The greatest quote whore who ever lived
In the University of Chicago Alumni magazine, Amy M. Braverman has an excellent profile of Robert Thompson, Syracuse?s trustee professor of radio, television, and film in the S. I. Newhouse School of Public Communications and founding director of the Center for the Study of Popular Television. Thompson is better known as being the best quote ...
In the University of Chicago Alumni magazine, Amy M. Braverman has an excellent profile of Robert Thompson, Syracuse?s trustee professor of radio, television, and film in the S. I. Newhouse School of Public Communications and founding director of the Center for the Study of Popular Television. Thompson is better known as being the best quote whore in the business -- seriously, the could be asked to comment on wallpaper paste -- or That 70's Show -- and he'd come up with something worth putting in the first two paragraphs of a story. What Braverman reveals, however, is that Thompson devotes considerable time and effort to hone this skill: [A] large portion of his day is devoted to talking with reporters. Most mornings, after waking up at 5:30 to read a novel (favorite authors include Don DeLillo, Nicholson Baker, and Alison Lurie), he makes scheduled calls to a few radio shows. ?If you?re a professor holding office hours,? he says, ?you?ll talk to anyone who comes in. This is the same thing. If I have three calls?one from the student newspaper, one from the New York Times, and one from CNN, I?ll return them in that order.? When big television events occur, he?s inundated. After the 2004 Super Bowl, for example, ?Janet Jackson gets her blouse ripped off, and that killed Monday.? In fact, the Janet calls continued for two weeks. For that particular story, he considered it important ?to get another voice out there.? Nobody else, he says, was discussing how the Super Bowl ?has always been a raucous, rowdy broadcast with cameras lingering on cheerleaders and crass commercials. What are you going to worry about more?the breast flashing at 50 yards or the countless commercials about beer and the good life? To me there?s no question.?.... It?s time to return some calls. He?s already spoken today with an LA radio station about the JetBlue incident, the Syracuse Post Standard about Martha Stewart?s Apprentice, the Los Angeles Times about the Weather Channel changing format for big weather stories like Hurricane Katrina, and WPRO in Rhode Island about the new fall television season. Now he plays phone tag with NPR, which wants him to reflect on Bugs Bunny for an upcoming ?great characters in cultural history? series. He gets hold of Sacramento Bee reporter Alison Roberts and discusses JetBlue. The next day he appears in her story:But did the coverage unnecessarily alarm passengers? ?The mode of American journalism is hyperbole,? said Robert Thompson, director of Syracuse University?s Center for the Study of Popular Television. At the same time, the attention can also be reassuring, he added. ?If CNN and Fox are on you?if you?re considered breaking news?then you figure somehow surely all that can be done is being done,? Thompson said. The key to Thompson?s savvy is staying ahead of the game. ?You hope that by the time a journalist calls you?ve already been thinking about it,? he says. The 60th anniversary of the webbed aluminum lawn chair, he offers as a nontelevision, pop-culture example, is approaching, so he read up. The chair is fascinating, he says, ?because you had all this extra aluminum after the war,? and some enterprising folks thought to ?take this surplus of aluminum and match it with the explosion of the suburbs, which was helped with the GI Bill.? It?s his favorite type of topic. ?It?s fun to learn the contextual history of things you take for granted. The stuff is so totally a part of who you are and you fail to see the significance.? The webbed aluminim lawn chair. Wow. I humbly bow before the greatest quote whore who ever lived. [Isn't there a price to be paid for this kind of slavish attention to media entreaties?--ed. I dunno. On the one hand, Thompson does seem to have an encyclopedic knowledge of his subject domain, thanks in no small part to his willingness to talk to the media. At the same time, attempting to render a two-sentence judgment on any media trend or phenomenon under the sun might carry a cost in terms of deeper thought -- a point Josh Korr makes here and here. Er, can't you say the same thing about bloggers?--ed. I'll leave that question for the comments.] UPDATE: Thompson might be the most prolific quote whore ever, but I'm pretty sure Virginia Postrel will win the award for most profitable.
In the University of Chicago Alumni magazine, Amy M. Braverman has an excellent profile of Robert Thompson, Syracuse?s trustee professor of radio, television, and film in the S. I. Newhouse School of Public Communications and founding director of the Center for the Study of Popular Television. Thompson is better known as being the best quote whore in the business — seriously, the could be asked to comment on wallpaper paste — or That 70’s Show — and he’d come up with something worth putting in the first two paragraphs of a story. What Braverman reveals, however, is that Thompson devotes considerable time and effort to hone this skill:
[A] large portion of his day is devoted to talking with reporters. Most mornings, after waking up at 5:30 to read a novel (favorite authors include Don DeLillo, Nicholson Baker, and Alison Lurie), he makes scheduled calls to a few radio shows. ?If you?re a professor holding office hours,? he says, ?you?ll talk to anyone who comes in. This is the same thing. If I have three calls?one from the student newspaper, one from the New York Times, and one from CNN, I?ll return them in that order.? When big television events occur, he?s inundated. After the 2004 Super Bowl, for example, ?Janet Jackson gets her blouse ripped off, and that killed Monday.? In fact, the Janet calls continued for two weeks. For that particular story, he considered it important ?to get another voice out there.? Nobody else, he says, was discussing how the Super Bowl ?has always been a raucous, rowdy broadcast with cameras lingering on cheerleaders and crass commercials. What are you going to worry about more?the breast flashing at 50 yards or the countless commercials about beer and the good life? To me there?s no question.?…. It?s time to return some calls. He?s already spoken today with an LA radio station about the JetBlue incident, the Syracuse Post Standard about Martha Stewart?s Apprentice, the Los Angeles Times about the Weather Channel changing format for big weather stories like Hurricane Katrina, and WPRO in Rhode Island about the new fall television season. Now he plays phone tag with NPR, which wants him to reflect on Bugs Bunny for an upcoming ?great characters in cultural history? series. He gets hold of Sacramento Bee reporter Alison Roberts and discusses JetBlue. The next day he appears in her story:
But did the coverage unnecessarily alarm passengers? ?The mode of American journalism is hyperbole,? said Robert Thompson, director of Syracuse University?s Center for the Study of Popular Television. At the same time, the attention can also be reassuring, he added. ?If CNN and Fox are on you?if you?re considered breaking news?then you figure somehow surely all that can be done is being done,? Thompson said.
The key to Thompson?s savvy is staying ahead of the game. ?You hope that by the time a journalist calls you?ve already been thinking about it,? he says. The 60th anniversary of the webbed aluminum lawn chair, he offers as a nontelevision, pop-culture example, is approaching, so he read up. The chair is fascinating, he says, ?because you had all this extra aluminum after the war,? and some enterprising folks thought to ?take this surplus of aluminum and match it with the explosion of the suburbs, which was helped with the GI Bill.? It?s his favorite type of topic. ?It?s fun to learn the contextual history of things you take for granted. The stuff is so totally a part of who you are and you fail to see the significance.?
The webbed aluminim lawn chair. Wow. I humbly bow before the greatest quote whore who ever lived. [Isn’t there a price to be paid for this kind of slavish attention to media entreaties?–ed. I dunno. On the one hand, Thompson does seem to have an encyclopedic knowledge of his subject domain, thanks in no small part to his willingness to talk to the media. At the same time, attempting to render a two-sentence judgment on any media trend or phenomenon under the sun might carry a cost in terms of deeper thought — a point Josh Korr makes here and here. Er, can’t you say the same thing about bloggers?–ed. I’ll leave that question for the comments.] UPDATE: Thompson might be the most prolific quote whore ever, but I’m pretty sure Virginia Postrel will win the award for most profitable.
Daniel W. Drezner is a professor of international politics at the Fletcher School of Law and Diplomacy at Tufts University and co-host of the Space the Nation podcast. Twitter: @dandrezner
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