4/8 Reagan: His Life and Legend Hardcover – September 10, 2024 by Max Boot (Author)
The John Batchelor Show
John Batchelor
4.5 • 2.8K Ratings
🗓️ 16 November 2024
⏱️ 9 minutes
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Summary
by Max Boot (Author)
https://www.amazon.com/Reagan-Life-Legend-Max-Boot/dp/0871409445
The story begins not in star-studded Hollywood but in the cradle of the Midwest, small-town Illinois, where Reagan was born in 1911 to Nelle Clyde Wilson, a devoted Disciples of Christ believer, and Jack Reagan, a struggling, alcoholic salesman. Boot vividly creates a portrait of a handsome young man, indeed a much-vaunted lifeguard, whose early successes mirrored those of Horatio Alger. And contextualizing Reagan’s life against American history, Boot re-creates the world in which Reagan transitioned from local Iowa sportscaster to budding screen actor.
The world of Hollywood from the 1930s to the 1950s would prove significant, not only in Reagan’s coming-of-age in such classics as Knute Rockne and Kings Row but during the twilight of his film career, when he played opposite a chimpanzee in Bedtime for Bonzo, and then his eventual emergence as a television host of General Electric Theater, which established his bona fides as one of the leading conservative voices of the time. Indeed, the leap to California governor in 1966 seemed almost preordained, in which Reagan became a bellwether for a nation in the throes of a generational shift.
Reagan’s 1980 presidential election augured a shift that continues into this century. Boot writes not as a partisan but as a historian seeking to set the story straight. He explains how Reagan was an ideologue but also a supreme pragmatist who signed pro-abortion and gun control bills as governor, cut deals with Democrats in both Sacramento and Washington, and befriended Mikhail Gorbachev to end the Cold War. A master communicator, Reagan revived America’s spirits after the traumas of Vietnam and Watergate. But Boot also shows how Reagan was armored in obliviousness. He traces Reagan’s opposition to civil rights over forty years, reveals how he neglected the exploding AIDS epidemic, and details how America experienced a level of income inequality not seen since the Gilded Age.
With its revelatory insights, Reagan: His Life and Legend is no apologia, depicting a man with a good-versus-evil worldview derived from his moralistic upbringing and Hollywood westerns. Providing fresh examinations of “trickle-down economics,” the Cold War’s end, the Iran-Contra affair, as well as a nuanced portrait of Reagan’s family, this definitive biography is as compelling a presidential biography as any in recent decades.
1952 Nancy Davis and Ronald Reagan
Transcript
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| 0:00.0 | I'm John Batcher, visiting with Max Booth, the author of the new book, Reagan, his life and legend. |
| 0:05.4 | I believe it's Mike Deaver later in the White House who says television is the presidency. |
| 0:10.4 | And we're about to see that demonstrated. |
| 0:13.3 | There's a General Electric Theater, there's Borax, the 21 Mule, I remember that vividly, Max, in black and white. Ronald Reagan is a perfect TV presenter. |
| 0:24.1 | The movie career is unnecessary. He's earning very good money from GE and from mixing with |
| 0:30.1 | corporate leadership in the 50s and early 60s. But we need to get back to politics. Politics can push the audience away. |
| 0:39.2 | However, he became attached to what becomes the Goldwater |
| 0:42.5 | part of the early Republican conservative movement. |
| 0:46.4 | What convinced him, was it talking to GE executives? |
| 0:50.3 | Is that why he went from New Dealer to Goldwaterite? |
| 0:58.0 | Well, Reagan's own explanation was he often said, I didn't desert my party, my party deserted me, to imply that the Democratic Party had feared far to the left and he had stayed in the center. |
| 1:06.0 | And as I show in the book, that's not really accurate because the Democratic Party in the 1950s was still pretty centrist. |
| 1:12.6 | I mean, in 1960, John F. Kennedy actually ran to Richard Nixon's right on defense policy. |
| 1:18.9 | So it wasn't the Democrat, so it changed. It was Reagan. |
| 1:21.4 | And I traced the transformation beginning in World War II and still as a pretty highly, very highly paid actor, |
| 1:29.3 | Ronald Reagan was very unhappy to be paying 90% rates of income taxation during the war. |
| 1:34.3 | And then after the war, as we discussed, he became involved in the Red Hunts in Hollywood and became a very hardline anti-communist. |
| 1:42.3 | And that his transformation was really complete in the 1950s when he |
| 1:46.2 | was a spokesman for General Electric and host of the General Electric Theater. Because in those days, |
| 1:51.8 | GE was a very conservative company. And they viewed spreading, you know, free market propaganda as |
| 1:58.8 | being an inoculation against union troubles. |
| 2:01.6 | And so they made sure that all of their managers and employees were exposed to a host of conservative viewpoints. |
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