Summary: CNN - The Inside Story
Review and Analysis of Whittemore's Book
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About This Book
The must-read summary of Hank Whittemore's book: `CNN - The Inside Story: How a Band of Mavericks Changed the Face of Television News`.
This complete summary of the ideas from Hank Whittemore's book `CNN - The Inside Story` tells the story behind the creation of television station Cable News Network and its founder, Ted Turner. In his book, Hank Whittemore describes the risks Turner took and how he tried to take over CBS and fought against ABC. This summary contains inspiring quotes and an interesting behind-the-scenes look at one of the most successful television channels.
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To learn more, read `CNN - The Inside Story` and discover the story behind the channel and the risks it took to create it.
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Summary of CNN ā The Inside Story (Hank Whittemore)
1.
āI just wanted to see if we could do it ā like Christopher Columbus. When you do something thatās never been done before, sail on uncharted waters and donāt know where youāre going, youāre not sure what youāre going to find when you get there, but at least youāre going somewhere.ā
āI came out of a Depression family, where my father started with absolutely nothing. He thought that the way to be successful was to make a lot of money and have a lot of riches and power. When he was fifty-three years old, he had a nervous breakdown and blew his brains out. I loved that man desperately; he was my father and we were very close; but I spent a lot of time trying to figure out what it was he did wrong. He put too much emphasis on material success. I can tell you itās fools goldā¦.
I really grew up with a tremendous work ethic and it was pumped into my head to ābe a success, be a success.ā And all during my life, I had this gnawing feeling that maybe I wasnāt going to be a success. My father died when I was twenty-four and he was the one, really, that I had expected to be the judge of whether I was successful or not.
So when I finally got on the cover of Success magazine, I held it up and said, āDad. Do you see this? I made the cover of Success Magazine! Is that enough?āā
āWhen I bought Channel 17, everybody just hooted at me. The station was really at deathās door. I didnāt bullshit anybody. I told them I didnāt know anything about TV. My accountants told me we were going to go broke. They said I was crazyā¦..
I just love it when people say I canāt do something. Thereās nothing that makes me feel better, because all my life people have said I wasnāt going to make it.
The secret of my success is this: Every time I tried to go as far as I could. When I climbed the hills, I saw the mountains. Then I started climbing the mountainsā¦ā
Turner was also putting together a team of guys who would be prepared to go all out with him. Some of his team included:
āOne time I went with Ted to a bank where we were trying to get a loan. The executive listened and finally said, āThatās all very well and good, Mr. Turner, but what if you drop dead?ā In the next second, Ted dropped to the floor and lay there as if he were dead. Then he slithered up the side of the desk, grinned at the banker and said, āFooled ya, didnāt I?ā We got the loan.ā
āThere were maybe forty-three people in the whole corporation when I arrived. We had absolutely no equipment at Channel 17, and no real engineering or maintenance being done. We had all kinds of technical problems and kept going off the air. I bought a cot and basically moved in and stayed there. The operators would sit around playing banjos and smoking pot while the film would run out. Nobody really knew there was a Channel 17 in those days.
One time our transmission line blew all the way to the top of the tower. It took about seven days to get back on air. I worked on the tower for that entire week and never got any sleep and my shoes were full of blood. If I had time to look for another job, I wouldnāt have been there. I thought Ted was crazyā¦ā
āI was twenty-five when I started working there and I thought to myself, what have I got to lose? Every year, from then on, Iāve said the same thing. Itās like youāre halfway up the hill and youāve got to see whatās on the other side. Every year, something crazy or wild came up. Eventually, you take on the attitude that youāre like guerilla fighters. Or a bunch of pirates going after an armarda. You accept the tough parts because thereās a sense of mission. I got to the point where I really enjoyed living on the edge, which is what Ted always did. And he would do anything, like stand on a table or take a guy by the throat or kiss his feet. Whatever was called for in the situation.ā
āWhen I got to Charlotte to head up sales, I wondered what the hell Iād done. The second night I was there, I was watching our big prime time movie. It was some Maureen OāHara movie about the desert. Here it comes on, and you see these camels with Maureen OāHara, and theyāre walking upside down and backwards! This goes on for about three minutes and they shut it off. Itās just black. For five more minutes. Then the movie comes on again, but the camels are still upside down, so it goes off again. But this time, instead of a black screen, they run about seven minutes of straight commercials. Finally it comes on and we try once more ā but now itās a different movie!ā
Table of contents
- Title page
- Book Presentation
- Summary of CNN ā The Inside Story (Hank Whittemore)
- About the Summary Publisher
- Copyright