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Flashing Before My Eyes: 50 Years of Headlines, Deadlines & Punchlines
 
 

Flashing Before My Eyes: 50 Years of Headlines, Deadlines & Punchlines [Hardcover]

Dick Schaap , Mitch Albom
3.7 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (15 customer reviews)

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Product Description

From Amazon

Dick Schaap, it seems, knows everyone. He would easily win at Six Degrees of Separation. Heck, he would win at Six Degrees of Kevin Bacon. As a matter of fact, he probably golfs with Kevin Bacon. I wouldn't be surprised, since Schaap has golfed with Bill Clinton and played doubles tennis against Johnny Carson, and he regularly dines with Billy Crystal. Oh, and Muhammad Ali is one of his oldest friends. But Schaap is also a guy who remembers his teammates on the Freeport Barons (winners of the New York State Kiwanis League Championship '49 and '50) in fond and humorous detail. It is his true love for and fascination with people that make Flashing Before My Eyes such a delight to read.

Born in Brooklyn, Schaap was a smart kid with an outsized love for the Dodgers. By the age of 15 he was a sports reporter for the Nassau Daily Review-Star, where he worked under 20-year-old Jimmy Breslin, who became a lifelong friend. From there Schaap moved on to Cornell University and then to Newsweek, where he learned to write "short and tight. The end of the world? Give me eight hundred words. The end of the World Series. Maybe five hundred." With more than 50 years in journalism, over 30 books to his name, and five Emmys, there's no debating that Schaap is a storyteller extraordinaire. Page after page of Flashing Before My Eyes rolls by as you snort and chortle at Schaap's stories (and sometimes Schaap himself; he doesn't spare the pen), but then he slides in a moment that makes you tear up. Mitch Albom, who wrote the introduction, says of Schaap, "His cross-referencing would put Microsoft Access to shame. You can say to Dick, 'Pass the ketchup,' and he will reply, 'Did I ever tell you about Bobby 'Catch-Up' Johnson, the one-legged soccer player I met in Belgium?'" Schaap on sports, Schaap on comedy, Schaap on politics--these we've enjoyed for years. Now relish Schaap on Schaap. --Dana Van Nest

From Publishers Weekly

In a country obsessed with voyeurism, Schaap's book will find a receptive audience. Schaap (Turned On) fleshes out a chronology of his journalism career with endless yarns starring the last half-century's leading lights in sports, politics and the arts. From smoking a joint with Joe Namath to removing a strange animal from the leg of Bobby Kennedy's wife, Ethel, and taking in a World Series game with Lenny Bruce, Schaap's ubiquity ensures a surfeit of stories and, for that matter, ego. Schaap's strong presence introduces a strange underlying conflict: this purported autobiography is rife with stories about other people, told by a confessed egomaniac who insists that his characters come alive because he lays low. The result is a laissez-faire account whose anecdotes exceed their telling, and whose narrator never strays far from the foreground. Schaap can seem haughty, as when he describes his goal of writing a book each year: "I have come up short... only thirty-three books in the last thirty-nine years of the twentieth century." And though readers will tire of hearing that he was the youngest senior editor in the history of Newsweek, he undercuts his braggadocio by pointing it out himself: "Have I broken the record for name-dropping yet?" he jokes early on. Possibly. But the array of luminaries on Schaap's roster keeps him from sounding like a broken record. (Jan.)
Copyright 2000 Reed Business Information, Inc.

From Library Journal

Schaap probably knew Jesus; if no+t, it's one of the few greats he's missed. In his long career as both a sports and hard journalist he has encountered them all, from Rocky Graziano to Muhammad Ali, Lenny Bruce to Billy Crystal, Erich Segal to Jimmy Breslin, RFK to Bill Bradley. Of Sport Century's top 100 athletes, he interviewed 75 and, more significantly, knew more than 40 socially. He was a minor hero in San Francisco's gay community for his stories on gay decathlete Tom Waddell and in football-mad Green Bay for his stories on the Packers (he's "certain the two communities overlap, but not by much"). For all the names dropped, however, there is refreshingly little score-settling or dirt dished. This autobiography superbly illustrates Schaap's gift for getting to know newsmakers, both famous and obscure, and presenting them through the amusing and/or telling anecdote. A valuable addition to all sports and journalism collections.
-DJim Burns, Ottumwa P.L., IA
Copyright 2001 Reed Business Information, Inc.

From Booklist

You know Dick Schaap. You were at a party with Schaap, Muhammad Ali, F. Lee Bailey, and . . . well, maybe it wasn't you, but Schaap sure knows everyone else in the world. Schaap's career in journalism began more than 50 years ago at the Nassau Daily Star-Review as a 15-year-old working for night sports editor Jimmy Breslin. He went on to become the editor of Sport magazine and a senior editor at Newsweek, among many other positions. Among his many books is Instant Replay (1968), thought by many to be one of the best book-length examples of sports journalism ever published. Schaap loves people and his profession. That passion is evident on every page as he relates self-deprecating anecdotes with leading characters such as Ali, Billy Crystal, chef Paul Prudhomme, Bobby Knight, former New York mayors John Lindsay and Abe Beam, George Plimpton, William Buckley, and Rocky Graziano. This is a thoroughly entertaining memoir and will also serve to direct readers to the rest of Schaap's work. Wes Lukowsky
Copyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved

Book Description

Muhammad Ali stretched out on a brown couch, a towel across his waist, while an air conditioner fired cool air across his body. It was a scorching Manila morning, and in thirty minutes Ali would go to war with Joe Frazier for the third and final time. Ali yawned and stared at the ceiling of his dressing room. "Just another day's work," he said. "Just gotta go beat on another man." The reporter did what a reporter is supposed to do. He listened and wrote down Ali's words.

And so began just another day's work for Dick Schaap, who in the past half-century has carved out his own legend, not with his fists but with his reportorial verve, his indefatigable curiosity, and his irrepressible wit. Now, in Flashing Before My Eyes, the longtime ABC correspondent and host of ESPN"s The Sports Reporters recounts a charmed career in which he has met almost everyone and seen almost everything. He has played golf with Bill Clinton, tennis with Bobby Fischer, cards with Wilt Chamberlain. He has written books with Joe Namath and Joe Montana. He has taken Brigitte Bardot to dinner and Lenny Bruce to a World Series. He saw the Baltimore Colts beat the New York Giants in sudden-death overtime, and the Green Bay Packers beat the Dallas Cowboys in the Ice Bowl. He saw Bill Mazeroski end a World Series with a home run, and Willis Reed lift the New York Knicks to an NBA title. He has covered murders and riots, presidential campaigns and Broadway openings. He introduced Muhammad Ali to Billy Crystal, and Billy Crystal to Joe DiMaggio. He walks with sluggers and senators, cops and comedians, authors and actresses, and he shares the sights he sees and the words he hears in stories that make you laugh and cry.

With an introduction by Tuesdays with Morrie author Mitch Albom, Schaap's memoir gives the reader the ultimate highlight reel of the last fifty years and makes a compelling case that if Dick Schaap wasn't there to see it, it didn't happen.

About the Author

Dick Schaap is the author of more than thirty books, including the New York Times bestsellers Instant Replay (with Jerry Kramer) and Bo Knows Bo (with Bo Jackson). Host of ESPN's The Sports Reporters and ESPN Classic's One on One and theater critic for ABC's World News Now, he has won six Emmy Awards. He is the only man who votes for both the Heisman Trophy and the Tony Awards.
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