376 lines
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Plaintext
376 lines
24 KiB
Plaintext
ÜÜÜÜÜÜÜÜÜÜÜÜÜ ÜÜÜ ÜÜÜÜ
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ÜÛÛÛÛÛÛÛÝ ÞÛÛÛÛÛÛÛÛ ÞÛÛÛÛÛÛÛÛ ß ÞÛÛÛÛÛÛÜ ÜÛ
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ÜÛÛÛÛÛÛÛÝ ÛÛÛÛÛÛÛÛ ÛÛÛÛÛÛÛÛÝ ÞÞÛÛÛÛÛÛÛÛÛß
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ÜÛßÛÛÛÛÛÛ ÜÜ ÛÛÛÛÛÛÛÛÝ ÛÛÞÛÛÛÛÛÝ ÞÛÛÛÛÛÛßß
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ÜÛßÛÛÛÛÛÛÜÛÛÛÛÜÞÛÛÛÛÛÛÛÛ ÞÛ ßÛÛÛÛÛ Ü ÛÝÛÛÛÛÛ Ü
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ÜÛ ÞÛÛÛÛÛÛÛÛÛÛß ÛÛÛÛÛÛÛÛÛ ßÛÜ ßÛÛÛÜÜ ÜÜÛÛÛß ÞÛ ÞÛÛÛÝ ÜÜÛÛ
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ßÛÜ ÜÛÛÛß ßÛÛÛÛÛÛÛÛÛÛÜ ßßÜÜ ßßÜÛÛßß ßÛÛÜ ßßßÛßÛÛÛÛÛÛÛßß
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ßßßßß ßßÛÛß ßßßßß ßßßßßßßßßßßßß
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ARRoGANT CoURiERS WiTH ESSaYS
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Grade Level: Type of Work Subject/Topic is on:
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[ ]6-8 [ ]Class Notes [Citizen Kane and it's ]
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[x]9-10 [ ]Cliff Notes [accurate Portrayal of ]
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[ ]11-12 [x]Essay/Report [William Randolph Hearst.]
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[ ]College [ ]Misc [ ]
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Dizzed: 06/94 # of Words:4227 School: ? State: ?
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ÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄ>ÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄ>ÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄ>Chop Here>ÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄ>ÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄ>ÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄ>ÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄ
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Citizen Kane: An Accurate Portrayal of
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William Randolph Hearst?
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Many have called Citizen Kane the greatest cinematic achievement of all
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time. It is indeed a true masterpiece of acting, screen writing, and
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directing. Orson Welles, its young genius director, lead actor, and a
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co-writer, used the best talents and techniques of the day (Bordwell 103)
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to tell the story of a newspaper giant, Charles Kane, through the eyes of
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the people who loved and hated him. However, when it came out, it was
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scorned by Hollywood and viewed only in the private theaters of RKO, the
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producer. Nominated for nine Academy Awards, it was practically booed off
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the stage, and only won one award, that for Best Screenplay, which Welles
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and Herman Mankiewicz shared (Mulvey 10). This was all due to the pressure
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applied by the greatest newspaper man of the time, one of the most powerful
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men in the nation, the man Citizen Kane portrayed as a corrupt power
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monger, namely William Randolph Hearst.
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One cannot ignore the striking similarities between Hearst and Kane. In
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order to make clear at the outset exactly what he intended to do, Orson
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Welles included a few details about the young Kane that, given even a
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rudimentary knowledge of Hearst's life, would have set one thinking about
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the life of that newspaper giant. Shortly after the film opens, a reporter
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is seen trying to discover the meaning of Kane's last word, "Rosebud." He
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begins his search by going through the records of Kane's boyhood guardian,
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Thatcher. The scene comes to life in midwinter at the Kane boarding house.
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Kane's mother has come into one of the richest gold mines in the world
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through a defaulting boarder, and at age twenty-five, Kane will inherit his
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sixty million dollars (Citizen Kane). His mother is doubtful of the
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quality of the education her son will receive in Colorado, and therefore
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wishes to send her son to study with Thatcher. Hearst's parents came by
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their money through gold mines (Swanberg 5), so both Hearst and Kane were
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raised with "golden" spoons in their respective mouths. Kane is unusually
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devoted to his mother, as shown when he turns away from his father to
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listen to his mother, and when he only pays heed to his mother's answers to
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his questions (Citizen Kane). Hearst likewise was completely devoted to
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his mother. He was sheltered from the real world by his mother and her
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money for most of his young life, rarely even seeing his traveling father
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(Swanberg 25). Also, Kane's dying word and the name of his childhood sled,
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"Rosebud," (Citizen Kane) was the name of a town twenty miles east of where
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Hearst's parents were born and grew up (Robinson 13). Everything from the
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newsreel at the start of the film on Kane's life matches Hearst's almost
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perfectly. Kane ran over thirty newspapers, radios, and syndicates, had a
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well publicized romantic affair, tried in vain to be elected to public
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office, was totally and completely careless with his money, (always
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expecting there would be much more coming), and built himself a pleasure
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palace called Xanadu, which included a gigantic collection of statues and
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animals (Citizen Kane). Hearst also did all these things over the course
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of his life, which further served to convince movie viewers of Welles'
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libelous intentions in the making of the movie. (Swanberg).
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After the opening newsreel on Hearst's life, the movie goes through the
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boyhood scene where Thatcher takes Kane away from his parents. It then
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quickly shifts to a point twenty years later, when Kane is about to inherit
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the sixth largest private fortune in the world. Thatcher is concerned that
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Kane won't know his place in the world, and his fears are affirmed when
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Kane sends a telegram saying that he has no interest in gold mines or
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banks, but, rather, he would like to take over a small newspaper of which
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Thatcher has taken possession, the Morning Inquirer, because, "I think it
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would be fun to write a newspaper." (Citizen Kane) The circumstances under
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which Hearst entered the newspaper world were very similar. Hearst's
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father, a nearly illiterate mining tycoon, owned a newspaper in San
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Francisco, The Examiner, which he used as nothing more than a political
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organ to further his candidacy for a seat in Congress (Swanberg 26).
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Against his father's wishes for him to enter the world of mining, young
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Hearst took control of the paper to try to reverse his father's enormous
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losses on it (Swanberg 47).
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Both Hearst and Kane immediately began to revolutionize everything
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about their respective papers. Kane literally moved in to the office so
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that he might be constantly around his paper, constantly able to redo it at
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any hour, night or day. He makes it quite clear that, from now on, The
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Examiner was going to do more than just report what the current editor
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considered "newsworthy." It was going to report all news, large or small,
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especially if it could be made into a sensation and sell newspapers. And
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if there was no current sensation, Kane would create the news. Hearst did
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the same thing, revolutionizing his paper to take on "undignified topics"
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to gain circulation, sporting shocking headlines and stories of "crime and
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underwear." In a classic example of similarity, Kane nearly quoted Hearst
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exactly: "You supply the prose and poems, I'll supply the war," (Orson
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Wells, Citizen Kane) as Kane discussed what to telegram back to a man in
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Cuba. Hearst was very much anti-Spanish dur ing the Cuban revolution, and
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if not for his efforts, it is probable that the war would not have even
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been fought. But Hearst, who would do anything for a headline, cooked up
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incredibly falsified tales of Spanish brutality. As stories of Cuban
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injustice became old news to the public, especially as there was no real
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war, a reporter telegraphed Hearst that he would like to leave. Hearst
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replied, "Please remain. You furnish the pictures, I'll furnish the war."
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(Swanberg 127) Such an obvious similarity can only have been deliberate,
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as Kane practically quoted Hearst.
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In the movie, Thatcher was furious with Kane's success in attacking
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trusts in defense of "the people" and providing false headlines such as
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those about the Spanish Armada being anchored off of the Jersey coast, a
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headline printed with virtually no proof to substantiate it. Kane even used
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his paper to attack a company of which he himself, along with Thatcher, was
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the major shareholder. As Thatcher prepared to leave after his discussion
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with Kane on what new is, he mentioned to Kane his enormous losses, which
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totaled one million dollars for the year, a staggering sum to have been
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lost by one person, especially at that time. Kane,. however, laughed it
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off, joking that, at that rate, he'll have to close down in sixty years
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(Citizen Kane). All these things were characteristic of Hearst as well.
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He attacked the trusts in favor of "the people" (a favorite phrase of
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Hearst's) and hired lawyers to try to get injunctions against the trusts
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and eventually destroy them. He supported the eight hour workday and the
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labor unions (Swanberg 235). He made up headlines preying on people's fear
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and hatred of Spain and Japan which, not coincidentally, he had aroused by
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previous articles in The Examiner and other publications of his about
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Spanish atrocities in Cuba and the "yellow menace" of Japan (Swanberg 122,
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352) Hearst threw money away as though to him it literally grew on trees.
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A man with an income of fifteen million dollars a year at the height of his
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power, he had almost no savings and sometimes had to borrow money (Swanberg
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88).
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Right after taking over The Inquirer, as told now by Bernstein, Kane
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ordered the editor to play up less "important" stories for the paper, the
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kinds of things that the nation wanted to see and read about, not just
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boring, plain "news." He became very involved in the editorial content of
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his paper, constantly trying to make it better that the rest, staying up
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late, thinking of headlines and ideas for scoops. Kane went to the office
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of The Chronicle, his main competition, to admire the best newspaper staff
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in the world and its gigantic circulation, and soon after he bribed those
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same men with large sums of cash to move from The Chronicle to his
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newspaper, achieving in six years what it took The Chronicle twenty years
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to accomplish. He married the president's niece, Emily. (Citizen Kane)
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These were very Hearst-like maneuvers in many ways. First, as stated
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before, Hearst loved to embellish and exaggerate the news to get
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circulation. Second, Hearst was constantly stealing talented newspapermen
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from other newspapers, a practice which annoyed such men as Joseph Pulitzer
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to no end. (Pulitzer's World was Hearst's favorite publication) (Swanberg
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95). Hearst paid any salary he had to without a care, for he had millions
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his disposal, since his father was still funding the enterprise. Hearst
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married young Millicent Willson, a parallel to Kane's Emily (Swanberg 246)
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Bernstein's narration ended with a telegram from Kane announcing his
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purchase of the largest diamond in the world. Bernstein commented to
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Leland, Kane's best friend, that Kane was not collecting diamonds, but
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collecting someone else who was collecting diamonds (Citizen Kane). This is
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an early hint at Kane's belief that one could buy love like anything else,
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which is one of Welles' main criticisms of Hearst, and is shown as Kane's
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fatal flaw. It is certainly one of the main reasons Welles made the movie
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about Hearst in the first place.
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The next scene opens with Leland, one of Kane's only friends. Leland
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continued Bernstein's stories of Kane's belief in the ability to purchase
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love, and hinted at the one overwhelming thing about him, the absolute
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enigma he posed to even his closest friends. Leland explained how no one
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could understand Kane because of the contradictions in his beliefs and
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life. He said that, "Maybe Charlie wasn't brutal, he just did brutal
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things," (Citizen Kane) explaining how Kane, while a firm believer in the
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government and law, couldn't see how it applied to him. Hearst, who was an
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incredible egomaniac, shared the same beliefs. He was in constant conflict
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with himself. For instance, he supported the coal strikers while being
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backed by Tammany Hall, the very head of the Democratic party machine with
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close ties to big business (Swanberg 238-245). This trait is the one which
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Kane played out to full effect in his movie. Once the audience was sure
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that they were seeing Hearst up there, Welle s could explain the problems
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of a man like Hearst, a man who had to have his own way. His want at the
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moment was the largest paper in New York, but that would soon change.
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Leland told of Kane's arguments with his wife, which climaxed with
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Kane's ultimate statement of his belief in his own omnipotence. When Kane's
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wife begins, "People will think," he completes the sentence for her with,
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"What I tell them to think!" (Citizen Kane) Everything about Hearst's
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manner of speaking and his beliefs pointed to that fact that he was an
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egomaniac as well, a firm believer in his own power.
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The one thing Kane wanted in his life, Leland explained, was love, but
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it was the one thing he never found. He wanted the people to love him just
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as his newspaper staff did, and he went about making sure that it occurred
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by entering the world of politics. Right before his campaign for governor,
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Kane met a pretty, young opera singer named Susan Alexander and entered
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into a relationship with her. Then he made his incredible bid for
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governorship on an independent ticket, an office which, for him, would have
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been the easy first step to the White House (Citizen Kane). Once again,
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the detailed similarities to Hearst's life were astounding. Hearst sought
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public office after his dominance over the newspaper world was assured.
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The key office he sought, and which was denied to him by attacks by
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Theodore Roosevelt, was the governorship of New York on an independent
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ticket. Both of the men used dirty and abusive campaigning methods,
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portraying their opponents as jailbirds in their publ ications. Had Hearst
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been elected, he would most likely have become president soon after. Here,
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however, both in the movie and in Hearst's life, the family obsession about
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the newspapers began to dissolve. Kane left the running of his newspapers
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to other men, not taking as much of an interest in them anymore. Hearst did
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likewise, ending his earlier practices of obtaining good men at any cost.
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A man had to work to keep his job, and it could be snatched away at any
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moment by "The Chief" (Swanberg 263). Hearst also met a beautiful young
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actress, Marion Davies, and took her as his mistress (Swanberg 402). At
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this point, however, the two tales differ.
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Kane was defeated in the election when his affair with Ms. Susan
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Alexander was exposed by his opponent, Jim Gettys, who basically ordered
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Kane and Emily to come to see Ms. Alexander. Again Kane's towering
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egocentricity showed through when he completely disregarded everyone else's
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wishes and declared that only he decided what C.F. Kane did. As Gettys
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left, Kane flew into a rage and screamed, "I'm Charles Foster Kane, and I'm
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going to send you to Sing Sing, Gettys, Sing Sing!" The next day, the
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papers were filled with the story, and Kane lost the election. (Citizen
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Kane) Hearst, on the other hand, was defeated by the president himself and
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people using his own newspapers against him, but it served Welles' purpose
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better to have Kane defeated by his own greed.
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Kane went on to divorce Emily and marry Susan. Having failed in his
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own right, he heaped his ambition on Susan. This was most clearly seen
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with his statement, "We're (italics added) going to be a great opera star."
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(Citizen Kane)
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The movie then shifted easily to Susan Alexander's portrayal of Kane as
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her own personal ambition factory. Whatever she was lacking, he supplied
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it for her and threw his papers heart and soul into backing her, even
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though she was a terrible opera singer. Hearst did the same for Davies,
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each movie of hers a greater triumph than the last, according to his
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reviewers. Although Marion Davies, unlike Susan, was a genuinely talented
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individual, there were enough similarities between the two women. Both
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women loved jigsaw puzzles (Reflections on Citizen Kane), both were
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singers, both were well publicized affairs. However Kane married Susan,
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while Hearst never divorced his wife. Both men pushed and pushed and
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pushed their mistresses to the breaking point and ran their mistress's
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lives (Swanberg 585), at which point Susan attempted suicide and Kane found
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her lying in bed unconscious. Davies never went to such lengths, but found
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the pressure somewhat hampering. When Susan awoke, Kane was so grateful,
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he let her have her way; she would not sing again even though it meant the
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end of Kane's hopes for greatness. Kane began to build Xanadu for them, a
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gigantic castle with a gigantic collection of animals from all over the
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world (Citizen Kane). Hearst built San Simeon for Davies, to whom he was
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truly devoted (Swanberg 447), unlike Kane and Susan. The latter couple
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eventually divorced after Susan's speech in which she says that Kane had
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never giver anything to her, he had just tried to buy her into giving him
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something.
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Finally, with the point of view of Kane's butler come two more
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similarities. Kane flew into violent rages when he didn't get something he
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wanted, as when Susan left him and he said that fateful word for the first
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time, "Rosebud." Kane was also a collector of everything, he threw nothing
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out, and was always buying something. (Citizen Kane) Hearst had the same
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bizarre practice. He would destroy thousands of dollars worth of antiques
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in a fit of anger and then spend one hundred thousand dollars on a passing
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whim. He never, however, threw anything out (Swanberg 585).
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The movie closed on the scene of the resolution of the Rosebud puzzle.
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Among all the junk Kane had collected, lay a tiny wooden sled, the one from
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the day when Thatcher took him away from his mother, which was hauled off
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and thrown into the fire. Upon closer examination, the word "Rosebud" can
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be made out as it is slowly incinerated.
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Having taken into account the evidence presented above, it was clear
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that Orson Welles had based his movie around the life of William Randolph
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Hearst, a fact which upset Hearst to no end. In fact, a representative of
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the Hearst Organization offered eight hundred and forty two thousand
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dollars to RKO, the film's producer, if they would burn it. This plot
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having failed, RKO was blacklisted by the gigantic Hearst press and had to
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show the movie in private theaters. And yet, Welles still claimed that his
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movie had no intention of being biographical. He said, It is not based
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upon the life of Mr. Hearst or anyone else. On the other hand, had Mr.
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Hearst and similar financial barons not lived during the period we discuss,
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Citizen Kane could not have been made." (Zinmen 238)
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In his life, Hearst ran many newspapers, as of course, did Kane. When
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he was still beginning, he owned four, and at the time he committed all of
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them to warring with Spain, as mentioned above. This singular, small event
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was the turning point in the life of a brilliant man and indeed the turning
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point of a nation. He had almost single handedly, using his power of the
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press, sent one of the most powerful nations in the world to war. The
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people of the United States had been manipulated wonderfully by the press
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to believe that Spain was such a menace that they must rally for war, even
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though it was all an invention by Hearst and his constituents to promote
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the newspaper's circulation. If the press could do that, he believed it
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could do anything, even send a Mr. Hearst to the White House who had not
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the slightest experience as a political leader. And it very nearly did
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(Swanberg 245).
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When he realized that his newspapers were a source of infinite power,
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that he could manipulate the people to get what he wanted, Hearst changed.
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His goals changed. His fight went from one for larger circulation to one
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for personal power, as much as he could get. He stopped being physically
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involved in his papers, as mentioned before, instead directing from his
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throne at San Simeon. He entered the political arena, where the ultimate
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prize lay, the ultimate investment of power in a single individual, the
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presidency. And yet again and again, by the voters or the corrupt bosses
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at Tammany Hall or by his many political enemies, he was defeated. His,
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like the story of Kane, was a story of constant personal failure due, as
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often as not. to his own faults
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However, things for Hearst were not always as bad as they were for
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Kane. Hearst did actually win public office once. He became a state
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representative of New York. This he accomplished with the backing of the
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Tammany Hall bosses and a Democratic constituency in the district. Beyond
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that he hurled his newspapers and money into the effort, earning a colossal
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victory over his opponent. However, Hearst was not content to be a
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Representative. He wanted to be president, had wanted to be president ever
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since he realized that he had a chance. He had wanted to be the biggest
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newspaper publisher in America, and he was. He had wanted Ms. Davies, and
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he had her and was devoted to her and spent millions for her entertainment.
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Everything which he had wanted he had received, in any way that he could
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think of at the moment.
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Orson Welles' criticism of Hearst was the way in which he went about
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getting what he wanted, using his immense power over the people of the
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country simply to gain personal power. This is the overarching theme,
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portrayed so powerfully, in Citizen Kane. When Welles disclaimed any
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biographical intent, he did not pretend he was not depicting the forces
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that governed Hearst's life. His newspapers changed drastically, and men
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spoke to him with reverence and fear, for his darker side had come to
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light. He enjoyed being king over his empire, watching his subjects squirm.
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With the building of his palace at San Simeon he only made concrete what
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many had known for a long time: William Randolph Hearst sat on a throne as
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the king of an empire which controlled the country's information.
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As brought out explicitly by the movie, Hearst wanted love, but not
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just the love of a few, the love of all. He needed whatever he wanted, and
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he wanted the people's love. While Hearst was not the loveless monster
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Kane is portrayed as, he had many faults, the main one being that he often
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seemed to believe he could buy love. Welles attacked this belief heart and
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soul, claw and tooth in such scenes as when Leland returns the check with
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which Kane had hoped to preserve their friendship, now torn into shreds.
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Kane simply cannot fathom why he returned it, because he doesn't realize
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that there is more to loving that gifts. (Cowie 37)
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Hearst gave lavish parties and demonstrations to try to win people over
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to his side, and it often worked. He assailed his political opponents with
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his newspapers, attacking them in whatever way he could, transforming the
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newspapers from something he thought he loved into a tool with which he
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could get things, a bat he could swing at his opponents, a way to quench
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his thirst for money and power. Hearst was a man who discovered the power
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he controlled and then proceeded to abuse it, a practice Welles found
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intolerable.
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All in all, Orson Welles directed, starred in, and helped to write
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possibly the greatest film of all time, all to one purpose, to denounce
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William Randolph Hearst and all men who were abusive of power and the
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public trust. Why did he spend all this effort on this one man, an
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apparent crusader for the people, for the working man? Simply, it was
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because Hearst, for all his apparent love of the people, was only trying to
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get love and power for himself by abusing the most potent weapon and shield
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of his day, the free press. "If I hadn't been very rich, I might have been
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a really great man." (Orson Welles, Citizen Kane)
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Bordwell, David. "Citizen Kane," Focus on Orson Welles. Prentice-Hall,1976.
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Cowie, Peter. The Cinema of Orson Welles. De Capo Press, 1973.
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Citizen Kane. dir. Orson Welles. With Orson Welles, Joseph Cotten, Dorothy
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Comingore. RKO, 1941.
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Mulvey, Laura. Citizen Kane. BFI, 1992.
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Reflections on Citizen Kane. dir. Unknown. Turner Home Entertainment,1991.
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Robinson, Judith. The Hearsts: an American Dynasty. Avon Books, 1991.
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Swanberg, W.A. Citizen Hearst. Scribner, 1961. Bantam Matrix Edition, 1967.
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Zinman, David. Fifty Classic Motion Pictures: The Stuff that Dreams are
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Made Of. NY Crown Publishers, 1970. NY Limelight Editions, 1992.
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