This episode focuses on the period between
U.S. President Richard Nixon’s
1972 trip to
China and the fall of the
Gang of Four in
October 1976. While the
U.S. established a liaison office in
Beijing, the lack of formal diplomatic relations meant that
American reporters could not be based in China. Most reporting continued to be of the China-watching variety, though each of the major broadcast networks was permitted to shoot a documentary in China and many reporters gained access for short visits. It was a tumultuous period, the last year of which included the death of three of
China’s revolutionary giants, a natural disaster which took a quarter of a million lives, and fierce battles over who would run China after the Mao-era.
The documentaries prepared by the networks offered a much richer look at China than had been possible previously.
CBS focused, for example, on
Shanghai and
ABC on “the people of
People’s China.” One journalist managed, as part of a left-wing group, to get to work at various sites in China, including
Dazhai, the model commune.
Others visited to cover the trips of American leaders including
Secretary of State Henry Kissinger and
President Gerald Ford. During the latter’s visit, one of
Chairman Mao’s translators,
Nancy Tang, sparked the imagination of cartoonist
Gary Trudeau who turned her into the character “
Honey” in his Doonesbury strip. The political strains of the era were felt by all. One especially interesting story involves a return visit thirty-years later to re-interview a teacher who was terrified of her students.
During this period, several of the Hong Kong-based China watchers reported on political struggles among China’s leaders.
Deng Xiaoping reappeared on the scene, only to be purged again. Mao welcomed
Nixon back to China in
1976, but the Chairman, along with
Premier Zhou Enlai, exited the stage in 1976.
Jiang Qing, Mao’s widow, and her associates moved to consolidate power, but the episode ends with them in prison and a giant propaganda campaign to condemn them.
Interviewees in this segment (and the organizations they represented for during this period)
Steve Bell, ABC
Richard Bernstein,
Time Magazine
Henry Bradsher,
Washington Star
Tom Brokaw,
NBC
Raymond Burghardt, U.S.
Foreign Service
Fox Butterfield,
New York Times
Frank Ching, New York Times
Mike Chinoy, CBS
Irv Drasnin, CBS
Bruce Dunning, CBS
Robert Elegant,
Los Angeles Times
Liu Heung-Shing,
Associated Press
Bernard Kalb, CBS
Ted Koppel, ABC
Joseph Lelyveld, New York Times
Jay Matthews,
Washington Post
Ron Nessen,
Ford White House
J. Stapleton Roy, U.S. Foreign Service
Jerrold Schector, Time Magazine
Orville Schell,
The New Yorker
Barbara Walters, NBC
A major initiative of the
USC U.S.-China
Institute, Assignment:China is a ten part series focusing on the work of journalists for American news organizations in China. The series begins with the civil war between the
Nationalists and the Communists and ends with journalists today covering a much more prosperous, but no less complicated and diverse country. Mike Chinoy writes and narrates the series.
Craig Stubing is the series editor and lead videographer.
Clayton Dube conceived of the project and oversees it.
Assignment: China is possible only due to the generous support of donors. The series is dedicated to the memory of
John Rich, a longtime newsman who accompanied the American ping pong team to China in
1971. Our supporters include
Ming Hsu and Nate
Rich as well as
Stephen Lesser, the
U.S. State Department, and the
Turner Foundation. We welcome you to join this effort by making a tax deductible contribution to the USC U.S.-China Institute.
- published: 23 Feb 2015
- views: 5463