Ron Howell is an Associate Professor at Brooklyn College, a journalist, and the author of Boss of Black Brooklyn: The Life and Times of Bertram L. Baker and One Hundred Jobs: A Panorama of Work in the American City. He has written thousands of articles over many decades for numerous journals, books, magazines, and newspapers.
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Description
Introduction 1 1 Reverend Al and Me 9 2 Les Payne Sounds the"Death Knell" on the Tawana Brawley Story 17 3 The Early '80s: Sharpton Enters the Realm Where White Newspapers Ruled 33 4 Black Women and the Embedded Racism of the Realm 56 5 Rev. Al, Wayne Barrett, and Old Black Brooklyn 69 6 Enter James Brown and Don King 85 7 Roots of a Preacher's Strength 97 8 "I Know Jews from Italians" 117 9 The '90s: Climbing the Ladder in Politics 124 10 A New Day, a New Journalism, a King Emerges 133 11 Confessions of a Hack (i.e., Old-time Tabloid Reporter) 142 Acknowledgments 151 Tools That Made the Book 153 Index 157
In this colorful and at times humorous chronicle of the life and exploits of black activist Al Sharpton, veteran journalist Ron Howell reveals how the Reverend Al used a combination of pluck, brains, ambition and resilience to overcome the journalists who portrayed him as a buffoon and a hustler and emerge as a power broker and a journalist.---Sheryl McCarthy, host of "One to One," and former New York Newsday columnist Ron Howell has written a much-needed work on the Reverend Al Sharpton. This book provides readers a fair and balanced examination of the most visible and talked about civil rights leader of the past 20 years. We learn from Howell about Sharpton's rise to prominence as a civil rights and media figure; his relationships with black and white journalists; and his skillful use of the media and Sharpton's politically influential National Action Network. It is a must-read for anyone interested in the role of journalism in the city, New York politics, and the Rev. Al Sharpton.---Clarence Taylor, professor emeritus of History, Baruch College and the Graduate Center, CUNY, and author of Fight the Power: African Americans and the Long history of Police Brutality in New York City.

