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by David Everitt
The cold war came to broadcasting in 1950. In that year, just as the Korean War was about to erupt, there appeared from a small publisher a booklet called Red Channels, which listed 151 suspected Communist sympathizers in broadcasting. Within months, the blacklist in radio and TV began. The purge of the airwaves, distinct from the better-known blacklist in the movie industry, provoked one of the American media's great free-speech controversies. It affected scores of writers, directors, and actors, and involved some of the media's largest figures, including Edward R. Murrow and Frank Stanton of CBS. It roiled and intimidated some of the country's largest corporate program sponsors. Yet it was instigated by only a handful of anti-Red watchdogs - three ex-FBI agents, a former naval intelligence officer, and a grocer from Syracuse. A Shadow of Red follows the efforts of these five guardians of the broadcast media in a revealing history of the period, based on interviews, personal correspon
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