I was never strictly a crime reporter but several times I covered the cops-and-courts beat, which was more genteel and less interesting than it sounds. Reading the police blotter each morning or scanning new filings in the county clerk’s office left this reporter feeling less disillusioned with humanity than bored. The number of ways to behave badly is finite.
Like
politics, journalism tends to invite second-raters, people otherwise
unemployable. Most can’t write and are stubbornly indifferent to language.
Master the clichés, internalize the formulas, and you can retire after thirty-seven years.
A few journalists have entered the literary mainstream – H.L. Mencken, A.J. Liebling, Joseph Mitchell, Murray Kempton. Another name less well-known though deserving of readers is Meyer Berger (1898-1959), who wrote for the New York Times for more than thirty years. The book to find is the posthumously published Meyer Berger’s New York (Random House, 1960). The volume collects samples of his column, “About New York,” published in the Times between 1953 and 1959. Berger was a good American writer who never stopped being a good reporter. He was by nature a features writer, more interested in human beings than in sociological trends or gaseous “think-pieces” dear to editors.
In 1935, Berger
published an article, “Gentleman Racketeers,” in Current History, a magazine supplement to the Times. Berger traces the changing nature of crime and criminals –
the birth of “organized crime” -- to the “great liquor flood” of the
Prohibition years:
“The tough
mug with the turtleneck sweater and thick-soled boots is a thing of the past.
He has degenerated into the smart man-about-town, forsaken his quaint habiliments
for smart dinner jacket and patent leather pumps and is hard to distinguish from
any other tired businessman.”
Berger’s
prose is amusing and colorful without being cheap or jokey. He assumes the
voice of a mock tour director, showing us the sights, explaining the new, more sophisticated underworld:
“The 1935 racketeer boss proceeds about the business of murder with true
executive gravity and dignity.” At the conclusion of his article, Berger pokes
fun at the naïveté of prosecutors who claim they can “reach over the shoulders
of the outer racket guards and grab the big shots.” The healthily skeptical Berger
continues:
“Special Prosecutor
Thomas E. Dewey in New York is trying out that plan now. If he fails there
seems to be only one other solution—with a vigilante committee. Legal gentlemen
will cry ‘anarchy’ and flap the Bill of Rights in your face if you suggest
anything so crude, but so far they have not done anything to remedy the
condition.”
You’ll
recall that a mere thirteen years later, Dewey was the subject of the most mistaken headline in the history of American journalism.
"Rock journalism is people who can't write interviewing people who can't talk for people who can't read." - Frank Zappa (1940-1993)
ReplyDeleteSo, I got curious about Berger (he has a Wikipedia page, natch). Consulting with Dr. Amazon, I just bought a copy of "The History of the New York Times, 1851-1951" (New York: Simon & Schuster, 1951), his history of the organization published in its centenary year - for $7.01! The anthology you mentioned is also on Amazon.
ReplyDeleteSounds like an interesting guy.
“Reading the police blotter each morning … ”
ReplyDeleteCoincidentally, I just now caught a bit of an old “Rockford Files” episode (while pausing from Chapman’s Homer), and Jim mentioned that he wasn’t frequently on the police blotter. I wondered about that word. Then up jumped your reference. Which called for a googling of its origin.
“The term GǣblotterGǥ has been used since the 16th century to refer to some form of record-keeping notebook. Large ledgers used to note down entries of daily events in businesses and police stations were often termed Gǣdesk blotters, Gǥ perhaps because when open they resembled the large blotters used to routinely dry ink from the quill pens used in those days. Many of us remember using smaller blotters to prevent smudging of wet ink from fountain pens. But, no one seems to know the exact etymology of the word. The blot thickens.”
Re: “A few journalists have entered the literary mainstream – H.L. Mencken, …”
“All zoos actually offer the public, in return for the taxes spent upon them, is a form of idle witless amusement, compared to which a visit to the state penitentiary, or even a state legislature in session, is informing, stimulating, and ennobling.” -H.L. Mencken (12 Sep 1880-1956)