附註:Includes bibliographical references (pages 388-402) and index.
Prologue: Why This Book -- 1. The Day It Started -- 2. The End of the Line -- 3. The Knight Errant -- 4. Alarums and Excursions -- 5. Toward Higher Ground -- 6. The Golden Egg -- 7. Getting on the Map -- 8. Hope Reborn -- 9. The Three-Ring Circus -- 10. In Pursuit of Forever -- 11. The Long View -- Appendix: The Standards of Ownership by Nelson Poynter.
摘要:One of the country's most respected newspapers developed in tandem with the sometimes paradoxical life of Nelson Poynter, its owner for three decades until his death in 1978. As a result of Poynter's obsessive demands, the St. Petersburg Times, once an unremarkable daily read mainly by the residents of Pinellas County, Florida, achieved an international reputation for journalistic innovation and quality. , Poynter believed that a newspaper is a sacred trust. He set a national standard by using color graphics and photos to tell complex stories. , He was one of the first to launch a crusade for good writing, and he refused to kowtow to community opinion. "In Florida's largest bastion of Republicanism, it kept intact its reputation as the state's most liberal editorial voice," Robert Pierce writes. "It exhorted its readers to change their minds on gun control, Contra aid, and capital punishment." The Times gave its readers what it thought was good for them, whether they liked it or not. , Equally paradoxical was Poynter's legacy. His will set in motion a unique experiment in U.S. journalism management that made public service, not money-making, the moving force and primary responsibility of a news medium. This procedure left ownership of the paper to an educational institute but gave total control to a series of chief executives, each of whom would choose a successor. , Any corporate history is a suspicious undertaking, and the author writes in the preface that he was wary at the outset, recognizing that "the Times's extraordinary story had taken on mythical dimensions as told by true believers among its executives." The book is nevertheless as objective as biography can be. , The author has interwoven Poynter's life and death not only with the tempestuous and highly relevant history of his own family but also with the major themes in the newspaper's evolution, and he locates all of these in the context of national and state history and of journalistic development. In the end, though, it is "a story of human beings, some brilliant, some obsessed, all with limitations, [who] somehow ... worked together to fashion a newspaper unlike any other."