Background
They moved throughout the Southwest where Editor’s father would trade advertisement in his magazine (as a side job ), The Last Frontier, for tangible goods.
They moved throughout the Southwest where Editor’s father would trade advertisement in his magazine (as a side job ), The Last Frontier, for tangible goods.
Student, University Wyoming.
He was president of Columbia Broadcasting System News. He lived for many years in California"s Santa Ynez Valley and in Redding, Connecticut. This was Editor’s first exposure to the world of media.
He would later attend the University of Wyoming and work at small radio station as a janitor/DJ. From his media debut in small time radio he moved to television in Utica and Schenectady, New New York
Columbia Broadcasting System Radio and Columbia Broadcasting System News
He then hooked up with Columbia Broadcasting System Radio, first in Chicago and later in New York, where he was given a daily discussion program called “The Talk of New York” and the opportunity to interview such individuals as civil rights activist Malcolm X and sports legend Jackie Robinson. His success with the radio station and program was only the initial step in his corporate climb.
First, he earned a position as an executive producer for the Columbia Broadcasting System News radio network, then a news director for a television station in New York, third, a Vice President of the news for all five stations in New York, then the general manager for stations in Chicago, including WBBM-TV-television, where he was well known for his decisive management style, so much so that some disgruntled employees referred to him as the "velvet shiv". Later he was dispatched to Los Angeles, and New York, culminating his career as the President of Columbia Broadcasting System News.
One of his more prominent accolades was his investigation and publication on the Kennedy-Chappaquiddick fiasco wherein he bypassed the conventional reporting of events and delivered the story for what it was: sensational and dubious.
He took note of the fact that Senator Kennedy was in fact a senator, and that he had walked for over a mile from the accident, past two lighted houses, waded a shallow stream, taken a bus, stopped for a lobster roll, bought an ice cream cone, gone beach combing and then waited 12 hours before reporting anything. Memoir
In 1988, Doubleday published Prime Times Bad Times, Joyce"s memoir of his time as president of Columbia Broadcasting System News. Then-Chicago Sun-Times television and radio critic Robert Feder reviewed the book in May 1988, calling it an "unbelievably detailed, if utterly self-serving, record of chaos at Columbia Broadcasting System from the moment Dan Rather succeeded Walter Cronkite as nightly news anchorman in 1981 until Joyce"s downfall." Feder also wrote that Joyce was "widely regarded throughout his career as aloof, arrogant and insensitive to others," and that the book did "little to dispel that reputation despite the familiar alibi that he was only following orders." Feder concluded by writing that Joyce "wastes our time settling old scores and vainly trying to rehabilitate his image.".
Born in Phoenix, Arizona during the Depression, Editor Joyce’s father was a member of the Civilian Conservation Corps (an unemployment combatant during the Franklin Delano Roosevelt administration), making travel commonplace (think cardboard boxes, second hand at that, a precious commodity during the Depression) for the Joyce family.
Married Maureen Jarry. Children: Brenda, Randall.