Biography: Gabriel Heatter, the radio journalist rivaled only by Walter Winchell and Edward R. Murrow in his time, was born on the lower East side of Manhattan to immigrant parents on September 17, 1890. The family soon moved to Brooklyn, where Heatter went to school. He was not a good student and found his high school studies particularly frustrating. However, he was well-spoken, well-read and had a lively ... show all Gabriel Heatter, the radio journalist rivaled only by Walter Winchell and Edward R. Murrow in his time, was born on the lower East side of Manhattan to immigrant parents on September 17, 1890. The family soon moved to Brooklyn, where Heatter went to school. He was not a good student and found his high school studies particularly frustrating. However, he was well-spoken, well-read and had a lively interest in current events. When he was 16 years old, Heatter harnessed his gift for communication and hit the hustings as a sidewalk campaigner for media baron and Congressman William Randolph Hearst's unsuccessful 1906 run for mayor of New York City. Although Hearst lost the race, his example as a progressive tribune of the people influenced the young Heatter to become a journalist. After graduating from high school, Heatter began working at the "East New York Record," a weekly rag where he reported on social functions. Heatter moved on to the "Brooklyn Times," and while working as a cub reporter for that paper, the Heast Corp. offered him a position as the Brooklyn reporter for The "New York Evening Journal," Hearst's flagship paper in the Big Town. He accepted. Heatter became well-known because of a 1931 article published by the liberal weekly "The Nation" in which he argued against the legality of the U.S. Socialist Party. The New York radio station WMCA set up an on-air debate between Heatter and a prominent Socialist, and when his opponent failed to show up, Heatter went on the air and discussed his article in more depth. The response was so positive, a larger station, Mutual Broadcasting's WOR offered him a job as a commentator and reporter. From then on, his career was in radio news. Heatter became a prominent radio newsman in 1933 when he covered the "Trial of the Century," the Bruno Richard Hauptmann/Lindbergh Baby Kidnapping-Murder Trial. Now nationally famous, Heatter's commentary began to be a major influence on public opinion, and he became a peer and competitor of the powerful radio newsmen Walter Winchell. His heyday was World War II, when Heatter's upbeat reporting and commentary was popular with American audiences gloomy over the reversals of fortune in the immediate post-Pearl Harbor period. In the first half of 1942, the news from the Pacific War was not good. One evening, after the U.S. Navy successfully sank a Japanese destroyer, Heatter came on the air declaring, "There is good news tonight." This became his catch phrase that he continued to use throughout his career. He was seen as a morale booster looking for blue skies and silver linings in clouds that he would include with the news. This optimism and lack of objectivity may be one reason why he is forgotten today, whereas the highly opinionated Winchell and the coldly objective-seeming (though by no means neutral) Murrow live on 'til this day (in Matt Drudge and the movie 2005 movie "Good Night and Good Luck," respectively). hide |