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Veteran journalist shares stories from 4 decades in broadcast news

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KENT – Stories sprinkled with humorous anecdotes delighted the crowd who came out to hear a veteran journalist and broadcast news producer this week.

Cheryl Gould shared stories of her time on the front lines during 40 years in the broadcast news. Photo by Lynn Mellis Worthington

Longtime journalist and former NBC producer Cheryl Gould spoke to 25 people Tuesday, June 25, at a program offered at Kent Memorial Library and sponsored by The Kent Good Times Dispatch.

Gould has been a supporter of the local newspaper since it was envisioned over two years ago. She was introduced by her friend, Karen Chase, who is a member of the Kent News, Inc. Board of Directors and helped found the online version that went live in October 2023. Chase and Gould met over lunch at The Villager and have been friends ever since.

Kent News, Inc. President Andrea Schoeny welcomed everyone and said the board members appreciated the support of local journalism.

“Just like the library is a community hub in person, we believe the GTD is a community hub online and we’re glad that we’re able to support local journalism and see how people can start in local journalism and rise way, way up,” Schoeny said, referring to Gould.

Gould described her journey from the “farmlands of South Jersey to the upper levels of network news.”

Kent News Inc. founder and board member Karen Chase introduces Cheryl Gould during the library program June 25. Photo by Lynn Mellis Worthington

Graduating with a history degree from Princeton University at the very beginning of co-education in 1974, she found it to be good practice with a ratio of 10:1 males to females for every newsroom she entered.

Her career started in Rochester, NY, and she shared how difficult it was for her to find a job. Ultimately, she ended up working part-time at WAXC radio as a “super jock” reading the sports scores on the weekends. The news director liked her voice and she was promoted to doing a five-minute newscast every hour. Gould proved that she was willing to work hard and shared some experiences of those early days.

Her very first news assignment was to meet with Sen. Scoop Jackson from Washington state, who had just announced his candidacy for president. She had to meet him at the airport and she had lots of questions for her boss.

“How do I get the story to you?” she asked. “He showed me alligator clips, where you would unscrew the bottom of the payphone phone and hook the alligator clips into the two wires there and feed that into the reel-to-reel.”

She got into the car and it was a stick shift. “I had no idea how to drive a stick shift,” Gould said. She ended up driving the entire way to the airport in first gear. “It taught me a lesson. No challenge is too great, you have to get the story.”

She learned that lesson well and put it to good use when she got to Paris, France, and began working for NBC radio. She spoke fluent French and worked weekends and she was responsible to “call in the troops” when there was breaking news. It was the late 1970s and there a movement growing in Iran and there was “this guy in exile,” who turned out to be Ayatollah Khomeini.

She was able to record his sermon and he preached about getting rid of the Shah. She kept pitching stories about this guy to NBC in New York but they weren’t interested. Until Nov. 4, 1979, when it came across the wires that students had taken over the U.S. embassy in Tehran. There were no direct phone connections from New York to Iran, but there were connections from France to Iran, so Gould ended up leading the coverage of the Iran hostage situation. She was sent to Algeria for two months, which was the country leading the negotiations.

Cheryl Gould, a former NBC producer and longtime journalist, speaks to a crowd of 25 people at the Kent Memorial Library Tuesday, June 25 in a program sponsored by The Kent Good Times Dispatch. Photo by Lynn Mellis Worthington

“I was one of the first Americans to see the hostages coming off the plane,” Gould said.

She later moved to London and was able to cover the royal wedding of Princess Di and Prince Charles. Gould had an offer from NBC to be a producer and that brought her to New York where she worked with Jessica Savage and Jane Pauley. Moving to coordinate news broadcasts instead of being a reporter, she decided was a good change.

“I realized that I was more interested in power than fame,” Gould said.

She created a show called Overnight with Linda Ellerbee that was a parody of news and it became very popular. It aired from 1:30 to 2:30 a.m. and was in response to CNN that had just started the 24-hour news channel. It was very popular and developed quite a following.

“When the show ended there were demonstrations outside 30 Rock,” Gould said.

Her next project was a special report on the 40th anniversary of D-Day, anchored by Tom Brokaw. She was in charge of finding veterans and this became the book, “The Greatest Generation.” It was the start of a long professional relationship with Brokaw.

“I had plenty of experiences with Tom that are too numerous to mention,” she said. One highlight was when they were the first network to broadcast live from China in the Hyatt Hotel. She was able to be in the Forbidden City that dates back to the 1400s.

“I thought, ‘How did I get so lucky?’ I still get chills,” she said.

She related that NBC was the only network in Berlin, Germany, when the Berlin Wall came down and it was a “thrilling night.”

By the time she was 40, she knew she wanted to have a child and decided to move to a “front office job” to work in talent relations and hire correspondents.

She also worked for CNBC and later became the first woman to be a senior vice president of a broadcast network.

Gould decided to retire when she realized that the business was changing so much she didn’t recognize it any longer. The shift to live reporting and then 24-hour news coverage meant that “new technology was dictating content,” she said.

She has been a staunch supporter of local news because of the importance it holds in communities.

“It is the duty of every citizen to be informed,” Gould said. “Local news is the glue connected to our neighbors that has led to a decline in civic engagement.” She strongly believes in news literacy and teaching young people how to recognize fact from fiction, as well as training students in civics and journalism.

Lynn Worthington
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    John Breasted (Great Barrington, Mass.)

    June 27, 2024 at 4:33 pm

    6-27-2024

    Thank you for publishing this interesting article.

    Several of Cheryl Gould’s reported remarks at the Kent library on June 25 illustrate well some of the major, long-standing defects in mainstream US journalism (both print and broadcast). One example is this account of part of her time in Paris for NBC in the late 1970s:

    “She kept pitching stories about this guy [Ayatollah Khomeini] to NBC in New York but they weren’t interested. Until Nov. 4, 1979, when it came across the wires that students had taken over the U.S. embassy in Tehran.”

    That NBC editors and producers in New York in the fall of 1979 were not aware of the importance of this man is not surprising (they may not even have known his identity), and is typical of the insular myopia and historical amnesia which characterized the US corporate media coverage of foreign affairs in the 1970s and that, to a large degree, still does.

    The articulate commentary of well informed observers of US foreign policy like Noam Chomsky was totally ignored (in effect blacked out) by mainstream corporate media outlets like NBC during Cheryl Gould’s career there, and still is. The results have been predictable catastrophes like the US invasions of Iraq (1991 and 2003) and Afghanistan (2001).

    Martin Luther King’s courageous opposition to the Vietnam War in the last two years of his public ministry, and his linkage of that war to domestic poverty and racial oppression, were roundly denounced by the editorial boards of both the New York Times and The Washington Post at the time, a fact few of us remember, even those of us who were alive then and old enough to read those newspapers.

    A year before his assassination he said, “…I knew that I could never again raise my voice against the violence of the oppressed in the ghettos without having first spoken clearly to the greatest purveyor of violence in the world today: my own government.” The statement that our government is “the greatest purveyor of violence in the world today” is still true but you will not see it quoted in the Times or hear it on NBC, NPR, or even PBS news programs.

    I have felt pleased to learn of the recent revival of the Kent GTD. My family lived in Kent from 1952 to 1970. The GTD published my first letter to the editor in 1961, just after my 13th birthday. I later worked as a general assignment reporter for weekly newspapers in the Hartford area from 1976 to 1981, before moving on to other work.

    John Breasted
    Great Barrington, Mass.

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