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Me and Ted Against the World : The Unauthorized Story of the Founding of CNN

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The co-founder of CNN offers a behind-the-scenes account of the tumultuous launch of the world's first twenty-four-hour, all-news network.

432 pages, Hardcover

First published February 5, 2001

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Displaying 1 - 3 of 3 reviews
Profile Image for BLESK.
40 reviews11 followers
December 17, 2019
"He was liberal, Ted (Turner) was conservative...." - page 54

As light on analysis as it is on self awareness, just like the network he founded. Only news/media junkies will want to engage with this narrative.
Profile Image for Matt.
751 reviews
June 5, 2014
The story behind the founding of CNN is an engaging page turner written by the man who conceived it, but is never really given credit by the "official" history. Reese Schonfeld, a veteran in the news service for almost 25 years before CNN, gives a detailed account about what led him in the direction of a 24-hour television news channel and how it came to be that he joined with Ted Turner to found CNN. Schonfeld goes through the pains and joys of creating an entire news service from nothing that stretched all over the world then experience the ups and downs of first 2 1/2 years of operations before being fired and watching his dream steadily decline.

Part biography and part first-hand account of how a medium reshaped society, Me and Ted Against the World could have descended into a bitter rant but Schonfeld gives a balanced account not only of others (most notably Ted Turner) but himself as well (several times admitting where he erred when heading CNN). Although the book was published before the fallout of the AOL-Time Warner merger was known, Schonfeld's thoughts on what the merger could do the channel were interesting and pretty good. Overall the book is must read for journalism students and those interested in the evolution of medium of television.
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