We're Going to Make You a Star explained

We're Going to Make You a Star
Author:Sally Quinn
Country:United States
Language:English
Genre:Biography
Published:1975 (Simon & Schuster)
Media Type:Print (hardcover)
Pages:256
Isbn:0-671-22084-5
Oclc:1324461
Dewey:070'.92'4
Congress:PN4874.Q5 A35

We're Going To Make You a Star is a 1975 book by Sally Quinn detailing her brief time with the CBS Morning News. In this book, she discusses the CBS failure and reflects on her adolescence and how it, among other things, led to her failure as a television news anchor.

Contents

Sally Quinn grew up a general's daughter. She was acquainted with many diplomats and obtained a string of odd jobs around Washington, D.C. until she settled as a society reporter for the Washington Post. Quinn became notorious for her tough reviews. This is where the book begins but the real story is addressed after she is offered an anchor job for the CBS Morning News. She describes how reluctant she was about taking the job alongside Hughes Rudd and goes on to chronicle the failure of the show.

Quinn disclaims any responsibility for being unprepared and blames CBS for all that went wrong during the short life of this incarnation of the CBS Morning News. Scattered among the accounts of the broadcasting field Quinn offers an account of her personal relationships with big names such as Fred Friendly and Walter Cronkite.

Critical reception

Kirkus Reviews panned We're Going To Make You a Star, saying the book was "embarrassing to read".[1]

Notes and References

  1. . We're Going to Make You a Star by Sally Quinn . Kirkus Reviews. 1 June 1975. 647 . 24 December 2017.