TY - BOOK AU - Barbas,Samantha TI - Confidential Confidential: the inside story of Hollywood's notorious scandal magazine SN - 9780912777542 PY - 2018///] CY - Chicago, Illinois PB - Chicago Review Press KW - Confidential (New York, N.Y.) KW - Tabloid newspapers KW - United States KW - History KW - 20th century KW - Sensationalism in journalism N1 - Includes bibliographical references (pages 295-352) and index; The education of a publisher -- The age -- Confidential -- Winchell and Rushmore -- Asbestos -- The dream factory -- Hot Hollywood stories -- Hollywood Research Incorporated -- Gossip -- The legal department -- 1955 -- Hollywood -- The curious craze -- Public service -- Libel -- Freedom of the press -- The Post Office -- The peak -- The decline -- Slander -- The Kraft Committee -- Criminal libel -- The trial -- The end and the aftermath -- Conclusion N2 - " In the 1950s, Confidential magazine, America's first celebrity scandal magazine, revealed Hollywood stars' secrets, misdeeds, and transgressions in gritty, unvarnished detail. Deploying a vast network of tipsters to root out scandalous facts about the stars, including sexual affairs, drug use, and sexual orientation, publisher Robert Harrison destroyed celebrities' carefully constructed images and built a media empire. Confidential became the bestselling magazine on American newsstands in the 1950s, surpassing Time, Life, and the Saturday Evening Post. Eventually the stars fought back, filing multimillion-dollar libel suits against the magazine. The state of California, prodded by the film studios, prosecuted Harrison for obscenity and criminal libel, culminating in a famous, star-studded Los Angeles trial. This is Confidential's story, detailing how the magazine revolutionized celebrity culture and American society in the 1950s and beyond. With its bold red-yellow-and-blue covers, screaming headlines, and tawdry stories, Confidential exploded the candy-coated image of movie stars that Hollywood and the press had sold to the public. It transformed Americas from innocents to more sophisticated, worldly people, wise to the phony and constructed nature of celebrity. It shifted reporting on celebrities from an enterprise of concealment and make-believe to one that was more frank, bawdy, and true. Confidential's success marked the end of an era of hush-hush--of secrets, closets, and sexual taboos--and the beginning of our age of tell-all exposure"-- ER -