“...And Then What Happened?”

· AuthorHouse
Ebook
316
Pages
Eligible

About this ebook

Most people in our country become fascinated by stories reported by favorite newscasters Walter Cronkite and Ed Murrow being two prime examples that had wide audiences who accepted their comments and reported their news and views as gospel. Chicago, on the other hand, began a love affair with a street reporter named Studs Terkel (1912-2008), whose 45-year career of recording interviews with a wide spectrum of street people and common folk who were asked for their views on what they liked, hated, living circumstances, and an abundance of topics that they tolerated but despised, racial views being a prime topic of comments. The people Terkel sought out were the homeless, streetwalkers, prostitutes, cops, firemen, celebrities, doctors, teachers, businessmen, and a full spectrum of people in the building trades. Usually those he chose to interview were more than pleased to be asked for their comments, and would pour out stories that made Terkels hour-long radio broadcasts on Chicagos WFMTs a fascinating listening experience. As if the person being interviewed hadnt bared enough of his/her soul to the reporter, Terkel would wait until their story was finished before then asking them and then what happened? The shock of this quest invariably resulted with additional startling stories coming out of the mouths of the victims Studs had chosen to interview. In fact, these comments asked the people he interviewed after the first part of the story they rendered revealed secrets and things that the person had never mentioned to anybody. They were like icing added to a cake, and turned out to be the fascination that brought the reporter abundant listeners, as well as rendering Studs Terkel just about every book award and citation ever given to a single person in the United States. Studs Terkel interviews gained him the top echelon of reporters during the 45 years that his radio and then television shows were in demand by Chigagoans from 1952-1997. His variety of stories was the catalyst that prompted Victor Kelley to publish his own version of events that fascinated readers of his eight books.

About the author

Following a Pittsburgh Duquesne University 1957 degree (in English), Kelley, who was ripe for being drafted by the Military, accepted a job as a General News Reporter with a newspaper in the small town of Somerset, Pennsylvania that doubled as a pit stop along the Pennsylvania Turnpike. Duties included coverage of Civil and Criminal Court, Sheriff’s office, State Police station news, Church groups, Ladies’ social meetings, Hospital happenings, and some very mundane events around town, making sure to mention as many names in the articles as possible. It was even common for recipes to be printed on the morning newspaper donated by prominent local residents. The 21year-old reporter soon learned to join a morning coffee klatch of old men that roosted at a large round table for hours at the town’s favorite restaurant, commenting on every event that had happened in the past day along with personal remarks usually comic in content. They covered just about every aspect that Kelley found newsworthy for the paper. Oftentimes there were problems selecting which stories to submit for publication (without attribution, of course.) The newspaper’s circulation increased noticeably, attributed by the Editor to the articles submitted by the reporter covering a beat that often included a humorous side to a story. Most of the articles submitted were short stories that easily fit on the front page of the newspaper and caught the eye of the public with fascinating headlines that often included a comic touch.

Rate this ebook

Tell us what you think.

Reading information

Smartphones and tablets
Install the Google Play Books app for Android and iPad/iPhone. It syncs automatically with your account and allows you to read online or offline wherever you are.
Laptops and computers
You can listen to audiobooks purchased on Google Play using your computer's web browser.
eReaders and other devices
To read on e-ink devices like Kobo eReaders, you'll need to download a file and transfer it to your device. Follow the detailed Help Center instructions to transfer the files to supported eReaders.