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Covering Clinton: The President and the Press in the 1990s

(Hardback)


Publishing Details

Full Title:

Covering Clinton: The President and the Press in the 1990s

Contributors:

By (Author) Joseph R. Hayden

ISBN:

9780275970345

Publisher:

Bloomsbury Publishing PLC

Imprint:

Praeger Publishers Inc

Publication Date:

30th November 2001

Country:

United States

Classifications

Readership:

Tertiary Education

Fiction/Non-fiction:

Non Fiction

Other Subjects:

History of the Americas
Biography: historical, political and military
Political control and freedoms
Media studies

Dewey:

973.929

Physical Properties

Physical Format:

Hardback

Number of Pages:

168

Description

Hayden examines the presidential-press relationship in the 1990s, focusing first on the 1992 campaign, then on issues and events over Clinton's two terms. He analyzes the press response to the programs of the Clinton era and scandals, and the role's of consultants, press secretaries, and pollsters, seeking to determine how the press reacted relative to the Iran-Contra and Watergate scandals.

Reviews

"If you find it fascinating to learn how Houdini managed to get himself into impossible situations and then magically managed to extract himself and escape to his next entanglement, this is your book.[W]hen Clinton and his publics pass on, the warmth of human relations will dissipate and the final verdict about the Clinton presidency will be rendered in the cold light of dispassionate scholarship. If that light focuses on Hayden's text, it will show a presidency marked by superb style and acrobatic political flexibility but short on principled actions and sorely lacking in lasting substantive political achievements."-Political Science Quarterly
A quick read recapping the best--and worst--of the Clinton years, this book touches on many matters: the political and personal baggage Clinton carried into both his elections; his ability to court the new media; his hiring of a young and energetic (though not always competent) staff; surviving the Lewinsky scandal; his generating high job ratings and surviving dismal personal ones. Told through a handful of brief chapters that discuss topics such as Clinton's "first term follies," his two campaigns, his impeachment, and his desire to have a favorable legacy, the book provides a picture of a "scandal-prone politician" who brought great intelligence, glib political skills, and dogged persistence to the White House. Throughout Hayden highlights the tensions Clinton experienced with both the old and new media: illustrative is a synopsis of the Clinton-Dole campaign that recounts the "liberal bias" of the media, a Dole who could not match Clinton in charisma, and the victory of an energetic, incumbent Clinton (albeit with a much lower margin of victory than had been predicted). The reader comes away with a picture of a president with an uncanny ability to connect with a portion of the US population, a man who often had shaky relations with the press. All collections.-Choice
If you find it fascinating to learn how Houdini managed to get himself into impossible situations and then magically managed to extract himself and escape to his next entanglement, this is your book.[W]hen Clinton and his publics pass on, the warmth of human relations will dissipate and the final verdict about the Clinton presidency will be rendered in the cold light of dispassionate scholarship. If that light focuses on Hayden's text, it will show a presidency marked by superb style and acrobatic political flexibility but short on principled actions and sorely lacking in lasting substantive political achievements.-Political Science Quarterly
"A quick read recapping the best--and worst--of the Clinton years, this book touches on many matters: the political and personal baggage Clinton carried into both his elections; his ability to court the new media; his hiring of a young and energetic (though not always competent) staff; surviving the Lewinsky scandal; his generating high job ratings and surviving dismal personal ones. Told through a handful of brief chapters that discuss topics such as Clinton's "first term follies," his two campaigns, his impeachment, and his desire to have a favorable legacy, the book provides a picture of a "scandal-prone politician" who brought great intelligence, glib political skills, and dogged persistence to the White House. Throughout Hayden highlights the tensions Clinton experienced with both the old and new media: illustrative is a synopsis of the Clinton-Dole campaign that recounts the "liberal bias" of the media, a Dole who could not match Clinton in charisma, and the victory of an energetic, incumbent Clinton (albeit with a much lower margin of victory than had been predicted). The reader comes away with a picture of a president with an uncanny ability to connect with a portion of the US population, a man who often had shaky relations with the press. All collections."-Choice

Author Bio

JOSEPH HAYDEN is a professor of history at the University of North Carolina at Charlotte, a freelance writer, and a former journalist.

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