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Newhouse: All the Glitter, Power, & Glory of America's Richest Media Empire & the Secretive Man Behind It

Newhouse: All the Glitter, Power, & Glory of America's Richest Media Empire & the Secretive Man Behind It

List Price: $20.00
Your Price: $13.60
Product Info Reviews

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Rating: 5 stars
Summary: An Important but Neglected Book
Review: The book shows how American media are controlled by a single family company. It owns many of the famous and influential publishing companies, magazines, and newspapers. It is a very dangerous situation that American media are under control by the handful people. As a matter of fact, the author mentioned in the paperback edition that the Newhouse company banned any mention of this book in their publications. The book, which won the 1995 "best media book" prize, seems to be neglected, but this is a very important book that more people should read. A sole purpose of media isn't a simple means of entertainment for people, and isn't mere profit organizations for the owner either. Media have the responsibility to execute the social role, and its fair execution is questionable under such a monopoly situation. The author proposes not-for-profit newspapers, and I believe it is time to consider to go back to such a fundamental point. Through various incidents the Newhouse company have initiated, the book leads us to consider what media mean to us. It is a very good book to think what true journalism means to us.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Critical Media Biography
Review: This is a biography as much of a media empire as it is of a man. While Maier spends as much time as he can on the private side of S.I. Newhouse Jr., he in the end focus on what is most seen of this most private of media moguls-- his media properties.

Maier uses the device of choosing figures and brands important to Newhouse history (Roy Cohn, Random House, Tina Brown, the New Yorker) and spending a chapter on each one, tracing their history in relation to both Newhouse and Advance Publications. While a good device for giving a thorough overview, be warned that it does make for a slightly disconnected read and I found that I had to flip back through the chapters to remember how events relating to particular chapters related to each other in time.

One of the more complete media biographies you're likely to encounter and a must read if you're interested in magazine history.


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