"Vietnam, and especially Saigon, comes alive. . . .
Reading Inside Television's First War almost made me
sweat—I could feel the humid heat, crowded streets, and the
sense that in this deep nowhere land something bad could happen
at almost any time. . . . It's a great read."—Randy
Roberts
Inside Television's First War recounts Ron Steinman's
tenure as head of the NBC news bureau in Saigon from April 1966
until July 1968. This was a time during the Vietnam conflict that
included the major American buildup and the Tet Offensive and saw
much of America turn from support of the war to opposition.
During this period, television journalists learned how to report
war in a distinctly new way: through the eye of a camera on the
front lines, in the countryside, and in cities, towns, and
villages. The experience of a living-room war was new, and its
effects are still being felt today. Yet in our own era of high-
tech journalism and hasty judgment, Vietnam's lessons are all but
forgotten.
Steinman and his colleagues, mostly quite young, were covering an
increasingly controversial war. They were going places and doing
things that had never before been done on such a scale for an
international audience. They used film that had to be shipped and
then developed because satellites were rarely used before 1968.
Correspondents and crews often drove to their assignments in
rented cars, whether covering a battle, a riot, a political
event, or a military briefing. When necessary, they resorted to
military flights or erratic, unsafe commercial airlines.
The author also provides glimpses into his personal life. He
writes of his courtship of Josephine Tu Ngoc Suong, a young
Vietnamese coworker who was seriously wounded and near death in
1967. After her recovery, she and Steinman were married and now
have three children together. And he tells the story of his
brother-in-law, a prisoner in a Communist reeducation camp after
the war, to whom he tried to smuggle money and medicine during a
visit in 1985.
Inside Television's First War is a behind-the-scenes look
at how the Vietnam conflict influenced young journalists, and how
their coverage of the war influenced the American public.
Steinman offers an intimate portrait of what became the biggest
story of many people's lives. History buffs and general readers
alike will benefit from this valuable contribution to
understanding America's coverage of Vietnam.
About the Author
Ron Steinman is Partner, Producer, Director, and Writer at
Douglas/Steinman Productions in New York City. He is the author
of The Soldiers' Story: Vietnam in Their Own Words and
Women in Vietnam: The Oral History.