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Timothy Crouse
Timothy Crouse
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Timothy Crouse (born 1947)[1] is an American journalist and writer.

Family

[edit]

Crouse is the son of Anna (née Erskine) and Russel Crouse.[2] His maternal grandparents were Pauline (Ives) and author, educator, and former Columbia professor John Erskine.[3][4] Timothy Crouse's affinity for campaign reporters and the theater took root from his father, Russel Crouse, who was a career newspaperman and playwright.[5] "The stories he told me of his newspaper days—especially traveling around the country with prankish sports teams—had a fatal tinge of romance about them," said Crouse.[5] His father's career in theatre began in 1928 when he played Bellflower in the play Gentlemen of the Press. Later, his father turned his attention to writing. In 1934, he and his long-time partner Howard Lindsay together revised P. G. Wodehouse and Guy Bolton's book for the Cole Porter musical Anything Goes.[6] "My father and Howard's trademark was a painstaking craftsmanship," says Crouse.[6] "They spent months on an outline for a play, then worked on the dialogue, then rewrote and rewrote until everything was just right."[6] And more than fifty years after his father collaborated on the original score, Timothy Crouse's revised libretto of Anything Goes opened on Broadway.[6]

Crouse is the brother of actress Lindsay Crouse. He attended Harvard University.

Early career

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Crouse served as a Peace Corps Volunteer in Morocco from 1968 to 1969.[7] Returning to the United States he wrote for the Boston Herald before joining the staff of Rolling Stone where he worked as a contributing editor from 1971 to 1972.[8]

The Boys on the Bus

[edit]

Crouse is the author of The Boys on the Bus, a largely critical look at the journalists who covered the 1972 US presidential campaign. As a young Rolling Stone reporter he wrote music stories, but he wanted to try his hand at political reporting. At a 1972 Rolling Stone staff meeting the only other writer interested in covering the election was his colleague, the legendary writer Hunter S. Thompson, so Crouse latched onto him. "It only took a few days of riding the bus for me to see that the reporters themselves would make a great story," Crouse said.[5] Crouse also profiled Hunter S. Thompson in the book. [Thompson] "wrote to provoke, shock, protest and annoy," wrote Crouse.[9] Crouse also profiled R.W. Apple, the legendary reporter and editor at the New York Times. Reporters "recognized many of their own traits in him, grotesquely magnified. The shock of recognition frightened them. Apple was like them, only more blatant. He openly displayed the faults they tried to hide: the insecurity, the ambitiousness, the name-dropping" and "the weakness for powerful men."[10] David Broder and Robert Novak are also profiled in the book. In the book, Crouse coins the term pack journalism. "The press likes to demonstrate its power by destroying lightweights, and pack journalism is never more doughty and complacent than when the pack has tacitly agreed that a candidate is a joke."[11]

Later work

[edit]

After The Boys on the Bus, Crouse became the Washington columnist for Esquire and also wrote articles for The New Yorker and The Village Voice.[12] In 1982 Crouse conceived the idea of reviving Anything Goes. He co-authored a new libretto for the musical with John Weidman that opened at the Vivian Beaumont Theater on October 19, 1987, and ran for 784 performances. They re-ordered the musical numbers, borrowing Cole Porter pieces from other Porter shows, a practice which the composer often engaged in. ("Easy To Love" was from the 1936 movie Born to Dance.) In 2002 the musical was produced at the Royal National Theatre in London.[5] In 2000 Alfred A. Knopf published Crouse and Luc Brébion's translation of Nobel-prize winner Roger Martin du Gard's nearly 800-page memoir Lieutenant-Colonel de Maumort.[13] Crouse has been working on fiction for the past several years and his story Sphinxes appeared in the Spring 2003 issue of Zoetrope: All-Story.[14]

Citations

[edit]
  1. ^ Jacqueline Nash Gifford and Guido H. Stempel, Historical Dictionary of Political Communication in the United States (Greenwood Publishing Group, 1999: ISBN 0-313-29545-X), p. 30.
  2. ^ Film Reference. "Lindsay Crouse Biography (1948–)."
  3. ^ "Newsweek". 1945.
  4. ^ Hamersly, Lewis Randolph; Leonard, John W.; Mohr, William Frederick; Knox, Herman Warren; Holmes, Frank R.; Downs, Winfield Scott (1938). "Who's who in New York City and State".
  5. ^ a b c d mediabistro.com: Articles: Q&A: Timothy Crouse
  6. ^ a b c d Program notes by Don Shewey for Lincoln Center Theater's 1988 revival of "Anything Goes"
  7. ^ Bibliography of Peace Corps Writers – C
  8. ^ The Boys on the Bus – 1970's Government and Politics
  9. ^ The New York Times > Books > Hunter S. Thompson, 67, Author, Commits Suicide
  10. ^ R.W. Apple, a Times Journalist in Full, Dies at 71 – New York Times
  11. ^ Q&N: The Boys on the Bus (Timothy Crouse)[permanent dead link]
  12. ^ Random House Publicity | The Boys on the Bus by Hunter S. Thompson
  13. ^ Sturrock, John, "The Man Who Believed in Nothing" (review), January 23, 2000.
  14. ^ Zoetrope: All-Story: Back Issue
[edit]
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from Grokipedia
Timothy Crouse (born 1947) is an American , , and librettist best known for his nonfiction book The Boys on the Bus, which offers a candid portrayal of the reporters and their pack mentality while covering the 1972 U.S. presidential election campaign between and . As a reporter embedded with the press corps, Crouse documented the exhaustion, rivalries, and evolving influence of media on politics, drawing from direct observations during primaries and the general election. The son of playwright and and his wife Anna Erskine Crouse, he graduated from in 1968, served in the , and briefly worked on an underground newspaper in before entering professional . Crouse's career extended beyond campaign reporting, with contributions as a Washington columnist for Esquire, where he analyzed political figures and events, and as a contributing editor for Rolling Stone and The Village Voice, covering music, politics, and culture in pieces that reflected his skeptical eye toward institutional media dynamics. He later wrote for The New Yorker, including profiles that showcased his narrative style honed in gonzo-adjacent journalism circles. In 1987, inspired partly by his father's theatrical legacy, Crouse co-wrote a revised libretto for the Cole Porter musical Anything Goes with John Weidman, updating the original 1934 book by P.G. Wodehouse, Guy Bolton, Howard Lindsay, and Russel Crouse for a Lincoln Center revival that emphasized streamlined plotting and satirical edge. Additionally, he collaborated on translations, such as Roger Martin du Gard's Lieutenant-Colonel de Maumort with Luc Brébion, extending his work into literary adaptation. These efforts highlight Crouse's versatility, bridging gonzo journalism's raw empiricism with structured narrative forms, though his enduring impact remains tied to exposing the human frailties shaping political coverage.

Early Life

Family Background

Timothy Crouse was born in 1947 to , a who had earlier worked as a newspaper reporter, and Anna Erskine Crouse. His parents married in 1945, and his mother was the daughter of John Erskine, a professor, musician, and author affiliated with . Russel Crouse's dual background in and theater influenced his son's early interests in reporting and the performing arts. Crouse has one sibling, a younger sister named Lindsay Ann Crouse, who pursued a career as an actress.

Education and Initial Interests

Timothy Crouse graduated from in 1968. After completing his undergraduate studies, Crouse served in the , an experience that preceded his entry into professional writing. His early interests in and were influenced by his father, Russell Crouse, who began his career as a newspaperman before achieving success as a and collaborator on Broadway hits such as (1939) and (1945, winner). This familial background in reporting and dramatic writing likely fostered Crouse's affinity for narrative nonfiction and cultural observation, evident in his later focus on music scenes and political reporting.

Journalistic Career

Entry into Journalism and Rolling Stone

Timothy Crouse graduated from in 1968. Following graduation, he served in the and subsequently worked as a reporter for a newspaper in , marking his initial foray into professional . In early 1972, approximately three years after completing college, Crouse, then aged 25, approached Rolling Stone magazine and successfully persuaded its editors to assign him to cover the presidential campaign—not by focusing on the candidates, but by embedding with and reporting on the accompanying press corps traveling by bus and plane. His first ride on a campaign press bus occurred in that February, where his mandate from Rolling Stone was to observe and document the journalists' dynamics rather than the political events themselves. This assignment aligned with Rolling Stone's gonzo journalism ethos, influenced by contributors like , whom Crouse effectively supported during the coverage; Crouse filed vivid dispatches that captured the internal workings, rivalries, and pack mentality of the reporters, establishing his foothold in national through the magazine's countercultural lens. His work for Rolling Stone during this period laid the groundwork for his later book The Boys on the Bus, published in 1973.

Coverage of the 1972 Presidential Campaign

In February 1972, Timothy Crouse began covering the presidential campaign for magazine, starting with the New Hampshire primary. His initial assignment was to accompany fellow contributor , with instructions to keep Thompson out of trouble and carry bail money if needed. However, Crouse soon gained independence to report on the press corps itself, examining their personalities, interpersonal relationships, and operational methods rather than focusing primarily on the candidates or . Crouse embedded with the campaign press buses, traveling across key locations from through primaries and into later phases, including routes extending to . His approach emphasized observational immersion, capturing the exhaustion, rivalries, and herd-like conformity among reporters, such as the influence of dominant figures like New York Times correspondent R.W. "Johnny" Apple Jr. He documented the pack mentality that shaped coverage, where journalists often echoed each other's narratives despite individual ideological leanings, and highlighted logistical absurdities like late-night filings amid and alcohol-fueled camaraderie. This perspective revealed how the press corps' insularity contributed to homogenized reporting on both the Nixon re-election effort and McGovern's insurgent challenge. Crouse's key publication during the campaign was the article "The Boys on the Bus," published in Rolling Stone on October 12, 1972, which chronicled a "strange, rocky ride" with the press corps from Manchester, New Hampshire, to Miami. Employing a narrative style infused with humor and irony, the piece portrayed the journalists' self-perpetuating dynamics, including advance men scripting access and reporters navigating restricted interactions with campaigns. His work complemented Thompson's candidate-focused gonzo pieces, providing Rolling Stone's alternative lens on the election's media ecosystem amid Nixon's landslide victory on November 7, 1972.

The Boys on the Bus

Development and Publication

Crouse's work on The Boys on the Bus stemmed from his assignment to cover the 1972 U.S. presidential campaign for , beginning in in February 1972, where he initially focused on the candidates but rapidly shifted attention to the accompanying journalists and their dynamics. This observational approach involved embedding with the press corps—primarily male reporters traveling by bus—documenting their routines, rivalries, and interactions with campaigns of and amid the grueling schedule of primaries and general election stops. The manuscript expanded from campaign dispatches and notes accumulated during months on the trail, incorporating vignettes of key figures like , whom Crouse accompanied early on, and critiquing the herd mentality of "pack journalism" without relying on formal interviews, instead prioritizing direct witnessing of behaviors such as deadline pressures and interpersonal conflicts. Random House published the first edition in 1973, with Thompson providing the foreword, framing it as an insider's exposé of media operations rather than candidate-centric reporting. The hardcover release, spanning 383 pages, captured the campaign's conclusion including Nixon's on November 7, 1972, and entered the market amid post-Watergate scrutiny of political coverage.

Core Themes and Analysis

In The Boys on the Bus, published in 1973, Timothy Crouse dissects the phenomenon of pack journalism, a term he popularized to describe how reporters embedded with the 1972 presidential campaigns—particularly those trailing against —developed a collective mindset that prioritized group consensus over independent scrutiny. Crouse observed that journalists, confined to buses and planes, routinely cross-pollinated leads and narratives, validating stories through mutual reinforcement rather than primary evidence, which fostered uniformity in coverage and diminished contrarian reporting. This dynamic, he argued, arose from the campaign trail's logistical pressures, where straying from the pack risked professional isolation or being scooped, as evidenced by instances where initial scoops on candidate gaffes, like Edmund Muskie's emotional response to attacks, were amplified or dismissed en masse based on shared interpretations rather than facts. A secondary theme centers on the interpersonal and psychological strains within the press corps, portraying reporters as flawed individuals whose personal habits—excessive drinking, rivalries, and transient relationships—mirrored and exacerbated the campaigns' chaos. Crouse profiles figures like R.W. Apple of and Curtis Gans of , illustrating how egos and alliances shaped access to sources, with Nixon's team limiting interactions to control narratives while McGovern's openness invited subjective, insider-driven stories. This , Crouse contends, traded critical distance for proximity, leading reporters to internalize campaign spin; for instance, the corps' predominantly liberal leanings fueled toward Nixon's tactics but often overlooked McGovern's inconsistencies, as group reinforced ideological blind spots. Crouse further analyzes the erosion of traditional objectivity amid emerging "parajournalism," influenced by gonzo styles like Hunter S. Thompson's, where reporters injected personal subjectivity to capture the campaigns' absurdity. He critiques how the relentless pace—up to 20-hour days across 50 states—distorted news judgment, prioritizing episodic scandals over substantive policy, a that prefigured modern media's focus on horse-race dynamics over issues. Ultimately, these themes reveal journalism's vulnerability to environmental and social forces, with Crouse's insider vantage from providing vivid, if anecdotal, evidence of how structural incentives perpetuate conformity, though his narrative style invites scrutiny for potential dramatization over exhaustive verification.

Reception, Influence, and Criticisms

The Boys on the Bus garnered widespread acclaim upon its 1973 release, establishing itself as a seminal work in for its unvarnished depiction of the reporters covering the 1972 presidential campaign. Reviewers praised its psychological depth and narrative verve, with highlighting how Crouse shifted focus from candidates—as in Theodore H. White's Making of the President series—to the journalists' interpersonal dynamics and professional flaws. The book achieved bestseller status and has maintained a strong reputation, evidenced by its 4.1 average rating on from over 1,300 reviews, where readers noted its enduring relevance despite the passage of decades. Its influence extended to shaping critiques of media practices, particularly through Crouse's coinage and popularization of "pack journalism," which described the herd-like conformity among reporters that homogenized coverage and amplified biases during the campaign. The book illuminated how personal relationships, alcohol-fueled camaraderie, and competitive egos among the press corps—predominantly white, male, and liberal—contributed to skewed reporting that underestimated Richard Nixon's electoral strength on November 7, 1972, while overemphasizing George McGovern's viability. This analysis has informed subsequent scholarship and discussions on campaign reporting, as seen in academic references to its observations on editorial pressures and reporter autonomy, and remains cited in examinations of media echo chambers. Its impact is evident in modern adaptations, including the 2024 HBO series , which draws directly from Crouse's framework to explore evolving press dynamics. Criticisms of the book have centered on its narrow focus and stylistic choices, with some observers arguing it inadvertently glamorized the excesses of the all-male press corps while underemphasizing substantive policy analysis in favor of anecdotal portraits of reporters' flaws. Figures like New York Times reporter R.W. Apple Jr. were depicted with unflattering emphasis on ego and bravado, prompting pushback from subjects who viewed the characterizations as sensationalized through Crouse's Rolling Stone lens, which blended new journalism techniques with Hunter S. Thompson's foreword. Additionally, the title and content reflected the era's gender exclusivity—virtually no female reporters featured—drawing retrospective critique for perpetuating an outdated, insular view of the profession, though later assessments note diversification has not eliminated pack tendencies. Despite these points, the work's exposure of systemic media shortcomings has largely outweighed detractors, positioning it as a cautionary benchmark rather than a flawed polemic.

Later Works

Additional Books and Articles

Following the publication of The Boys on the Bus in 1973, Crouse served as the Washington columnist for Esquire magazine during the mid-1970s, producing analytical pieces on political figures and events. Notable examples include "The Troublemaker," published in the October 1975 issue, which examined a key political operative, and "The Sheikh Not Exactly of Araby" in the May 1976 issue, profiling an influential Middle Eastern figure in U.S. policy circles. These columns reflected his continued scrutiny of power dynamics, akin to his campaign reporting, though focused on Washington insiders rather than traveling press corps. Crouse also contributed feature articles to as a contributing editor, covering investigative topics such as and corruption. A prominent example is his October 24, 1977, piece "Nicky Barnes: Geronimo Takes on the Man No One Can Convict," which detailed the operations and legal challenges faced by kingpin Leroy "Nicky" Barnes amid federal prosecutions. He similarly wrote for and maintained ties to , though specific post-1973 bylines in those outlets emphasized cultural and political commentary over original book-length projects. In a departure from , Crouse co-translated French author Roger Martin du Gard's posthumous novel Lieutenant-Colonel de Maumort with Luc Brébion, published by in 1991; the work chronicles the reflections of a French aristocrat during the , drawing on the winner's unfinished manuscripts. This translation represented his sole major book project after The Boys on the Bus, highlighting linguistic and literary pursuits amid a pivot toward theater adaptation in the .

Contributions to Music and Cultural Journalism

Crouse began his journalism career at Rolling Stone in the early 1970s, initially focusing on music coverage before shifting to political reporting. His pieces included album reviews and artist profiles that captured the era's singer-songwriter movement and funk innovations. For instance, in August 1971, he reviewed Joni Mitchell's Blue, praising its introspective lyrics and Mitchell's vocal range while critiquing its occasional self-indulgence. Similarly, his February 1971 feature "James Taylor: The First Family of the New Rock" examined Taylor's familial influences and role in soft-rock's rise, highlighting the artist's confessional style amid the post-Woodstock landscape. Crouse also delved into Sly and the Family Stone's internal dynamics, authoring "The Struggle for His Soul" in 1971, which detailed Sly Stone's creative battles, drug issues, and the band's 1969 Woodstock performance amid escalating tensions. This was followed by "Now Sly Tells His Side of the Story, Sort of," exploring Stone's reclusive persona and the group's commercial pressures post-. These articles exemplified Crouse's participant-observer approach, blending with analysis of artists' personal tolls in the rock industry. In later years, Crouse contributed to cultural journalism through outlets like , where he served as a contributing editor. His January 1979 piece "The Journey of Bob Marley" chronicled Marley's 1978 visit and Rastafarian symbolism, drawing on eyewitness accounts of the event's chaos and Marley's global influence amid reggae's mainstream breakthrough. This work reflected his ongoing interest in music's intersection with social movements, extending his earlier reporting into broader cultural narratives. Crouse's articles, often rooted in direct observation, prioritized artists' lived experiences over hype, influencing subsequent gonzo-inflected music writing.

Legacy

Impact on Understanding Media Bias

Crouse's The Boys on the Bus, published in 1973, provided an insider's examination of the 1972 presidential campaign press corps, revealing how journalists' collective dynamics fostered conformity in reporting that amplified personal and ideological biases. The book detailed "pack journalism," a term that gained prominence through Crouse's observations of reporters traveling together, echoing each other's narratives and prioritizing access to candidates over independent scrutiny, which often resulted in homogenized coverage skewed against and toward . This , Crouse argued, suppressed dissenting views within the press and contributed to a failure to anticipate Nixon's on , 1972, despite evident voter preferences. The work highlighted the predominantly liberal worldview of the campaign journalists, many of whom openly favored McGovern and dismissed Nixon's appeal, leading to coverage that emphasized scandals like Watergate prematurely while downplaying broader public sentiment. Crouse documented instances where reporters' cynicism and social bonding on the campaign trail reinforced biases, such as shared skepticism toward Nixon's administration rooted in cultural alienation rather than balanced evidence. This exposure underscored causal mechanisms of , including self-selection into (attracting those with contrarian or progressive leanings) and the pressure to conform for professional survival, influencing subsequent analyses of media echo chambers. By turning the journalistic lens inward, The Boys on the Bus advanced causal realism in media critique, demonstrating that emerges not merely from overt partisanship but from structural incentives like deadline-driven and candidate-controlled access, which Nixon exploited through limited press interactions. The book's influence persists in scholarly and journalistic discussions of conformity's role in distorting electoral coverage, as seen in references to its framework for evaluating pack-driven errors in later campaigns. Critics, however, note that while it illuminated liberal-leaning in 1972, it did not prescribe remedies, leaving its revelations more diagnostic than prescriptive for mitigating systemic distortions.

Enduring Relevance and Contemporary Assessments

Crouse's The Boys on the Bus continues to shape scholarly and journalistic evaluations of campaign reporting, with its depiction of pack dynamics and access-seeking behavior cited as prescient amid evolving media landscapes. In a 2013 Shorenstein Center analysis, Peter Hamby assessed whether had eroded the traditional model, concluding that accelerates narrative formation through rapid scoops and gaffes but sustains pack journalism's emphasis on speed over contextual depth, as younger, tech-oriented reporters mirror the competitive incentives Crouse documented. Contemporary observers highlight the book's enduring of reporters' self-importance and to manipulation, traits persisting in modern coverage. A 2024 Tablet assessment described Crouse's work as capturing a "" of and lack of , evident in instances of uncritical reporting on political events and spin, which aligns with Gallup's October 2024 finding of 69% of Americans expressing low or no trust in media—levels reflecting ongoing civic disillusionment with journalistic practices. While technological shifts have introduced changes—such as greater gender diversity in the press corps (approaching 50% women by the 2000s) and fragmented outlets reducing unified packs—core elements like trail exhaustion and social media-driven buzz replicate the 1972 era's reactive tendencies, per reflections from veteran reporters. Assessments differ on disruption: Hamby noted candidates increasingly bypass traditional media via direct channels, potentially diminishing the "bus's" centrality, yet the incentives for herd-like endure, underscoring the book's lasting diagnostic value for media self-examination.

References

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