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Aquarian
Weekly 12/14/11
REALITY CHECK
THE
LIFE, MYTHS & INFLUENCE OF AN AMERICAN ORIGINAL
In Praise of A Riveting New Biography on Howard
Cosell
May
you live in interesting times.
- Ancient Chinese Proverb
My disposition demands the immediacy of translation of effort
into result.
- Howard Cosell
I
last sent words to press on the subject of Howard Cosell in April
of 1995 for a now defunct weekly on the occasion of the legendary
broadcaster's death. Yet, in every piece I've researched, each
story I've covered or subject dissected in a column since, his
spirit resonates.
Like
nearly everyone from my generation, and the one preceding it,
we began by hating Cosell; his sneering egoism, the pompous self-congratulatory
harangue that fueled an incessant rambling myopia never failing
to garble our sports viewing experience. Certainly, it was a strange
preternatural hate, a raging abhorrence that comes from somewhere
not altogether rational. But unlike many of my friends, I aspired
at an early age to be a broadcaster, mainly of sports. So Howard
Cosell became in many ways a touchstone; he was no ex-jock, hardly
a handsome television prop, and there was something emancipating
about his brashly opinionated and wholly pathological style. If
nothing else, the man had balls.
In
1995, still in the midst of my sports writing, I penned this:
"This
country has not known a more influential journalist than Howard
Cosell. His innate ability to dissect an event, infiltrate a personality
and offer honest analysis at the point of attack made him a unique
voice in an otherwise antiseptic profession. The resonance of
his talent is an echo in the world of reporting today, but it
is a faint reminder of the man whose voice served as a sonic boom
that shook the walls and shattered the windows of broadcasting."
A
fairly blubbering tribute for the previously despised, but aside
from finally laying to rest the paradox of the love/hate aspect
of a Howard Cosell, it missed one key ingredient; despite Cosell's
impact on pop culture, his prominent place in the power and prestige
of network television or the incredible shadow his figure cast
on a period of unparalleled on-air oligarchy, he failed to leave
a legacy. Cosell, in the strangest of ways, was a one-off.
There
is nothing or no one today that resembles a serious evolution
of his style or substance - in the realm of sports or elsewhere.
Maybe, if you'd stretch it, occasional ball-busting commentators
or grand-standing blowhards, but none of them with an ounce of
the self-effacing humor or hardcore passion for singular causes
or mind-curving bombast as the original.
And
this glaring omission unfurls with intriguing momentum in the
first thoroughly researched and effectively framed biography of
Cosell and his times, Mark Ribowsky's Howard Cosell - The Man,
the Myth, and the Transformation of American Sports.
Beyond
its poignant depiction of a flawed, paranoid and narcissistic
character with the uncanny talent to immerse himself entirely,
almost supernaturally, into emerging events, Ribowsky's Howard
Cosell makes crystal clear the entwined path of Cosell's epic
career within the world of Big Time sports and its broadcasting
partners, as they quite literally created the monstrosities they
are today.
"If
you look at the lay of the land in the Fifties when Cosell started
out, there really was no industry called sportscasting," Ribowksi
told me recently. "It just wasn't important. All you did was kowtow
to the teams and their sponsors, until Howard Cosell changed all
that."
It
was a change that according to Ribowski had to be fought by Cosell
tooth and nail.
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"He
had three strikes against him from the beginning, his Jewishness,
his Brooklyness, his abrasively unattractive voice, but
he was relentless and uncompromising and lasted long enough
to match the times. People were looking for this anti-hero
in the emerging counter-culture of the Sixties and Seventies,
but he had to get there first."
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"He
had three strikes against him from the beginning, his Jewishness,
his Brooklyness, his abrasively unattractive voice, but he was
relentless and uncompromising and lasted long enough to match
the times. People were looking for this anti-hero in the emerging
counter-culture of the Sixties and Seventies, but he had to get
there first."
Howard
Cosell is a riveting journey of personal upheaval and challenges
for Cosell and his times, but mostly the burgeoning art form he
created, from his steadfast defense and promotion of lifelong
friend, Muhammad Ali and his making and breaking of the fight
game, to the emergence, almost mainly due to his talents and the
vision of Roone Arledge, ABC and the iconic Monday Night Football,
of sports as showbiz, all the way through the defining moments
of broadcast journalism.
"Cosell
is the one who merged entertainment and sport, and there's a great
irony to that," Ribowski says. "It had never been done like that
before, but today it's almost completely eclipsed by entertainment.
There's no journalism left. Journalism was the important underpinning
of what Cosell was creating, but now there's almost nothing of
importance going on."
Ribowski
echoes in Howard Cosell much of what the man brought to
his craft, a sense that he would always take a stand based on
principle even if it was guided by emotion. It was something I
had not considered with Cosell until this book. What made him
a hero and mentor to me was his detached sense of a story, to
take from it the clearly absurd notions and deconstruct it coldly
and rationally, as Cosell did brilliantly in covering Ali's battles
with the U.S. government over his draft status.
"The
thing that you can always say about Cosell, and it applies in
most cases for his work, is simply two words - he cared," Ribowski
cites. "He cared about what he did, he cared about the people
he spoke about, he cared about the issues that he elucidated,
he cared how the public would perceive them; he just cared."
However,
the godfather of sports journalism at the top of his game in the
late Sixties to early Seventies would soon develop a dark side
in which Ribowski argues turned a stellar career into one of parody.
"Cosell
lost that aspect of the whole thing with Monday Night Football,"
the author states. "It was both great and horrible for his delicate
pathology, both soothing his ego but also challenging it with
all the criticism he had to endure, the death threats and personal
attacks in the press, which ruined him."
Howard
Cosell is an even-handed appraisal of Cosell's mammoth influence
on and contribution to broadcast journalism - Ribowski agrees
with Cosell's own gaudy estimation that he was along with Walter
Cronkite and Johnny Carson among the pop culture media icons of
that era - but it also paints a picture of a sometimes petty,
often jealous and wildly paranoid jock-sniffer, who was from the
start an obsessive collector of celebrities and newsmakers for
self-promotion. His enigma, some may argue hypocrisy, dealing
with the ever-evolving social debates on race, religion, law and
culture are many and varied, which make Cosell one of the most
complex and fascinating subjects to cover.
This
brings to mind why no one dared touch his life for a telling before.
Perhaps
it was Cosell's final years spent penning vicious barbs in books
that built upon the myths of his image and burned every bridge
that had ferried him to fame and fortune, from the NFL to ABC
to colleagues and confidants. Maybe it was the reluctance of his
immediate family to contribute to the book; although Ribowski
admits some have enjoyed the results and now wish they had relented.
Then there is also a generation of sports writers who recall Cosell
as more pop culture caricature than significant pioneer.
None
of this stopped Mark Ribowski from giving us a much-needed glimpse
into our media history and an American success story like no other,
one long in coming. At the close of our conversation the author
was adamant; "To do all Cosell did at his age, tear down as many
barriers as he did, is like a fable. What a change this man was
responsible for, and it's a great tragedy that he took that change
to the grave. He deserved a permanent rendering in society. Where
we deserve to have a lot of Howard Cosells around, unfortunately
there was only one."
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