Last Call at the Hotel Imperial: The Deborah Cohen Interview
Gaslit Nation
Gaslit Nation
4.7 • 4.1K Ratings
🗓️ 28 December 2022
⏱️ 53 minutes
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| 0:00.0 | All right, everyone. |
| 0:11.2 | I am your co-host, Andrea Chalupa, and with me today is a very special guest. |
| 0:18.3 | Deborah Cohen is the author of The War Come Home, Household Gods, and Family |
| 0:23.2 | Secrets. She's also the Peter B. Ritzma Professor of Humanities and Professor of History at |
| 0:30.1 | Northwestern University, focusing on modern Europe. She's here to speak with us about her book, |
| 0:36.3 | Last Call at the Hotel Imperial, which is an extraordinary story of John Gunther, H.R. Knickerbocker, Vincent Sheen, and Dorothy Thompson. |
| 0:45.5 | This is a generation of authors that I'm especially interested in because Dorothy Thompson is a personal hero of mine. |
| 0:53.8 | Full disclosure, I am working on a script that was brought to me by a wonderful producer in Wales. |
| 1:03.1 | I love this project so much, and I'm so eager to dive in and learn more about Dorothy Thompson's incredible life and that whole generation of |
| 1:12.2 | journalists that stared down fascism and all that we can learn from them today. Welcome, |
| 1:18.7 | welcome to the show. Deppra Cohen, thank you so much for being here. |
| 1:22.5 | Thanks so much for having me. It's a thrill. Tell us about these reporters that that you focus on in the last |
| 1:29.7 | call at the hotel imperial. Am I saying it correctly? Is it the last call at the hotel imperial? |
| 1:35.3 | Yeah. I just call it last call at the hotel imperial, but imperial. Imperial is correct as well. |
| 1:42.3 | So they were a group of young men and women reporters, college graduates, |
| 1:50.1 | who in the early 1920s left America for Europe and Asia. |
| 1:55.1 | And they left because they were fed up with American moralism, |
| 1:59.8 | and they were disgusted by prohibition and Europe |
| 2:04.3 | to them was the center of all culture and they were interested in an adventure. So some of them |
| 2:10.8 | had worked on big city newspapers like the Chicago Daily News or the Newark papers and all of them were interested in participating in |
| 2:20.9 | what they felt were the big events happening in Europe and in Asia. Yeah, I mean, this was an |
| 2:27.4 | extraordinary time, much like today, where the world was facing the crossroads of fascism |
... |
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