Bob Dotson

AMERICA’S STORYTELLER

Love my stories about ordinary people doing extraordinary things?  I’m donating Autographed Copies of this New York Times Best Seller to help maintain the American Story Video Archive at Syracuse University. All proceeds go to the archive.

 

AMERICA’S STORYTELLER

Bob Dotson

America survives and thrives because of all those names we don’t know, seemingly ordinary people who do extraordinary things.  I found them while crisscrossing the country, four million miles, practically non-stop, for half a century, searching for stories hiding in history’s shadow.

Telling tales on television is a bit like writing on smoke:

 That’s why I saved these stories of us.

AMERICAN STORIES VIDEOS

AWARDS

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Stories Hiding in History’s Shadow

The Last Living

Heart Donor

Childhood should be a season of dreams, but some children awake each morning from an American nightmare.  Clara Hale saved hundreds of them.

Traditional values like caring and hard work are still guiding our lives in overlooked places, not all of them remote.

Success, Not Bought.  Earned

Braeden Kirchner likes to conduct music with his eyes closed, so he can see his dream. The boy from Goose Creek, South Carolina, wanted to conduct the Boston Pops.  Never mind that Braeden was just 18.  To prepare for a career in conducting, he learned to play every instrument in the orchestra. He finally got his chance.

Orphan Train

“No one succeeds alone,” the old man with a faraway look told me.  He pointed to a picture taken when he was a boy.

“I was a lonesome little fellow,” clutching a suitcase, waiting for a train.  

America thrives on rugged individualism, but look more closely and you’ll see other hands that guide our success.   

Want proof?  Click on this story from so long ago, Tom Brokaw and I had color in our hair.

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“The shortest distance between two people is a good story.  Once you know someone’s story, you begin to see not just how you  differ, but what you have in common.”

Bob Dotson

American Story Archive List

Spreadsheet

What's in the Archive?

NEW BOOK!!

THIRD EDITION

Make it Memorable, Writing and Packaging Visual News with Style

In Make It Memorable, former NBC News correspondent Bob Dotson and New York Times visual investigations producer Drew Jordan present a unique and engaging hands-on approach to the craft of visual storytelling. The third edition offers new insight for the digital age and a step-by-step explanation of how to find and create all kinds of visual stories under tight deadlines. In addition to new scripts annotated with behind-the-scenes insights and structural comments, the book includes links to online videos of all the story examples. 

 

Recently Featured Stories

 Restoring the South Bronx 

After years of urban decline, the community of the South Bronx gets a boost from native Hedy Fox, who brings the skills she learned in college to the challenges of neighborhood crime. 

The Man Who Made a National Park

Photographer Rex Ziak (pronounced Zeek) spent almost a decade trying to get a new National Park at the point where American explorers Lewis and Clark ended their westward journey. He tramped along the last bit of trail they blazed near his home in Southwestern Washington, studied their journals and discovered no one had accurately pinpointed that place on the Pacific coast. So Rex spent years searching their path until he found it. That work led directly to the creation of the Lewis and Clark National Historical Park, but Rex didn’t attend the opening ceremony. He planned it that way.

Finding Hope

Every generation faces terrible challenges.   Wars, depressions, holocausts.  Polio, Aids, pandemics.  We cannot predict what will come, but it is well to remember people who play a bad hand well, over and over again.  They are why America not only survives, but thrives.  Let me share with you one of my TODAY Show reports that was so much more than a weather story.  

Doctor Will Come to You

I remember when milk and doctors came to your house.  Fred Richardson still does — in one of the toughest neighborhoods in Chicago.  He is a brave man with a big heart.  Dr. Richardson returned to his old neighborhood to open a one-man practice. Scary?  No.  His neighbors keep him safe.  

Mother’s Day Dad

The Alonso’s lost their mother during the 9/11 attack in 2001.  Janet went to work at the World Trade Center that morning and never returned. Robert was left to care for a 2-year-old daughter and a baby boy with Down syndrome.

“If I was to tell you I did this by myself, I’d be a liar; I’d be a flat-out liar,” Robert said. “I got my mom, my aunt, my pop to help.”

But he never returned to work at the pizza place he owned in Stony Point, New York. His family substituted for him. “I owe it to my children to be around,” Robert explained. “If I buried my grief in work, my kids would lose both their parents.”

How’d they turn out? 

40 Acres and a Mule

The Federal government gave some starving folks 40 acres and a mule during the Great Depression of the 1930’s. It saved them.  I found them 50 years later. 

Above the Whispers and Stares

Not all my stories were done in America. I found Doug Mealing in Australia.  One side of his face grew faster than the other.  He was born with Elephant Man’s Disease.  Mealing worked far above the whispers and stares repairing the old Sydney Harbor bridge, but could not climb above his problems, until a woman’s love earned him a job on the number one soap opera in Australia. 

School of the Air

Long before Covid-19 made virtual classrooms a necessity, students in Australia’s vast Outback were learning via two-way radio.  The Warwick family built an extraordinary life in that dessert on not much more than hope. Their ranch sits on some of the driest country on earth. In order to make a modest living they farmed one hundred and twenty five square miles.  Their kids’ closest friends lived six hundred miles away.  The children dressed up on Halloween and described their costumes to their teacher over a short-wave radio.  They experienced the first chapter of modern communication.

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The Trouble We All Live With

A 6-year-old girl  became the first African American child to desegregate an all-white elementary school in the  South. Ruby Bridges always said her mother was the hero of the moment. She put her family and her husband’s job in jeopardy to open schools for all.   

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