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Olympic Athlete's Wife, Munich 1972 - American Story with Bob Dotson

My first job for NBC News was the Munich Olympics in 1972. Before the games began, I was sent out with a silent film camera to shoot minute-30 feature stories. Each one had to be shot on a single roll of film, 3 minutes in length. No more than one roll per story. No natural sound. No interview. Half of what I shot made the final cut. This was my first story.

America survives and thrives because of all those names we don’t know, seemingly ordinary people who do extraordinary things.  They don’t run for president or go on talk shows, but without them, the best of America would not exist.

Bob Dotson was born in St. Louis, Missouri, the son of Dottie Bailey, a singer who performed on NBC radio and Bill Dotson, a janitor who dropped out of school in fifth grade, but attended night classes for 23 years and later earned an honorary masters degree in Opthalmics for his study of the eye.  
 
Their youngest son Bob began a remarkable Odyssey of his own, after graduating from Kansas University in 1968.  Bob Dotson  crisscrossed this country, more than four million miles, searching for people who are practically invisible, the ones who change our lives, but don’t take time to tweet and tell us about it.
 
His quest got noticed.  Dotson won Oklahoma’s first National Emmy for a 90-minute documentary on African American history called “Through the Looking Glass Darkly.”  He was nominated for 11 national Emmys — and won seven more — after he became an NBC News correspondent in 1975.  His long-running series, “The American Story with Bob Dotson,” was a regular feature on the TODAY Show for 40 years.  He is now a New York Times Best Selling author and writes a daily blog which The Society of Professional Journalists cited as the “best in new media.”
 
Dotson continues producing documentaries.  An NBC production, “El Capitan’s Courageous Climbers,” won seven International Film Festivals and documentary's highest honor, the CINE Grand Prize.  He is one of the most honored storytellers of our time.  His reporting and storytelling have earned 120 awards around the world.  They include top honors from the Kennedy Center, DuPont Columbia and a record six Edward R. Murrow Awards for Best Network News Writing.  In 2014, Dotson received the William Allen White Foundation National Citation for journalistic excellence.  In 2019 he joined Will Rogers in the Oklahoma Journalism Hall of Fame.
 
Dotson now teaches the next generation of visual storytellers, conducting workshops in Korea, Australia, England, Holland, Switzerland, and Austria.  He is also a professor of  Master Storytelling at Syracuse University.  

 Bob is the author of four books, including the New York Times best-selling “American Story: A Lifetime Search for Ordinary People Doing Extraordinary Things.” (Penguin/Random House)
 
https://www.penguinrandomhouse.com/books/311268/american-story-by-bob-dotson/9780142180761/
 
The latest edition of his classic, “Make It Memorable: Writing and Packaging Visual News with Style” became Amazon’s best-selling journalism book.  It is being studied on 26 campuses and in newsrooms around the world.  (Roman & Littlefield.)
 
https://www.amazon.com/Make-Memorable-Writing-Packaging-Visual/dp/1442256117/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1535644265&sr=8-1&keywords=make+it+memorable+bob+dotson

Видео Olympic Athlete's Wife, Munich 1972 - American Story with Bob Dotson канала Bob Dotson
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19 апреля 2021 г. 19:57:05
00:01:27
Яндекс.Метрика