On air The triumph and tumult of NPR

Steve Oney, 1954-

Book - 2025

"An epic, decade-long reported history of National Public Radio that reveals the unlikely story of one of America's most celebrated but least understood media empires"--

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2 copies ordered
Subjects
Published
New York : Avid Reader Press 2025.
Language
English
Corporate Author
National Public Radio (U.S.)
Main Author
Steve Oney, 1954- (author)
Corporate Author
National Public Radio (U.S.) (-)
Edition
First Avid Reader Press hardcover edition
Physical Description
pages cm
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references and index.
ISBN
9781451656091
9781451656107
Contents unavailable.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

This raucous history from journalist Oney (A Man's World) recaps National Public Radio's trajectory from countercultural bulwark (Allen Ginsberg intoned about flower power on the network's inaugural broadcast, All Things Considered, in 1971) to pillar of mainstream media. Oney credits founding programming chief Bill Siemering with innovating a more conversational and personal mode of delivering news, and he offers a wry portrait of how its most famed practitioner, This American Life host Ira Glass, produces his seemingly offhand prologues with painstaking precision. Backstage melodrama abounds as Oney covers the network's near collapse in 1983 due to wild overspending and cocaine-fueled dysfunction, as well as the tense internal reckoning with the network's overwhelming whiteness and alleged liberal bias that followed the station's 2010 firing of Black conservative commentator Juan Williams. Oney's gossipy narrative unsparingly dissects the network's prima donna egos, describing how "the troika"--journalists Cokie Roberts, Nina Totenberg, and Linda Wertheimer--used their celebrity to wield de facto veto power over personnel decisions in the '70s and '80s, and how correspondent Anne Garrels, under stress while reporting from wartime Iraq, sank into depression and drink while bickering constantly with other members of NPR's Baghdad bureau. Oney's fleet-footed storytelling and immersive prose bring to life the network's colorful personalities. The result is an entertaining window into the creative but rancorous scene at one of journalism's most hallowed institutions. (Mar.)

(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Review by Library Journal Review

Many radio listeners know that NPR means "National Public Radio." Fewer know that NPR is a public radio network that was created by an act of Congress in 1970 to be a noncommercial alternative to the commercial radio broadcasters. In this book 14 years in the making, journalist Oney (And the Dead Shall Rise: The Murder of Mary Phagan and the Lynching of Leo Frank) traces the history of NPR from its creation through the 21st century and discusses key figures, like legendary on-air talents Bob Edwards, Susan Stamberg, Ira Glass, and Cokie Roberts, as well as executives with less name recognition. Oney also explores how NPR became the massive multimedia news network it is today, including the creation of This American Life and its entry into podcasting. Nor does Oney shy away from reporting on NPR's controversies, like the firing of Juan Williams and the larger issue of federal funding for a news network that reports on the government. Oney got interviews with seemingly everyone who had a relevant opinion or anecdote about NPR; because of these plentiful interviews, the book's index will be a vital tool for readers. VERDICT Highly recommended for readers interested in the history of public broadcasting.--Jerry Stephens

(c) Copyright Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
Review by Kirkus Book Review

A sprawling history of an American institution that gets plenty of love, if too little money. "It was an odd assortment of folks," said one of the first reporters to join National Public Radio when it went live in 1971, adding that he was hired "as a safety in case these crazies went off the deep end." Some of the "crazies," Oney's comprehensive history reveals, were pretty crazy indeed, especially when cocaine became commonplace in the 1980s: "There was nothing like snorting lines while wrestling with a complex story that required dozens of precise cuts and aural nuances," observes the longtime journalist and author. For some, "it was like ingesting a focusing device that enhanced one's powers of calibration." That such antics raised managerial hackles was another matter. NPR was famously packed with a talented staff that included Bob Edwards, Susan Stamberg, Linda Wertheimer, Scott Simon, and Noah Adams, each of whom brought tremendous skills to the job of reporting. Some of those skills were perhaps not the stuff of other media hotshots: there was the nerdiness--quite successful, eventually--of Ira Glass, while, as Oney notes, Stamberg's standout strength was "a willingness to pose the obvious question," the answer to which "everyone wanted to know." Talent and superb journalism notwithstanding, by Oney's account NPR was always strapped for money and sometimes held hostage by a hostile, politically much more conservative Corporation for Public Broadcasting. Its management and internal politics were sometimes messy as well: One boneheaded executive decision that fortunately didn't endure was to "de-emphasize distinctive personalities" and hire "interchangeable and replaceable hosts." And like so many institutions, it seems, NPR sometimes talked a good game when it came to equity but still was slow to promote women and hire minority staff; as one Black executive noted drily, "NPR news was not friendly to outsiders." A warts-and-all account that's full of surprises, and with plenty of insight into the world of nonprofit media. Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.