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Monitoring the News: The Brilliant Launch and Sudden Collapse of the Monitor Channel
Monitoring the News: The Brilliant Launch and Sudden Collapse of the Monitor Channel
Author: Susan Bridge
Publisher: M.E. Sharpe
Category: Book

List Price: $37.53
Buy New: $9.95
You Save: $27.58 (73%)
Buy New/Used/Collectible from $0.01

Avg. Customer Rating: 2.0 out of 5 stars(7 reviews)
Sales Rank: 2602062

Media: Hardcover
Number Of Items: 1
Pages: 240
Shipping Weight (lbs): 1.3
Dimensions (in): 9.3 x 6.3 x 1.1

ISBN: 0765603152
Dewey Decimal Number: 070.195
EAN: 9780765603159
ASIN: 0765603152

Publication Date: May 1998
Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days

Editorial Reviews:

Product Description
Between 1988 and 1992 a technologically sophisticated entrepreneurial leadership at the Christian Science Monitor led a costly campaign to diversify beyond the failing newspaper into radio, the Internet, multimedia publishing, and the highest ticket item of all -- a CNN-style, 24-hour news and public affairs cable TV channel. In 1992, the entire enterprise came crashing down. Sue Bridge tells the whole story here, setting it in the historical context of Monitor journalism, beginning with the paper's founding in 1908, through the rise of television in the fifties and sixties, and ending with the effective loss of the Monitor as a significant voice in American journalism, at a time when thoughtful and balanced sources of information are increasingly lost in the mass communications marketplace


Customer Reviews:   Read 2 more reviews...

1 out of 5 stars Lacking in true resolutions   November 29, 1999
  3 out of 8 found this review helpful

I was very dissappointed in reading this book. There was more fact and information in the notes then the actual text, I felt the author was giving an over view of the other resource material she had found.

I also found the book very one-sided. Defending the actions of the two key players. As someone who was also an employee of the Monitor Channel during this time, I was amazed at how many inacurate facts there were!

As I finished the book, the only question I had was why did I read it?


1 out of 5 stars poorly written puff piece   July 22, 1999
  1 out of 5 found this review helpful

I am not a Christian Scientist and have no stake in the church arguments over media which Bridges documents.

As I read the book, I was interested in the larger issues Bridges claims she will address: how do events at the CS Monitor reflect the situation of all US journalism?

Sadly, Bridges seems so interested in defending the actions of her colleagues and herself that she doesn't really examine this larger issue.

Also, the writing is terrible. The sentences are poorly constructed, and Bridges uses way too many unnecessary adjectives (perhaps forgetting that adjectives cannot substitute for evidence). By the time I finished, I felt that if she used the word "upshot" ("The upshot was . . .") one more time I would have to run screaming from the room.

The only reason to read this book is to get a glimpse of the primary sources Bridges cites. Read the quotes and the footnotes--I'd skip the rest.


5 out of 5 stars Well researched, very informative piece of literature   March 15, 1999
  6 out of 6 found this review helpful

Susan Bridge provides information about a relatively "cloaked" period in the Christian Science movement, and although her book wasn't intended to inform church members about the happenings as they related to the church itself, it is an excellent vehicle for doing so.The book is a good read for those individuals interested in the area of media and the news, even though it draws some bleak conclusions for positive changes in the future in the way we receive our news. The recent Walters/Lewinsky interview is a chilling example of the direction we might be headed, but it is a must reading for every Christian Scientist who is interested in what took place in Boston from approximately 1984-1992.I think it is well written, well documented, and very interesting. I also felt she was fair in her writing and kept as impartial perspective about the entire situation as possible under the circumstances. She leaves questions to be answered by each reader. Was it a good direction? Was it overly expensive? Would it have been an additional or even a replacement medium for providing the quality of news Mary Baker Eddy desired when she founded the Christian Science Monitor--a newspaper that has not broken even financially for decades? Were individual personalities responsible for the failure? What other factors came into play in this whole scenario that impacted the concepts and their implementation.It certainly will make you think.


2 out of 5 stars "To spread undivided the Science that operates unspent"   January 19, 1999
  1 out of 5 found this review helpful

Once again, the Monitor's fundamental intent, as expressed by Mary Baker Eddy, is overlooked and not understood--by the author and Netty Douglass et al.

The object: "To injure no man but bless all mankind," cited repeatedly in MTN, is the corollary, following the fundamental activity and statement made in the omitted first part of the quote from the Monitor's first editorial, where MBE says, speaking of the periodicals she founded: "The next I named 'Monitor,' to spread undivided the Science that operates unspent."

Although the Monitor's mission was never to prosyletize or be a missionary for the C.S. Church institution, it clearly is meant to further the underlying principle, i.e. Christian Science.

It is this blind spot that made the broadcasting project--the way Jack, Netty, et al went about it--destined to fail from the start.

While always putting things in the most positive light for Jack and Netty, from a cursory reading it seems MTN does cover most of the important points.


4 out of 5 stars Insightful, revealing, informative, and readable   August 25, 1998
  4 out of 5 found this review helpful

Bridge's book sheds real light on a fascinating story that only an insider such as she could tell with such authority and understanding. A most useful case-study of a fallen communication enterprise that seemed doomed from the start. This is a book that every broadcast professional and academic should read. Well-documented and thoroughly compelling.

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