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

Veteran’s Babies

I remember a man who said his father was a folded flag on the mantle. Let’s remember the bill some people must pay for patriotism.  Red was the last vivid image Matt Keil remembers, the day he stopped walking, the day an Iraqi sniper shot him in the neck. Matt and his wife Tracy were determined not to let that war wound limit their lives.  They longed to have a baby, but were told that might not happen.  They tried anyway, even as Matt battled back to health.  One day their doctor showed them three tiny hearts.  Tracy was pregnant with triplets.

Sing in the Shower and Dream

Most days you’ll find Jay Reinke singing to the audience behind his eyelids, the one that crowds his mind, while he measures floors for a living. Thirty years ago, he started performing the songs of Jay and the Americans, a pioneer rock group that twirled to stardom with Chubby Checker, opened for the Beatles and had 23 hits.  This is for all of us who sing in the shower and dream.

Music IS Life

What is it about creativity that keeps some folks active long after the factory workers have set aside their tools.  Perhaps it’s that simple urge to make something that keeps tugging them back.  Telling them to keep busy and stay alive.  Stanley Chappell has a profile chiseled with age.  A face Charles Dickens might have dreamed up.  Ebenezer Scrooge on the day after.  For most of last century, he hunched over musical podiums in Seattle, Washington, pouncing on notes like a bird of prey. 

 Saving the First Draft of History

Newspapers are the first draft of history, so it makes sense that a museum stepped up to save its small town newspaper and the story of their lives.  The Silverton, Colorado, Standard & the Miner is now a National Historic site.

The President Who Never Owned a Home

My grandfather Paul Bailey was a rock ribbed, small town Republican.  Former President Harry Truman, a Democrat, was his friend.  Grandpa Bailey once argued a case before Mr. Truman, when Truman was a Jackson County, Missouri, Commissioner.  

“You must have won,” I grinned, “if you became friends?”

“No,” he said, “I lost.  But I learned something about Mr. Truman that made me admire the man.  He opened a hat shop in Kansas City after he came home from the front lines of World War One.  The business failed.  His partner declared bankruptcy.  Truman did not.  He moved in with his mother-in-law, so he could pay back every penny.”

The only asset Mr. Truman had when he died was that house.  His wife had inherited the home from her mother and father and other than their years in the White House, they lived their entire lives there.

As president he called home collect.  Never billed the taxpayer.  

“Mrs. Truman wanted Harry to buy a car,” Grandpa recalled.  “He said, ‘We can’t afford one, but when we get out of this Great White Jail (the White House,) we’ll get one.”

After president Eisenhower was inaugurated, Harry and Bess bought one.  There was no Secret Service following them.

President Truman retired from office in 1952.  His income was a U.S. Army pension.  $112.56 a month.  Congress, noting that he was paying for his stamps and personally licking them, granted him an ‘allowance’ and, later, a retroactive pension of $25,000 per year.

When offered corporate positions at large salaries, Mr. Truman declined, stating, “You don’t want me.  You want the office of the President, and that doesn’t belong to me.  It belongs to the American people and it’s not for sale.”

One day on the way to Grandpa’s house, he stopped to show me the retired president mowing his mother-in-law’s lawn.

“Hi, Harry,” he waved.

Mr. Truman shaded his eyes and smiled when he recognized his friend.  “Hi, Paul.”

Grandpa grinned and then said, “Okay, Bobby.  Let’s get out of here before this Democrat stuff sticks to the tires…”

D.C. Samaritan

There is a side of Washington, DC, we seldom see on Nightly News.  It is far removed from the ruffles and flourishes of the Nation’s Capitol.  Here, survival is no global affair.  Calvin Woodland’s business is begging.  For decades, he hustled these streets, raising money to help the drug addicts and dead end kids who lived in his neighborhood.  Home was the grimy public housing projects southeast of the Capitol.  Calvin Woodland represents something in short supply around here.  A hero.   

An Image to Show They Lived

Most everywhere you go out west, you find that a photographer has been there before.  People didn’t always care where they’d end up, but they wanted the folks  back home to see they had arrived.  Glenn Altman has been taking their portraits most of his 81 years, offering his neighbors something special — a beautiful image to remind the world they had lived.  

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