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<text id=93HT1449>
<title>
Man of Year 1991: Ted Turner
</title>
<history>
TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--Man of the Year
</history>
<article>
<source>Time Magazine</source>
<hdr>
January 6, 1992
Man of the Year
Ted Turner: Prince of the Global Village
</hdr>
<body>
<p> Visionaries are possessed creatures, men and women in the
thrall of belief so powerful that they ignore all else--even
reason--to ensure that reality catches up with their dreams.
The vision may be the glory-driven daring of a Saddam Hussein,
who foolishly tried to extend his rule by conquest and plunder,
or the seize-the-day bravery of a Boris Yeltsin, who struggled
to free a society from seven decades of iron ideology. But
always behind the action is an idea, a passionate sense of what
is eternal in human nature and also of what is coming but as
yet unseen, just over the horizon.
</p>
<p> A generation ago, social theorist Marshall McLuhan
proclaimed the advent of a "global village," a sort of
borderless world in which communications media would transcend
the boundaries of nations. "Ours is a brand-new world of
allatonceness," he wrote. "`Time' has ceased, `space' has
vanished. We now live in...a simultaneous happening."
McLuhan underestimated the enduring appeal of the status quo and
the stubborn persistence of the petty side of human nature. The
fusion of television and satellites did not produce
instantaneous brotherhood, just a slowly dawning awareness of
the implications of a world transfixed by a single TV image.
</p>
<p> It took another visionary, and the band of dreamers and
opportunists he gathered around him, to demonstrate that McLuhan
was wrong only temporarily. In 1991, one of the most eventful
years of this century, the world witnessed the dramatic and
transforming impact on those events of live television by
satellite. The very definition of news was rewritten--from
something that has happened to something that is happening at
the very moment you are hearing of it. A war involving the
fiercest air bombardment in history unfolded in real time--before
the cameras. The motherland of communism overthrew its
leaders and their doctrine--before the cameras. To a
considerable degree, especially in Moscow, momentous things
happened precisely because they were being seen as they
happened.
</p>
<p> These shots heard, and seen, around the world appeared
under the aegis of the first global TV news company, Cable News
Network. Contrary to the dictum of former U.S. House Speaker Tip
O'Neill that "all politics is local," CNN demonstrated that
politics can be planetary, that ordinary people can take a deep
interest in events remote from them in every way--and can
respond to reportage in global rather than purely nationalistic
terms.
</p>
<p> Back in CNN's infancy, when he was dismissed as
crackbrained and soon to be bankrupt, Ted Turner sensed the
wonders to come. "I am the right man in the right place at the
right time," he said. "Not me alone, but all the people who
think the world can be brought together by telecommunications."
The years since, and most especially the one just past, have
demonstrated how emphatically he was right. For influencing the
dynamic of events and turning viewers in 150 countries into
instant witnesses of history, Robert Edward Turner III is TIME's
Man of the Year for 1991.
</p>
</body>
</article>
</text>