Bit Player
My Life with Presidents and Ideas- Authors:
- Publisher:
- 2018
Summary
An insightful, often humorous look at how Washington works, or doesn't
The title Bit Player perfectly reflects Stephen Hess's long and distinguished career as a Washington insider. As a 25-year-old, recently discharged Army private in 1958, he suddenly found himself as part of President Dwight D. Eisenhower’s speechwriting team that ultimately helped draft the famed “Farewell Address” warning of the influence of the “military industrial complex.” Then over the next two decades, Hess played bit roles aiding Richard Nixon, Gerald Ford, Jimmy Carter, and Ronald Reaganalong the way observing up-close those presidents and many other senior political leaders. During his subsequent four-and-a-half decades at the Brookings Institution, Hess was well-positioned to monitor and comment on the achievements and failures of successive administrations.
This memoir by a certified member of Washington's old-guard establishment is rich with insight into contemporary American democracy, poignant in its reflections of avoidable missteps by even the best and most experienced leaders, and consistently good-humored in the author's self-awareness of his own role behind the scenes of political power.
Now in his mid-eighties, still involved at Brookings as a senior fellow emeritus, Hess uses this memoir to look back at what he describes as concentric circles of research, travel, advising, writing, and teaching. But more than just a memoir, Bit Player offers deeply informed commentary on the major political actors and seminal events in the nation's capital over the past six decades.
One of the foremost authorities on media and government in the United States, Stephen Hess is a senior fellow emeritus in Governance Studies at The Brookings Institution. He first joined Brookings in 1972 and was distinguished research professor of media and public affairs at the George Washington University (2004–2009). Hess served on White House staff during the Eisenhower and Nixon presidencies and as advisor to Presidents Ford and Carter.
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Bibliographic data
- Copyright year
- 2018
- ISBN-Print
- 978-0-8157-3699-8
- ISBN-Online
- 978-0-8157-3700-1
- Publisher
- Rowman & Littlefield, Lanham
- Language
- English
- Pages
- backcover1
- Product type
- Book Titles
Table of contents
- Table of Contents No access
- Foreword No access
- Preface No access
- First Words No access
- Getting There No access
- First Politics, 1952 No access
- Enter Professor Moos No access
- Drafted No access
- The Staff No access
- The 1960 Election No access
- Speeches No access
- Remembering Ike No access
- Interregnum, 1961 No access
- The Harlow Miracle No access
- Working for Richard Nixon No access
- California, 1962 No access
- November 22, 1963 No access
- A Bookmaker No access
- Lincoln Week, 1966 No access
- Harvard, 1967-68 No access
- Miami Beach, 1968 No access
- The 1968 Campaign and Spiro T. Agnew No access
- Deputy Assistant to the President for Urban Affairs No access
- To HEW No access
- The White House Conference on Children No access
- A White House Conference on Youth No access
- What Next? No access
- Leave-Taking, 1972 No access
- Settling In No access
- Governmental Studies No access
- Things to Do No access
- Watergate No access
- Talk No access
- The Presidency Book No access
- Newswork No access
- Transitions No access
- September 11, 2001 No access
- Des Moines, Iowa, 1976 No access
- Kansas City, 1976 No access
- United Nations, 1974 and 1976 No access
- Make-A- Wish Foundation No access
- Campaign Etiquette No access
- Political Cartoons No access
- The Notorious RBG No access
- Hyman Rickover, "Father of the Nuclear Navy," 1954 No access
- Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis, 1977 No access
- Richard Avedon, 1990 No access
- Oliver Stone, 1994 No access
- Former British Prime Minister John Major, 2009 No access
- Circles within Circles No access
- Afterword No access Pages 179 - 180
- Thanks No access Pages 181 - 184
- Index No access Pages 185 - backcover1





