A local history blogger has come across some tapes of an early Cops like show on KATL, Houston (1590) in 1951, featuring Marvin Zindler. At the time, Zindler was a Deputy with the Harris Co. Sheriffs Department, but he always had an eye for the nearest microphone. Zindler later became famous as the looooong running Consumer Affairs reporter on KTRK-TV, Channel 13, whose exploits were the inspiration for The Best Little Whorehouse in Texas.
I was struck in listening to the tapes how graphic and gruesome some of the reports are compared to the depictions of mayhem and violence in movies of the era; Zindler is on-scene, sometimes arriving before cops or other emergency personnel, interviewing victims, sometimes as they groan in agony, grilling people, suggesting lines of investigation to the cops.
I was wondering if anyone knows the history of this sort of on the scene reporting on radio - where did Zindler get the idea?
If you want to listen, here's a link to the series:
http://blogs.chron.com/bayoucityhistory/the_roving_mike/
There are supposedly at least two more installments plus the blogger has told me there are tapes that are mostly just music; I think he plans to post excerpts of one of those, later, too.
I was struck in listening to the tapes how graphic and gruesome some of the reports are compared to the depictions of mayhem and violence in movies of the era; Zindler is on-scene, sometimes arriving before cops or other emergency personnel, interviewing victims, sometimes as they groan in agony, grilling people, suggesting lines of investigation to the cops.
I was wondering if anyone knows the history of this sort of on the scene reporting on radio - where did Zindler get the idea?
If you want to listen, here's a link to the series:
http://blogs.chron.com/bayoucityhistory/the_roving_mike/
There are supposedly at least two more installments plus the blogger has told me there are tapes that are mostly just music; I think he plans to post excerpts of one of those, later, too.