Charles Promote Kane, an enormously wealthy paper publisher, has been living alone inside Florida in his vast palatial estate Xanadu du...
The reporter interviews the truly great man's friends and associates, and Kane's story unfolds as some flashbacks. Thompson approaches Kane's second wife, Susan Alexander, now an alcoholic who runs her own club, but she refuses to see him anything. Thompson then would go to the private archive of your late Walter Parks Thatcher, the banker who served as Kane's mother or father during his childhood and age of puberty. It is through Thatcher's prepared memoirs that Thompson learns in relation to Kane's childhood. Thompson then job interviews Kane's personal business manager Mr. Bernstein, estranged best ally Jedediah Leland, Susan for another time, and Kane's butler Raymond with Xanadu.
Flashbacks reveal that Kane's child years was spent in poverty inside Colorado (his parents ran the boarding house), until the "world's third largest gold mine" was discovered for the seemingly worthless property his mom had acquired. He is required to leave his mother, Betty, when she sends him away towards the East Coast of the Ough. S. to live with Thatcher, to become educated. After gaining full control over his possessions at age 25, Kane enters the paper business with sensationalized yellow journalism. He takes control on the newspaper, the New York Inquirer, and hires great journalists. His attempted rise to be able to power is documented, including his manipulation of public opinion for that Spanish American War; his first marriage to Emily Monroe Norton, the President's niece; and his campaign for that office of governor of Nyc State.
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