| In 'Flash Frames,' Don Marsh provides slices of history |
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| By Amanda King, Beacon intern | |
| Last Updated ( Tuesday, 22 July 2008 ) | |
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In his new book, "Flash Frames," Don Marsh, host of KWMU's St. Louis on the Air, takes readers through his nearly 50 years of broadcast news experience, covering big stories from the hot days of the Cold War to the Midwest flood of '93. Within four years of when he came on board with the American Forces Network in Germany in 1959, the Soviets constructed the Berlin Wall, the Cuban Missile Crisis put the world on the verge of nuclear warfare and President John F. Kennedy became the fourth U.S. president to die at the hands of an assassin.
And sometimes he was smack dab in the middle of it, as in April 1968, when riots broke out across the country in response to the Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.'s assassination. Marsh was in Baltimore working for WJZ-TV when rioters set the city afire. While he was covering the widespread destruction and looting, Marsh and a cameraman were attacked by arsonists armed with rocks and bottles. Six years earlier in Munich, Marsh was on the receiving end of more than one blow from a police truncheon while he was covering a student riot there for AFN. In his book, Marsh presents his observations of the news events with which he was so intimately acquainted -- from the riots in Baltimore and Munich to U.S. intervention in Somalia -- in short, self-contained sketches he calls "flash frames." "It basically was dictated to me by what popped into my head -- what I've talked to people about over the years, the strongest recollections," Marsh said. "I thought people might be interested in that little slice of (history) I happened to see. It's not about me. It's about what I saw. What was going on was more important than my being there." In one of his flash frames, Marsh recalls this fact being driven home to him during his discouraging first interview as an AFN reporter. Armed with little more than a year of experience and a recording device he had never handled before, Marsh was dispatched to the Frankfurt airport to nab an interview with Dean Martin and Frank Sinatra. Marsh now assumes he was given this as a "rite of passage" assignment by news directors who had few expectations of him getting anything. But he didn't return empty-handed. Marsh came back to the newsroom with a recording devoid of any comment from Old Blue Eyes and dabbled with one and two word answers from Martin -- trite answers made even shorter by the fast speed of the recording, which made the velvety-voiced singer sound like Alvin the Chipmunk. The Martin-Sinatra interview shook the rookie reporter's confidence for years. He recovered, though, and went on to interview such celebrities as James Garner, Duke Ellington and Henry Fonda. Marsh recalls spotting Sinatra at a national presidential convention years later when he worked for KTVI in St. Louis. Marsh did not attempt a second interview. From Frankfurt to St. Louis and everyplace in between, Marsh was never keen on climbing the corporate ladder. Though he was sometimes thrust into managerial positions, once serving as news director for WJZ in Baltimore, Marsh found that such positions were always temporary and usually distasteful.
About the Book
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