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1.82 MB

Extraction Summary

6
People
5
Organizations
2
Locations
2
Events
2
Relationships
4
Quotes

Document Information

Type: Memoir excerpt / narrative account (evidence document)
File Size: 1.82 MB
Summary

This document appears to be a page from a memoir or narrative account included in House Oversight evidence. It details anecdotes regarding 1960s journalism, specifically focusing on Jules Siegel and Arthur Kretchmer at 'Cheetah' and 'Cavalier' magazines. The text describes pranks involving fake obituaries and office maneuvering to publish early rock and roll journalism.

People (6)

Name Role Context
Jules Siegel Editor/Writer
Editor of Cheetah magazine; writer for Cavalier; published a fake obituary of the narrator.
Arthur Kretchmer Managing Editor
Managing editor of Cavalier; friend of Jules Siegel; altered magazine schedule to include a rock and roll issue.
Sterling Hayden Actor
Subject of Jules Siegel's first assignment; known for Dr. Strangelove.
Adam Ellsworth Journalist
Described Siegel's work on rock journalism.
Bob Dylan Musician
Mentioned in the context of rock and roll history and the Newport Folk Festival.
Narrator ('me') Author/Subject
Unnamed in text, but subject of a fake obituary published by Siegel.

Organizations (5)

Name Type Context
Cheetah (magazine)
Cavalier (magazine)
Associated Press
Playboy (referenced as 'Playboy-esque')
House Oversight Committee (implied by footer)

Timeline (2 events)

1965
Publication of 'The Big Beat' article in Cavalier magazine.
Cavalier Magazine
Unknown
Arthur Kretchmer sneaks into office at night to retype magazine schedule.
Cavalier office

Locations (2)

Location Context

Relationships (2)

Jules Siegel Friends/Colleagues Arthur Kretchmer
Described as 'Jules' friend' and they collaborated on the rock and roll issue.
Narrator Professional/Acquaintance Jules Siegel
Siegel published a fake obituary of the narrator without permission.

Key Quotes (4)

""That is the meaning of it.""
Source
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Quote #1
""Of course. I would tell you if I was dead.""
Source
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Quote #2
""When the editorial director later resigned... there was a 24-hour hiatus before the new editor arrived.""
Source
HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_024925.jpg
Quote #3
""Here's what we're working on.""
Source
HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_024925.jpg
Quote #4

Full Extracted Text

Complete text extracted from the document (1,931 characters)

now they could have a second chance because he was still alive. The obituary evoked inquiries from newspapers, wire services, foreign publications, radio and TV.
"What's the meaning of it?" one editor asked me. "There's a lot of excitement at the city desk."
"That is the meaning of it."
A few years later, without my permission, Jules Siegel, the editor of a short-lived magazine, Cheetah, published a fake obituary of me. I thought it was funny. An Associated Press reporter called, and I explained that it was a hoax.
"Are you sure?" he asked.
"Of course. I would tell you if I was dead."
Siegel started writing for Cavalier. His first assignment was a profile of Sterling Hayden, an actor best known in Dr, Stranglove or How I Learned to Stop Worrying and Love the Bomb.
Journalist Adam Ellsworth described Siegel's "Goodbye Surfing, Hello God" with his most famous example of rock journalism, but his most revolutionary was his article, "The Big Beat." It appeared in the Playboy-esque Cavalier magazine in 1965 and was one of the earliest writings he'd ever seen on the development of rock and roll, from slaves singing in chains on their way to America to Bob Dylan "going electric" at the Newport Folk Festival.
Then Jules' friend, Arthur Kretchmer, became Cavalier's managing editor. "When the editorial director later resigned," Kretchmer said, "there was a 24-hour hiatus before the new editor arrived." Siegel and Kretchmer had been discussing the possibility of publishing an issue on rock and roll, so to make it happen, Kretchmer went into the office at night and retyped the magazine's schedule to include their ideas.
When the new editorial started, Kretchmer handed him the schedules and said, "Here's what we're working on." The new editorial director suspected nothing and the rock and roll issue went ahead. Once the laughter died down, Jules talked for a good 25 minutes about
HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_024925

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