HEARST, WILLIAM RANDOLPH

1863–1951, American journalist and publisher, b. San Francisco. A flamboyant, highly controversial figure, Hearst was nonetheless an intelligent and extremely competent newspaperman. During his lifetime he established a vast publishing empire that included 18 newspapers in 12 cities and 9 successful magazines. Although he sometimes manipulated the news, Hearst was not afraid to espouse unpopular causes even at great cost in money and popularity.

In 1887, Hearst persuaded his father, George Hearst, to place him in charge of the San Francisco Examiner, where he experimented profitably with flamboyant pictures, shrieking typography, and earthy, mass-appeal news coverage; the paper remained in Hearst Corporation hands until 2000. In 1895, Hearst invaded New York City with his purchase of the Morning Journal and began a bitter war with the other yellow, or sensational, journals. He provided aggressive news coverage, bought distinctive talent, enticed employees of other papers from their jobs with higher salaries and greater prestige, and increased the size of his paper while cutting its price to a penny—a move his competitors were forced to follow. Into the circulation battle between the rival newspapers Hearst brought wild reports of Cuba's struggle for independence from Spain. Other papers replied with further lurid accounts. Leaving the truth behind, the papers' anti-Spanish outcry fanned public sentiment and helped to drive the United States to war with Spain (1898).

By the time Hearst had established his supremacy in "penny journalism," his funds were almost exhausted, but he had gained a foothold for the great newspaper empire he was to erect. The publisher's holdings eventually embraced not only his newspapers and magazines (which included Good Housekeeping,Cosmopolitan, and Harper's Bazaar) but also the American Weekly syndicated supplement and services supplying news, features, and photographs.

Hearst served in the House of Representatives (1903–7) but was defeated as candidate for mayor of New York City in 1905 and 1909 and for governor of New York in 1906. While a congressman he sought the Democratic party's presidential nomination without success. His papers originally supported public ownership, antitrust laws, and legislation favorable to labor unions. Support for Franklin D. Roosevelt's New Deal gave way, however, to vigorous opposition to the President's policies on taxes, trusts, and labor, and Hearst became stridently conservative.

Hearst's castle at San Simeon, Calif., erected from 1919 on, won fame for its huge art collections, which often overflowed into warehouses. At his estate Hearst entertained friends in the motion-picture industry, which he had entered as a financier on a large scale. The property was presented to the state as a museum after Hearst's death.

See biographies by W. Swanberg (1961) and D. Nasaw (2000).

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The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition Copyright© 2004, Columbia University Press. Licensed from Lernout & Hauspie Speech Products N.V. All rights reserved.

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books on: Hearst William Randolph  - 1966 results

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William Randolph Hearst The Early Years, 1863-1910 Orrin Peck, William Randolph Hearst, 1894 William Randolph Hearst The Early Years, 1863-1910 Ben Procter New York...
...cloth : alk. paper) i. Hearst,William Randolph, 1863-1951. 2. Motion...Bernays was never close to William Randolph Hearst, but he did work for the...other. One is a portrait of William Randolph Hearst, and the other reveals...
...The Parents of William Randolph Hearst 48...306 INTRODUCTION BEFORE William Randolph Hearst shall pass into the limbo...death, also stood behind William Randolph Hearsts beginnings as a journalist...
WILLIAM JENNINGS BRYAN I. Political Evangelist, 1860-1908 WILLIAM JENNINGS BRYAN I. Political Evangelist 1860-1908...Dana Maria, and Michael Preface and Acknowledgments WILLIAM JENNINGS BRYAN exemplified what a common man could accomplish...
THE PEERLESS LEADER WILLIAM JENNINGS BRYAN -ii- William Jennings Bryan As Secretary of State THE PEERLESS LEADER WILLIAM JENNINGS BRYAN BY PAXTON HIBBEN INTRODUCTION BY CHARLES A. BEARD FARRAR AND RINEHART, INCORPORATED PUBLISHERS ON...
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journal articles on: Hearst William Randolph  - 88 results

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...January 1897 between Frederic S. Remington and William Randolph Hearst ranks undeniably as "one of the most famous stories...United States going insane? ... A letter from William Randolph Hearst is in existence and was printed in a magazine...
...in Havana. The young and brash newspaper editor William Randolph Hearst, however, dumbfounded that such a lovely specimen...Willie Hearsts Newer, More Active Journalism William Randolph Hearst came to journalism casually, initially viewing...
...more public," the narrator assures us. Yet rather than uncovering the real life of Charles Foster Kane (i.e. William Randolph Hearst), this film within a film merely traces the broad contours of his controversial career. The multiple perspectives...
...Swanbergs biography of William Randolph Hearst (1961, 141). The...The "rantings of Hearst" are mentioned...issue of 1896--William Jennings Bryan...Ephraim K. 1993. William McKinleys enduring...1961. Citizen Hearst. New York: Charles...
...essential correspondences between William Randolph Hearst and Citizen Kane are analogously...situational dynamic in Baz Luhrmanns William Shakespeares Romeo + Juliet (1996...Bogdanovich 299), a genre Linda Williams finds unusually conducive to...
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magazine articles on: Hearst William Randolph  - 165 results

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...right-wing press baron William Randolph Hearst, he was vicious and...announcement of an "Anti-Hearst Rally" sponsored by...featured C.P. official William Patterson and "the...clip on the charges: "William Randolph Hearst is piqued with Orson...
...textbook is The Chief: The Life of William Randolph Hearst, by David Nasaw (CJR, May/June...biographer to see clearly how Hearst reached beyond print to the new...man in the film Citizen Kane. Hearst stirred news and entertainment...
...a veiled critical portrait of newspaper magnate William Randolph Hearst. Hearsts success in `killing Kane in 1941 tells us much...in its contemporary context and partly explain Hearsts dramatic reaction against the film. In the 1930s...
...and his assignment to Cuba for William Randolph Hearsts New York Journal. Remington and...wanted to return home and sent Hearst a telegram from Havana, saying...be no war. I wish to return." Hearst supposedly replied: "Please remain...
...City Blues by REM RIEDER Hearsts pursuit of the Chronicle takes some decidedly...great newspapers these days, the name Hearst rarely springs to mind. There have been...to jump to the Miami Herald last year, Hearst promised him 25 new hires--25 new hires...
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newspaper articles on: Hearst William Randolph  - 141 results

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...of Eccentric Media Tycoon William Randolph Hearst and Niece of the Notorious...brilliant and wayward genes of William Randolph Hearst (her great-grandfather...is the fourth daughter of William Randolph Hearsts youngest son. It really...
...press baron William Randolph Hearst. Lydia, the...then president William McKinley to...in the 1900s, Hearst hired thugs...billionaire publisher Randolph Hearst, died...house built by William Randolph Hearst is no longer...
...Hearst, the granddaughter of wealthy newspaper magnate William Randolph Hearst, was kidnapped and held for ransom by the Symbionese Liberation Army (SLA). Only 19 at the time, Hearst eventually joined her abductors and was videotaped...
...programs antagonists, newspaper titan William Randolph Hearst and show business titan Orson...opportunism when cribbing chapters from Hearsts life. Inevitably, this topic...who played Kanes first wife, and William Alland, who played the inquiring...
...luxury on board notorious American press baron William Randolph Hearsts fabulous yacht. But this cheapo production looks...part as a bumbling idiot by Edward Herrmann. William Randolph Hearst may have been many things, but an idiot he was...
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encyclopedia articles on: Hearst William Randolph  - 9 results

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HEARST, WILLIAM RANDOLPH 1863 1951, American journalist and...flamboyant, highly controversial figure, Hearst was nonetheless an intelligent and extremely...Although he sometimes manipulated the news, Hearst was not afraid to espouse unpopular...
...Francisco Examiner, which his son William Randolph Hearst managed after 1887. An unsuccessful...1885) for U.S. Senator, George Hearst was later appointed (1886) and...Senate. His wife, Phoebe Apperson Hearst, 1842 1919, became a prominent...
...museum, the Los Angeles Museum of History, Science, and Art, opened in 1913. Among its important patrons was William Randolph Hearst , whose enormous collection, largely donated from 1945 to 1955, brought the museum major status among the countrys...
...the direct election of U.S. senators. His political career was ended when, in the election campaign of 1908, William Randolph Hearst revealed that Foraker had accepted from the Standard Oil Company large retainers as well as a loan to purchase...
...illustrations, news stunts, crusades against corruption, and cartoons, as well as aggressive news coverage. William Randolph Hearst established his New York Journal in 1895 to vie with Pulitzers papers in sensationalism and in circulation...
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