Vital Speeches of the Day logo DIGITAL BUSINESS
Click to search
 
 
Trends, Techniques and Tips
The Teleprompter: Controversial from the outset

By David Murray, Editor, Vital Speeches of the Day

Kids ask the darnedest questions.

Mommy, where did the Teleprompter come from?

According to a Smithsonian history:

The device started out in 1948 as a roll of butcher paper rigged up inside half of a suitcase. Actor Fred Barton Jr., a Broadway veteran, was nervous. “For those that had been either in theater or the movies, the transition to television was difficult, because there was a much greater need for memorizing lines,” says Christopher Sterling, a media historian at George Washington University.

Mommy, has the Teleprompter always been fraught with controversy? Yes, Dear. From the Smithsonian:

Describing a September 9, 1952, campaign speech by Eisenhower in Indianapolis, The New York Times wrote, “General Eisenhower, who was speaking with the aid of a Teleprompter, a device that unreels the speaker’s text, was heard by a national radio audience, but not those in the hall, to say this: ‘Go ahead! Go ahead! Go ahead! Yah, damn it, I want him to move up.’” The outburst was reprinted in thousands of press accounts nationally, letting the world know about the new invention.

Blog post below
May 15, 2013, 6:35 AM
Communicators don't die. They don't even fade away.
May 8, 2013, 7:32 AM
Speechwriter: Are you working in an industry, or a racket?
May 1, 2013, 11:03 AM
VIDEO: Rowan Atkinson's "drunken father-in-law" wedding toast
Click to view the blog
Free Speech of the Week e-mail
Podcasts below
November 9, 2010
COMMENTARY: Insights from Leadership Communication Days (Part Two)

Curiosity killed the cat, but for a speechwriter, curiosity must be cultivated.  (1 min.)

Click to view more podcasts
 
 
1010 E. Missouri Ave.   Phoenix, Arizona 85014   +1 888 MCMURRY