- Generoso Pope, Jr.
Generoso Paul "Gene" Pope, Jr. (
January 13 ,1927 –October 3 ,1988 ) was an AmericanMedia mogul , best known for creatingThe National Enquirer .Pope learned the newspaper business from his father, Generoso Pope Sr., a New York political powerbroker and quarry magnate whose Italian-American newspaper interests included the "Corriere d'America" and the daily "Il Progresso Italo-Americano". Generoso Pope Sr. had ties to New York crime boss
Frank Costello , and at the birth of his son asked Costello to be the godfather. Pope Jr. took over the daily operations of the "Il Progresso Italo-Americano" at the age of 21 after completing his education at the Horace Mann School and theMassachusetts Institute of Technology , where he earned a bachelor's degree in general engineering in 1946 [http://alum.mit.edu] . After his father died in April, 1950 at age 59, Pope worked as an intelligence officer for theCIA .Pope acquired the "New York Enquirer" in 1952 for $75,000. The "Enquirer" purchase was supposedly made, in part, with a loan from Costello. In 1954, Pope revamped the format from a broadsheet to a
tabloid , and renamed it "The National Enquirer ". Pope worked tirelessly throughout the 1950s and 1960s to increase the circulation of the "Enquirer". In the late 50s and through to 1967 The National Enquirer was known for its gory and unsettling headlines and stories such as: "I Cut Out Her Heart and Stomped On It" (Sept. 8, 1963) [The true story of the April 1963 mutalation murder of former Olympic SkierSonja McCaskie ] & "Mom Boiled Her Baby And Ate Her" (1962). At this time the paper was sold on newsstands & drugstores only - as the gory headlines would not have been allowed in family Supermarkets, etc. Pope stated he got the idea for the format and these gory stories from seeing people congregate around auto accidents. After 1967, Pope tempered the use of gory headlines so the tabloid could be sold in a more family-friendly environment such as at supermarket check-out lines. This new sales strategy proved to be a huge boon for sales; single-copy sales of some issues (e.g. Elvis in his coffin) peaked above six million in the 1970s.Pope moved the "Enquirer" from New York to
Lantana, Florida in 1971. By the time of Pope's death, the "National Enquirer" had grown into American Media, Inc., which included the "Enquirer", "Weekly World News ", and a magazine distributor, Distribution Services Inc.Pope has often been described as a visionary, but has also been described with words like "zany", "eccentric", "strange", and "quirky". Rumors of mafia connections dogged him his whole career. [cite web | title=ketupa.net media profile | publisher=American Media Inc. | url=http://www.ketupa.net/ammedia.htm | accessdate=23 March | accessyear=2006] Pope lived in a self-designed beach front home in
Manalapan, Florida .Pope was also known for his generosity. In the 1970s and 1980s, his gift to the local community was to put up the largest
Christmas Tree in the world at the corporate headquarters of the "National Enquirer" in Lantana. The event grew into one of south Florida's most festive and celebrated traditions, but was discontinued after Pope died. He also gave back to the national community. For example, the "Enquirer" would profile sick kids needing medical treatment.Pope suffered a heart attack at the age of 61 at his Manalapan mansion, and died on his way to the hospital — in an
ambulance that he had donated to the town. His widow, Lois, is a well-knownsouth Florida philanthropist , specializing inmedical research ,humanitarian relief , and theperforming arts . [cite web | title=About: Leaders in Furthering Education | publisher=Lois Pope Life Foundation | url=http://www.life-edu.org/about.html |accessdate=23 March |accessyear=2006]References
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.