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Such airy servings, neatly calculated to confirm preconceived British notions, have won Iddon the Fleet Street title of "Britain's Walter Winchell." Since 1943, bumptious Reporter Iddon ("let's face it, I'm a terrific egotist") has been doing his diary the way his bosses and readers seem to like it-by skimming the foam from the U.S. scene...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Press: Report from Rainbow Land | 5/28/1951 | See Source »

Whose America? Last week, in England on a refresher trip, Reporter Iddon looked about him and blandly remarked: ''There seems to be a surprising amount of ignorance about America. People here seem to think Americans eat nothing but steak and ride in enormous cars. Of course, that's nonsense." Then he went to work to plug his new book, Don Iddon's America (Falcon Press, London; 125, 6d), a collection of his columns which have been carefully edited with the wisdom of hindsight. Some still unedited Iddon items: ¶"The electric chair is working overtime...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Press: Report from Rainbow Land | 5/28/1951 | See Source »

Such sensational jottings are the result of long practice. Don Iddon began his reporting career in London, at age 18, with such torrid features as "The Cocktail Girl Myth" (for the Sunday Mercury), later caught on at Beaverbrook's Daily Express, which sent him to New York in 1937. He landed on St. Patrick's day and, say critical Fleet Streeters, "he still writes as though every day is St. Patrick's day in New York." In 1938 he switched to the Daily Mail, started his column five years later and thereby got what he proudly describes...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Press: Report from Rainbow Land | 5/28/1951 | See Source »

Personal Affection. Despite his flippancies and irrelevancies, Iddon usually tries to be kind to the U.S. in his own way, often shows a sharp editorial insight. He has cautioned Britons against being shaken by the Anglophobia of such "choleric" isolationist newspapers as the Hearst press, Bertie McCormick's Chicago Tribune and the New York Daily News, and has admonished his readers: "Remember this personal affection of Americans for the British when you read the melancholy stories of abuse...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Press: Report from Rainbow Land | 5/28/1951 | See Source »

...Iddon never forgets that the tune Britons like to hear has a Rule, Brittanial theme. For example, after many a laudatory word about U.S. generosity in the Marshall Plan, he once summed up his sentiments in a way to bring cheers from home: "I await the day when we shall be sending bundles for America and floating loans for Washington. That day I shall crow until I am hoarse...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Press: Report from Rainbow Land | 5/28/1951 | See Source »

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