Watch Casey Claiborne's interview of former KTBC news director and anchor Neal Spelce where he talks about the early days at KTBC, the Johnson family, Bill Moyers, Verne Lundquist, the Tower coverage, and more!
The interview aired Thanksgiving Day, 2022 where Neal shared his unique perspective on the 70th Anniversary of KTBC signing on the air.
FOX 7's news team breaks down the latest local, regional and national news, along with information on business, entertainment, sports, weather, and more on KTBC's series, Good Day Austin.
As Soviet Premier Mikhail Gorbachev prepared to put pen to paper in a worldwide
television event to sign the document that would officially end the USSR and issue
in a new era in global history – his Russian-made pen didn’t work. That’s when a former Austinite, Tom Johnson, pulled his personal pen from his
pocket and said “Here, Mr. Gorbachev, use mine.” Tom’s Montblanc pen dissolved a global power and instantly became a historical artifact.
So how did this footnote to history come to pass? I detailed how this incident
occurred on pages 181 and 182 of my recent memoir, With the Bark Off. It is
timely to recall now because Gorbachev died August 30, 2022, at age 91.
Following service as a White House aide to President Lyndon Johnson, Tom came
to Austin in 1971 and became Executive VP of KTBC-TV, Channel 7. From there,
he had a meteoric rise to the top ranks of journalism with publishing stints at the
Dallas Times Herald and the Los Angeles Times Mirror.
He caught the eye of Ted Turner who had started a 24-hour cable TV venture called CNN. Tom took over as CNN CEO the day before Saddam Hussein invaded Kuwait in 1990. CNN’s stellar coverage of the Gulf War, under Tom’s leadership, won virtually every award in TV News.
Gorbachev was well aware of CNN’s worldwide influence and its splendid coverage of the Gulf War. This enabled Tom to meet with Gorbachev in Moscow and to out-negotiate ABC’s Ted Koppel for exclusive rights to cover the dissolution of the Soviet Union live.
Fast forward to signing day in Moscow. All the pomp and circumstance of this
rare event was unfolding as CNN cameras carried it worldwide. Tom was standing
just off to Gorbachev’s side when, damn!, his pen didn’t work. When Tom
handed his pen to Gorbachev, the once-powerful world leader glanced at it,
looked at Tom and with a wry smile asked “American?”
That was it. He scribbled his signature. And quick-thinking Tom took back his pen
– the pen that after almost 75 years signified the end of the Union of Soviet
Socialist Republics.
“How important was that one little pen in Gorbachev’s hand? It dissolved a global
power that had dominated a scattering of small Eastern European nations since
World War II, promulgating an ideology that had fueled a dangerous Cold War
that had divided the world for decades,” I wrote in With the Bark Off. Now for the rest of the story, as broadcaster Paul Harvey used to say.
Tom donated the pen to a museum. Then, many years after Tom had departed CNN,
Tom invited Gorbachev to speak in Austin at the LBJ Library. At the end of the
program, I watched as Tom said “Mr. Gorbachev, you may remember that I took
my pen back on that historic day in Moscow. So I want you to have a new pen
exactly like that one.”
He presented Gorbachev with a new black Montblanc fountain pen.
You can learn more about Tom Johnson in hard cover, ebook or audiobook in my memoir With the Bark Off please Join My List.
One of the joys of a life in journalism is you get to enjoy the “sayings” of public figures – without regard to politics. Despite all the harsh words tossed around in the public arena, some gems can actually emerge – even those with a bit of a bite. Watching for those can make 2022 a bit more bearable. Let me share some examples from the past.
President Harry Truman was the master of telling it like he saw it. After his controversial firing of popular General Douglas MacArthur due to insubordination, he famously told reporters “I didn’t fire him because he was a dumb son of a bitch, although he was, but that’s not against the law for generals. If it was, half to three-quarters of them would be in jail.” Truman’s wife Bess was asked if she could get him to stop saying manure. Her reply: “You don’t know how hard it was just to get him to use that word.”
From that same era, failed presidential candidate Adlai Stevenson said “I will make a bargain with the Republicans. If they stop telling lies about us, we’ll stop telling the truth about them.” A lie? Former Secretary of State Al Haig said “That’s not a lie. It’s a terminological inexactitude.”
President Ronald Reagan quipped that “one of the most important rules in politics is poise – which means looking like an owl after you have behaved like a jackass.” President Dwight Eisenhower cautioned that “sweet praise is like perfume. It’s fine if you don’t swallow it.”
Former Treasury Secretary and Texas Governor John Connally liked to twist the old George Washington-chopping-down-a-cherry-tree-legend into a Texas tale. Connally pointed out George Washington’s father told his son they would have to leave Texas and move to Virginia after young George confessed he couldn’t tell a lie when he cut down a mesquite tree in their backyard. As his father put it: “You’ll never get elected in Texas if you can’t tell a lie.”
Or sometimes, a Texas politician can simply “twist” the facts. Agriculture Secretary John White was badly beaten when he ran for Texas Governor. His rationale: “Texans like the job I was doing as Ag Commissioner, so they voted overwhelmingly to keep me in this job.”
And the following quote was made in jest, but it’s a good ’un: Texas Supreme Court Chief Justice John Hill commented after he was soundly defeated in a race for Texas governor: “The people have spoken – the bastards!”
As 2022 unfolds and the harsh political rhetoric heats up, be alert for the little humorous gems that are sure to emerge and brighten your day a bit.
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