end of the book it was very hard to find the emotional heart of the man.
There are some things missing in this book. Paley’s parents disappear from view once he is married to his first wife. We have no idea how they related with his first and second wife, or with their grand children.
There is nothing on how CBS coped with the civil rights movement in the 1950’s and 1960’s. Nothing on the woman’s movement and how this affected television. And very little on the Vietnam War, which was central to American living rooms during the era. The Smothers Brothers show was cancelled by CBS due to its controversial nature, but this is also not broached.
However, the portrait of Bill Paley “the man” and those surrounding him during his long life is incomparable and complete. Paley died at the time this book was published in October 1990.
A favourite quote from page 579 (my edition): “The stealthiest assassin was, of course, Bill Paley, who always kept a silencer on his weapon.” You just never knew how, where and when Paley would come at you!
An exhaustive and sometimes exhausting bio of the CBS titan (who wasn’t quite, as Smith reveals, the founder - he bought the company from someone else, though he certainly built it, often aggressively). All that stuff about his Tiffany tastes and firm ethics? Smith crushes those tales, which were gospel when I was studying comm in grad school. There’s a little too much about his family for my taste - when the book talks about his children, it sags, though it does get across the point that he was no father of the year.
But overall, what an amazing job. Paley comes across as brilliant but needy, especially as CBS became the leading TV network, and though I’m sure intimates can argue about the importance of his longtime No 2, Frank Stanton, there’s no question that Paley shot himself in the foot by sidelining him and several other heirs apparent.
Meticulous and smoothly written account of the broadcasting mogul's life. Not unusually for a wealthy man, he was decidedly selfish in his private life and his needs always took precedence over those of his wives and children. In those chapters covering his business life the focus is solidly on boardroom maneuvering and the ins and outs of the news division; the stars and shows that made CBS a ratings juggernaut for decades get little if any attention. One ultimately gets the feeling that Paley was always a radio man at heart, never entirely comfortable with television. Highly recommended, give it 4.5 stars.
An interesting and quite detailed history of not only Bill Paley but CBS. I found it at times a bit overly descriptive of all the different going ones at CBS
It Wes a long read in the end what the book concluded is rich self made men would rather ruin their business than pick a successor. Terrible weakness in Bill Paley's czreer. His wife Babe deserved .more space
Such a rich look into two burgeoning industries, radio and TV, about a central figure of both. Very, very well documented and written. Highly recommend.
A big, riveting biography of William Paley, the Chicago cigarmaker's son who built the CBS television empire and reigned as its chairman until 1983. A Reader's Digest Condensed Book Club selection.
Friends of the HHI Library find. Having read David Sarnoff's story who truly was the father of radio and television from a technical perspective, Bill Paley was a typical rich and spoiled "owner" who took money and credit for work done by others. The author was not a fan so the book was not complementary. Having read other accounts of the industry and CBS, she was probably spot on. Too bad he did not do anything worth while with his money other than over indulge himself.
Well written, but this book is enormous and I decided to admit defeat and prioritize some other stuff.
William Paley was one of the founders of CBS, and more or less invented the way network television (and radio) was run. Maybe I'll give it another shot in a few years.