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TIME: Almanac 1995
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<text id=91TT0355>
<title>
Feb. 18, 1991: Working Lives
</title>
<history>
TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1991
Feb. 18, 1991 The War Comes Home
</history>
<article>
<source>Time Magazine</source>
<hdr>
BOOKS, Page 67
Working Lives
</hdr><body>
<qt>
<l>SIGN OFF</l>
<l>by Jon Katz</l>
<l>Bantam; 374 pages; $18.95</l>
</qt>
<p> Most books set in the TV-news industry are about the drama
of a big story, the intrigue of an unfolding scandal or the
power and glamour and sheer money associated with being a
big-league anchor, interviewer or producer. In fiction and
reality, TV executives often characterize themselves the way
characters do in Jon Katz's roman a clef: as ranking among "the
25,000 most successful people in the world," right up there
with generals, Senators, tycoons and Third World dictators. But
here the big story and intrigue are inside TV itself--the
takeover of a network very much like CBS, where Katz was
executive producer of the Morning News from 1983 to 1985. The
corporate raider is compounded in equal measure of Donald
Trump, CBS chief executive Laurence Tisch and a handful of
other hardball players from the headlines. Katz's hero is a
work-obsessed producer who undergoes a classic mid-life crisis
in which he questions the value of ambition, propositions a
female colleague, visits a prostitute, loses his job and
realizes that there is more to life.
</p>
<p> Much of the plot revisits territory from the stage hit Other
People's Money, the movie Wall Street and a shelf of recent
nonfiction, not to mention such Eisenhower-era cautionary tales
as The Man in the Gray Flannel Suit. Katz's prose is competent,
his dialogue serviceable and his cast of characters large and
mostly faceless (although its obsessives stand out: a shopworn
survivor of the executive-suite wars; a by-hook-or-by-crook
booker of talk-show interviewees; and a tough, moralistic
accountant).
</p>
<p> Three qualities elevate the book to the memorable. First,
Katz knows TV, not just the details that lend verisimilitude
but the mind-set and values. Any seasoned journalist is likely
to identify with some incident and feel a twinge of shame.
Second, rather than fulminate against barbarian interlopers,
Katz is candid about the waste, carelessness and openly
tolerated thievery that made their raids possible. The TV
business, he says, was not businesslike. Third, Katz does not
exploit the melodrama of the takeover. He largely ignores the
boardroom fighting and has the actual bloodless coup take place
off-page. His real subject is what work means, whether to a
honcho or to a coffee-cart handler--how a job becomes an
identity, so that losing it forces a person not only to plan
a future but also to re-evaluate the past. Job cuts are a
standard TV-news topic. Katz proves that fiction can be far
more evocative in making this loss of personhood really matter
to the rest of us.
</p>
<p>By William A. Henry III.
</p>
</body></article>
</text>