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Tom Brokaw's Boom!: Voices of the Sixties

By Tom Brokaw, Random House Publishing Group. Posted December 5, 2007.


Journalism icon Tom Brokaw reflects on his Midwestern roots, 1960s gender politics and the death of JFK.
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The following is an excerpt from Tom Brokaw's latest book, Boom!: Voices of the Sixties, Personal Reflections on the 60s and Today.

In 1962, I had an entry-level reporter's job at an Omaha television station. I had bargained to get a salary of one hundred dollars a week, because I didn't feel I could tell Meredith's doctor father I was making less. Meredith, who had a superior college record, couldn't find any work because, as one personnel director after another told her, "You're a young bride. If we hire you, you'll just get pregnant before long and want maternity leave."

In retrospect, the political and cultural climate in the early Sixties seems both a time of innocence and also like a sultry, still summer day in the Midwest: an unsettling calm before a ferocious storm over Vietnam, which was not yet an American war. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. was confronting racism in the South and getting a good deal of exposure on The Huntley-Brinkley Report on NBC and The CBS Evening News with Walter Cronkite, the two primary network newscasts, each just fifteen minutes long.

In the fall of 1963, first CBS and then, shortly after, NBC expanded those signature news broadcasts to a half hour. As a sign of the importance of the expansion, Cronkite and Huntley and Brinkley were granted lengthy exclusive interviews with President Kennedy. ABC wouldn't be a player in the news major leagues until the 1970s, when Roone Arledge brought to ABC News the energy and programming approach he had applied to ABC Sports. Kennedy, America's first truly telegenic president, was a master of the medium, fully appreciating its power to reach into the living rooms of America from sea to shining sea.

During our time in Omaha, John F. Kennedy was not a local favorite. The city's deeply conservative culture remained immune to Kennedy's charms and to his arguments for social changes, such as civil rights and the introduction of government-subsidized medical care for the elderly. I'm sure many of my conservative friends at the time thought I was a card short of being a member of the Communist Party because I regularly championed the need for enforced racial equality and Medicare.

One of the most popular speakers to come through Omaha in those days was a familiar figure from my childhood, when kids in small towns on the Great Plains spent Saturday afternoons in movie theaters watching westerns. Ronald Reagan looked just like he did on the big screen. He was kind of a local boy who had made good, starting out as a radio star next door in Iowa and moving on to Hollywood, before becoming a television fixture as host of General Electric Theater.

Reagan's Omaha appearances were part of his arrangement with GE, which allowed him to be an old-fashioned circuit-riding preacher, warning against the evils of big government and Communism, while praising the virtues of big business and the free market. He was every inch a star, impeccably dressed and groomed. But those of us who shared his Midwestern roots were a bit surprised to find that although he was completely cordial, he was not noticeably warm. That part of his personality remained an enigma even to his closest friends and advisers throughout his historically successful political career.

In Omaha the only time he lightened up in my presence was when I noticed he was wearing contact lenses and I asked him about them. He got genuinely excited as he described how they were a new soft model, not like the hard ones that could irritate the eyes. He even wrote down the name of his California optometrist so Meredith could order a pair for herself. (Later, when he became president, I often thought, "He's not only a great politician, he's a helluva contact lens salesman.")


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Tom Brokaw is the author of four bestsellers: The Greatest Generation, The Greatest Generation Speaks, An Album of Memories, and A Long Way from Home. From 1976 to 1981 he anchored Today on NBC. He was the sole anchor and managing editor of NBC Nightly News with Tom Brokaw from 1983 to 2004.

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Too bad Lee Harvey Oswald was shot also.
Posted by: Ellie1 on Dec 5, 2007 3:23 AM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
We could really use him now.

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Mediocre Journalism = Mediocre History
Posted by: iconoblaster on Dec 5, 2007 3:58 AM   
Current rating: 2    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
More antiquarian history from Brokaw. Being a broadcast journalist who does little more than READ the news written by others clearly does not qualify one to write serious history. Within the field - we have a name for such folks -
blue hairs.

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» RE: Mediocre Journalism = Mediocre History Posted by: AMERICAN VETERAN
I had one of those too.
Posted by: PJAW on Dec 5, 2007 5:33 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
As an eighth grader, following his parents' lead, I had pulled for Nixon to win. Kennedy, after all, was a Catholic, and the Catholic Church was a bad memory for my father who had lived in one of their orphanages. But I grew to like Kennedy a lot. His humor and concern for the disadvantaged and general human warmth won me over. Still, I wouldn't hesitate to poke fun of him, more in the vein of a Vaughn Meader than any of today's mean-spirited hacks such as Hannity or O'Reilly.

But apparently some of my remarks were misconstrued by a classmate, who ran up to me excitedly in the hallway after the announcement from Dallas had shut school down for the day and said, "We got 'im!". "We", of course, being anyone in general who disapproved of JFK, I never suspected for a moment that my fellow high schooler in the upper Midwest was part of any grand conspiracy. But to repeat what Brokaw stated, Kennedy was not universally loved by Americans whle he was alive, in fact he was hated by some.

I consistently have suspected that the people behind Nixon's political career were deeply involved in Kennedy's death. If you dig into the assemblage of behind the scenes players who promoted and enabled Nixon, you'll find that many were in or connected to the mob and organized crime, particularly as it existed and operated in Cuba and the Carribean. And if you do a modicum of research, you will discover that Nixon plotted the Bay of Pigs while Eisenhower was disabled and Nixon ran unchecked as Vice President. And Kennedy, who inherited the plan (intended to "liberate" Cuba) called off air support for the invasion, which resulted in its failure.

For those who are too young (or too naive) to remember, in 1968 JFK's younger brother Bobby entered the Presidential race somewhat late, became a near instant front funner, and was assasinated. After a very contentious (and corrupt) Democratic convention in Chicago, the tired old retread Hubert Humphrey (heavily tainted from 4 years as LBJ's VP) became their candidate and lost to the recycled Nixon. For many people, this put the country back on its proper course after the brief "diversion" of the 60's. (you know, when civil rights, feminism and anti-war were at their height) It's pretty much been a stinking pile of monkey crap ever since. A slow steady march toward militarism and fascism with only brief interruptions by Carter (who was sabotaged at every turn) and Clinton (who was much more a right leaning moderate than a progressive but still a breath of fresh air comparatively).

This barely sentient creatue we have in the White House now, plus all the Republican and some of the leading Democratic candidates do not bode well for improvement in the future. Kucinich strikes me as our best hope, followed perhaps by Biden, Edwards, Obama and maybe Dodd and Richardson. You notice I didn't mention Hillary? True, she'd be better than any of the geeks on the Republican side, but she doesn't really represent much real change from what we're experiencing.

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» RE: I had one of those too. Posted by: futurefarm
» RE: I had one of those too. Posted by: AMERICAN VETERAN
» Hey American Veteran! Posted by: PJAW
» Hey, both of you. Posted by: Sojourner
» RE: I had one of those too. Posted by: Denver Dem
relevance?
Posted by: realthog on Dec 5, 2007 7:33 AM   
Current rating: 1    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Since when did Alternet become a shill for conglomerate publishing? I'm all for seeing book extracts here, but surely they should have some relevance to Alternet's "mission"? This is just another celebrity bio, it seems, and the appearance here of an extract is basically just a free ad for it.

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Too bad
Posted by: uncleeddie on Dec 5, 2007 9:54 AM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
It is sure too bad that the best of the mass murdering presidents got murdered.

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MORE AGGRANDIZEMENT FROM THE BOOMERS
Posted by: HistArch on Dec 5, 2007 10:15 AM   
Current rating: 2    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
First we had to hear about the Greatest Generation from Brokaw (the same Jim Crow, polluting, fast foodies that fought for freedom but didn't even want to talk about civil rights). Now he's back with another pat-yourself-on-the-back book about the Baby Boomers (the ones who continued consumption, pollution, and should always be known as the biggest, most destructive hypocritical generation in the history of Western Civilization). As a young person, I can't wait to live in the deformed world they will leave behind. Isn't it ironic how they love to remember their protests against the man, but are quick to take their Social Security checks now. Thanks Brokaw for another reminder of why this country is the way it is today. Keep on destructing, Baby "sell-out" Boomers.

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» RE: I don't think we'll do any better... Posted by: AMERICAN VETERAN
Fuck the 60s. The sham is over.
Posted by: cjohnson44 on Dec 5, 2007 10:39 AM   
Current rating: 1    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Nobody is buying that "60s Generation" crap anymore, having seen how all those 60s "idealists" who were going to change the world only turned into materialist consumers mico-managing their kids' lives.

Ever talk to a kid of a 60s parent? Talk about stupid and sheltered. They can't point to Korea on a globe or put two sentences together, but they sure know where to buy useless iPhone junk that's already obsolete.

The "60s Generation:" the most narcissistic failures ever.

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» RE: Fuck the 60s. The sham is over. Posted by: AMERICAN VETERAN
TO: THE YOUNG PUNKS WHO COME HERE TO WHINE
Posted by: AMERICAN VETERAN on Dec 6, 2007 6:52 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
about the GREAT & REAL AMERICA which we REAL AMERICANS had built, nursed and worked HARD to maintain,
You pieces of excrement who have posted your petty and empty headed little insults against us are the ACTUAL REASON why there is no longer a REAL AMERICA.
You are a collection of pieces of whiny, petty, finger pointing, ass kissing, chickenshit hawls who don't have the ambition, decency, intelligence and just plain old fucking AMERICA GUTS to DO something FOR AMERICA.
It would make me smile if you were to craok of whatever.
It is certain that not a goddamn one of you will ever die in combat.
You sit home and wring your little fingers and whine and weep about what others did to MAKE IT POSSIBLE FOR YOU TO BE TOTAL IGNORANT ASSHOLES.
You will collectively come here to whine and weep about my comment yet, your whining and weeping will be as empty as your illegitimate right to take FROM the America that WE have GIVE TO.
SIT DOWN, SHUT THE FUCK UP AND STOP STEALING FROM OUR AMERICA AS, it is NOT YOUR country.
You've done nothing to earn it.

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blue haired lackey
Posted by: craiteri on Dec 6, 2007 4:59 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Like all mainstream network "journalists," Brokaw
sold out the day he joined NBC. No journalists at any of the established networks are free to do their own reporting. They know their reports will reflect the thinking of the "home office" and that's how they'll rise in the ranks. Brokaw was always a blue hair because he was always a company lackey, which means he doesn't now and never did have anything insightful to offer America.

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hackbut
Posted by: hackbut on Dec 6, 2007 6:31 PM   
Current rating: 1    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Reading one of these self-righteous old lefties from the 60's makes me gag. After they established the principle that no one would admit responsibility for anything, they went on to grab the reins of power and nearly ruin this country with their left-wing policies. Even worse, the Republicans, the people with the money and the real power, picked up their ideas of no responsibility and the result is the cesspool this country is today. A pox on the 60's and the left criminals who started the ruination of this country.

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JFK & the MOB
Posted by: TruthBought&$old on Dec 6, 2007 10:55 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
"John F. Kennedy, the man I had thought would define the political ideal for the rest of my days, was suddenly gone in the senseless violence of a single moment..."

http://www.brasschecktv.com/page/206.html

There was no "senseless violence of a single moment" about the JFK hit. This president was taken out by a bloody putsch orchestrated at the highest levels.

JFK was far from perfect but perhaps the most important thing to know about him was that he was his own man, not owned by a criminal corporate ruling class that has run virtually every president since.

The video shows one of 2 Secret Service agents who literally had JFK's back. They were told to stand down and fall back for the planned hit. One of the SS agents demands an explanation from his superior in the film by holding up his arms in outrage not once – but 3 TIMES.

That Secret Service agent in his outrage at his ordered stand-down is symbolic of everything wrong at Fascist Amerika from 1963 to 9/11 and after.

Brokaw is a typical Stepford drone for an MSM farce that couldn’t be more smarmy or compromised.

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Don't TRUST HISTORY CHANNEL or Brokaw
Posted by: Kahoneez on Dec 6, 2007 11:57 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
In the last few years the History channel has been showing more programs that look they were produced by the Pentagon that I've ever seen . I've seen Special Ops program, followed by Swat Team Special , followed by a gun show . and since Brokaw goes to Bildeberger meetings and is a member of the Council on Foreign Relations its no surprise the picked him to do a little pro-government point of view "documentary "

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