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30-Plus Years in Television Broadcasting

G. L. Rockey Author Interview

Vagabond Broadcaster Gypsy TV Guy gives readers an inside look at your life from childhood through your thirty-plus years in television broadcasting. Why was this an important book for you to write?

So many coulda shouda mistakes.

I appreciated the candid nature with which you told your story. What was the hardest thing for you to write about?

Marriage stuff…what to include and what to not…

What is one thing you hope readers take away from the experiences you share in your memoir?

Keep “what might have been” to barest minimum.

What is the next book you are working on, and when will it be published?

Rabbit Hole University is published at KDP…working on Bats in the Belfry; Bells in the Attic II…collection of off the wall short stories, flash fiction.

Author Links: GoodReads | Facebook | Twitter | LinkedIn | Website | Amazon

Recalling a turbulent career in television broadcasting, questioning fate, chance, and coincidence; little did G L Rockey know when he switched majors at Michigan State University from Restaurant Management to Communication that it would be the beginning of a career in television broadcasting that would last some thirty plus years.

Vagabond Broadcaster Gypsy TV Guy

A terse yet vividly colorful account of a career in TV broadcasting, Vagabond Broadcaster Gypsy TV Guy, by G L Rockey is a short, quick read.

Thirteen chapters are bookended by a prologue and an epilogue; the book packs quite a bit in a chapter. The prologue alone covers the author’s less-than-ideal childhood, his time at acting school, and his disillusionment, getting his girlfriend pregnant at a young age, marrying her while still in college, and ending up at WZZM station right out of college. Beginning with the themes of fate and predestination (which run through the entire narrative), the author dwells on a number of decisions- the situations of which were presented by fate, but the decision taken was by him. Then again, he always ends up wondering if his decision changed the course of his life if it was all predestined and written anyway. It’s an interesting conundrum, and it’s easy to read it as a consolatory mechanism being used retrospectively by the author. 

From manning the camera to working his way up to the Operations Manager at several TV stations, the author’s career trajectory is highly impressive and an entertaining one to read. The writing is terse, like bullet points in a journal, without too much description. The collection of remembrances in a chronological form has the reader shaking her head at his chequered career and at the sheer number of times, he moves jobs, his family, and his entire life.

I think a little more background on the industry would lend more context to the book and help place said anecdotes in a clearer picture. But I still think Vagabond Broadcaster Gypsy TV Guy: A Memoir is a funny and wry read, and the inner workings of TV stations in the USA in the 1960s and 1970s are well-depicted through his anecdotes.

Pages: 115 | ASIN : B0CGVPPRQ8

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