The Phnom Penh Post

Elvis’s all-American appeal

- Gary Abernathy

ON WEDNESDAY, tens of thousands of fans flocked to Graceland to commemorat­e the 40th anniversar­y of Elvis Presley’s death. Today, Presley’s widespread influence and appeal are well establishe­d. But four decades ago, much of the media were caught off guard by the public’s response to the singer’s passing.

In 1977, before cable news or the internet, the nightly news broadcasts of CBS, NBC and ABC were at their zenith. Newspapers were enjoying their most prosperous years. But in newsrooms across America, Presley was barely on the radar.

Elvis was only 42, so his passing was unexpected. But what really surprised journalist­s was the national reaction to his death. To them, his influence had ended when the Beatles hit the scene. But as the afternoon of August 16, 1977, progressed, they couldn’t ignore the grassroots rumblings. Tens of thousands began trekking to Memphis, some walking off their jobs.

CBS News was the ratings leader, but its anchor, Walter Cronkite, was on vacation. His fill-in was Roger Mudd, but – lacking the managing-editor authority that Cronkite enjoyed – he was at the mercy of a producer. CBS led its evening news with a story about President Gerald Ford’s endorsemen­t of the Panama Canal treaty.

At NBC, anchor David Brinkley – a Southerner – understood the place Presley occupied in the lives of millions. ABC’s Harry Reasoner joined Brinkley in leading with the Presley story. As described in the 1980 book When Elvis Died, by Neal and Janice Gregory, “Millions of viewers, not finding the informatio­n they sought, immediatel­y tuned out the video eye and switched to one of the other networks.”

By early evening, editors at the nation’s newspapers were slowly recognisin­g the magnitude of the national reaction. At the New York Times, according to the Gregorys, “some mild panic occurred when editors discovered no one had prepared an advance obituary” of Presley.

But Elvis had never disappeare­d. After his blazing start in the 1950s, he starred throughout the 1960s in a string of highly profitable, if sometimes artistical­ly challenged, feature films. By the 1970s he was selling out the largest arenas in the US, including four consecutiv­e standing-room-only shows at Madison Square Garden in 1972. Seven weeks before his death, he had completed another sold-out arena tour.

The media often fails to notice the divide between its interests and the issues important to Middle America. The death of Elvis Presley was a prime example. A CBS News poll in 2002 determined that while Presley’s popularity cut across demographi­cs and regions, “Elvis’ fans are more likely to come from the Midwest – 51 percent of those who live there describe themselves as fans”.

In fairness, Presley’s appeal was not entirely lost on more erudite observers. No less a cultured connoisseu­r than William Buckley Jr came out as a fan, writing in a 2001 essay, “Elvis Presley had the most beautiful singing voice of any human being on Earth.” He followed with a novel, Elvis in the Morning, to bemused reviews.

But Elvis was loved most by commoners. Why? Aside from his talent, he expressed pride in his country regardless of who occupied the Oval Office. He openly expressed his love for his mother, served honorably in the Army, called people “sir” and “ma’am”, showered complete strangers with gifts, and stayed humble and devoutly spiritual.

Publicly, he shied away from politics. Asked his opinion of the Vietnam War, he replied, “I’d just sooner keep my own personal views about that to myself, ’cause I’m just an entertaine­r and I’d rather not say.”

In his last couple of years, Presley gained weight, and we learned after his death that he had become addicted to prescripti­on drugs. Even his faults were quintessen­tially American.

Hundreds of thousands of fans visit Graceland each year, millions continue to buy his records, and new Elvisrelat­ed projects abound. Even the news media seem to have caught up with the trend, a hopeful sign, even if it takes a few decades to get there.

 ?? NGAN MANDEL ?? Fans file past the grave of Elvis Presley in the Meditation Garden where he is buried alongside his parents and grandmothe­r at his Graceland mansion on August 12.
NGAN MANDEL Fans file past the grave of Elvis Presley in the Meditation Garden where he is buried alongside his parents and grandmothe­r at his Graceland mansion on August 12.

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