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

Views

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

Who’s the Savage?

You remember Sitting Bull who helped defeat General Custer at the Little Big Horn?  He was a Great War Chief of the Lakota Sioux Indian tribe. He was also a man who cared deeply about children. 

On his trip to New York City with Buffalo Bill’s Wild West Show, Sitting Bull was moved by the orphans he saw on the streets.  He spent his pay buying them food which he handed out in a back alley.  Ron His Horse is Thunder told me that story.  He is Sitting Bull’s Great-Great-Great grandson.  Ron let me ponder what he had said.   Finally, he looked up and asked, “Who’s the savage?”

College by 12

One mother told me her Home Schooling curriculum includes Honors laundry and AP vacuuming.  And then — there’s the Harding family who sent 6 kids kids to college by age 12.  That’s right.  12.  The Harding’s offer tired parents some tips.

America’s Main Street

Everything immortal must first pass away.  For nearly 60 years, Route 66 was THE way west — America’s Main Street — before highways looped outside little towns and fenced folks off from homemade America.  Route 66 was for most a Yellow brick road, a journey important for what we would find. 

Doctor Finds Poor Friends

Jack McConnell stopped to pick up a man who was walking down a dirt road without an umbrella on a drizzly day.

“Where you headed?” McConnell called out the window.

“To look for a job,” the man answered. “Any one I can get.”

“What’s your name?”

“James.”

“You married?”

“Yes. I’ve got two kids and my wife is pregnant with our third.”

“What do you do for medical care?” McConnell wondered. He was a retired doctor.

“We have to take care of ourselves,” James said. “No one else is going to help us.”

His answer would change thousands of lives across the country.

Who Invented the Wild West?

Lewis Whirlwind Horse was the last living member of a traveling troupe of cowboys and Indians who invented the way we imagine the Old West must have been.   “We were playing at the old Madison Square Garden in New York City, which is neither square nor a garden,” Whirlwind Horse said. “Buffalo Bill directed us to ride our horses around a circled ‘wagon train’ so we could show off our riding skills. My role in the act was to grab a pioneer woman and take her into a tepee set up at the other end of the arena. She was supposed to scream until Buffalo Bill came and rescued her, but we Indians were doing the screeching. You see, we played gin rummy while we were waiting for Bill to come shoot us, and she sat in on the game. She was the best card player in the show. Beat us every time. We were supposed to be killing her, but her card playing was killing us!”  

America’s Largest Do It Yourself

Three little boys live in a magical place riddled with secret tunnels: a 35,000-square-foot building their parents are restoring, mostly by themselves.

That’s right: a home one-third the size of Downton Abbey — without the downstairs help.

Cold Case

TV would have us believe that “high-tech” catches criminals, but only about a third of the cases get solved with DNA evidence. The rest rely on people whose minds never retire.

 BILL PETERS SOLVED THE MYSTERY TO A LIFE LONG ROMANCE.

Old West Humor

The west of legend has so captured our imagination that the real west is often overlooked.  For nearly 30 years cowboy cartoonist Ace Reid gave voice to people we thought we know, but never asked.  His cartoon series “Cowpokes” was read in Gobblers Knob, Utah and Fishtail, Montana, hundreds of small towns where cowboys still challenge a hardscrabble land.  

Pole Ferry

Growing up, I spent my summers in farm country — Kansas — with a grandfather who loved to tell stories. Perhaps that’s why I got into the storytelling business.

My grandfather told me that when he was 18, he was what used to be called “all hat and no cattle,” a kid with little money and no property. 

“One of my biggest thrills,” he said, “was loading my buggy and best girl on a river ferry. That was like a ride at Disneyland. The ferryman would push us across with a pole and an encyclopedic knowledge of the currents. Quite an adventure in 1903!”

Grandpa would have loved Ashley Pillar, one of the last of those old-time river ferrymen.  

https://youtu.be/_yr7dcTvtp8

Little Dead School House

The road out of town is the only way the road seems to go.  So few families remained in McLeod, North Dakota, Jan Herbranson ran out of kids at the old one-room school.  Normally, that would spell the end of a place like McLeod.  The school closed in 1986.  But in this village of 50, four babies born.  When they grew up, children returned to her little dead school house and so did Jan Herbranson.

https://youtu.be/CREGXwNB84Q

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