Scribd

Books

Audiobooks

Magazines

Podcasts

Sheet Music

Documents

Offer valid only for new first-time subscribers. Void where prohibited. Only one (1) promo code may be redeemed per household/per user account. The promo code is not transferable and is not redeemable for cash. Scribd reserves the right to modify or cancel this offer at any time. Other restrictions may apply. 

SCRIBD ORIGINALS IN THE PRESS

Vanity Fair
Entertainment Weekly
Gizmodo
Pop Sugar
The Cut

Footer Menu

Download on the  App Store
Get it on Google Play

Scribd Originals are only the beginning

Your subscription gives you access to the world’s most fascinating library — millions of titles across all your favorite formats.

Listen to more from this author 

See why readers choose Scribd

Table comparing benefits of Scribd to Audible and Kindle Unlimited.
Scribd offers over 2 million audiobooks and ebooks in one app, unlimited podcasts, magazines, and news, unlimited sheet music and documents, no confusing credit system at $9.99 per month.
Audible does not offer these benefits and costs $14.99 per month.
Kindle Unlimited does not have a confusing credit system, but none of the other benefits that Scribd provides, and costs $9.99 per month.
Table comparing benefits of Scribd to Audible and Kindle Unlimited.
Scribd offers over 2 million audiobooks and ebooks in one app, unlimited podcasts, magazines, and news, unlimited sheet music and documents, no confusing credit system at $9.99 per month.
Audible does not offer these benefits and costs $14.99 per month.
Kindle Unlimited does not have a confusing credit system, but none of the other benefits that Scribd provides, and costs $9.99 per month.
Listen free for 60 days

Only $11.99/month after. Cancel anytime.

About Scott Simon

Scott Simon is an Emmy- and Peabody Award-winning writer and broadcaster. He is the host of NPR’s Weekend Edition Saturday, which The Washington Post has called “the most literate, witty, moving, and just plain interesting news show on any dial.” He has reported from all fifty states, five continents, and ten wars, from El Salvador and Sarajevo to Afghanistan and Iraq. His nonfiction books include Unforgettable: A Son, a Mother, and the Lessons of a Lifetime; Home
and Away: Memoirs of a Fan; Jackie Robinson and the Integration of Baseball;
and Baby, We Were Meant for Each Other, about the joys of adoption. He is also the author of several novels, including Sunnyside Plaza and the upcoming Wins, Losses, Saves.

Listen free for 60 days

Only $11.99/month after. Cancel anytime.

This Is Life: 10 Writers on Love, Fear, and Hope in the Age of Disasters

Written by Scott Simon and 9 others

Ten of America’s finest writers tell us in This Is Life. Drawing on their wisdom and lived experience, they share bold, occasionally comic, occasionally biting insights on the past two years and offer possible ways forward, both for the country and for us as individuals. They articulate the anxiety of these...

Just Getting Started

By Tony Bennett and Scott Simon
Narrated by Joe Barrett

At ninety, musician and singer Tony Bennett is as vibrant and productive as ever. In addition to his prodigious musical output, including albums, concerts, and personal appearances, this beloved and enduring artist has written his second book. In 2012’s Life Is a Gift, Tony reflected on the lessons he has learned over the years. Now, in Just Getting Started...

Pretty Birds: A Novel

Written by Scott Simon
Narrated by Christina Moore

Celebrated NPR personality and acclaimed author Scott Simon is an Emmy and Peabody Award winner. This astonishing novel is based on his experiences covering the siege of Sarajevo. Teenaged Irena and her parents are forced into hiding when Bosnian Serbs launch their war of ethnic cleansing against Muslims...

Propaganda with a swing

NPR’s Scott Simon explores the fascinating history of an infamous Nazi jazz band whose influence still echoes today.

Listen free for 60 days

Only $11.99/month after. Cancel anytime.

EXCLUSIVELY ON SCRIBD

Genocidal jazz, fake news, and the power of propaganda

From the beloved host of NPR’s Weekend Edition Saturday, an exploration of the dangerous power of propaganda and hate speech, told from Simon’s perspective as a longtime journalist and his horrified fascination with a Nazi swing band that spread vile ideas through catchy songs broadcast in Europe and the US during World War II. At a time when intolerance and divisiveness are again on the rise, this story is an urgent reminder that sins of the past live on in the present.

In his long career as a journalist for National Public Radio and host of the popular Weekend Edition Saturday, Scott Simon has traveled the world, covering wars and political unrest. During that time, he grew familiar with the insidious lies dictators and oppressive regimes tell to keep their citizens in check. Simon has become, in a way, an aficionado of propaganda. From Bosnia to Rwanda, he heard it all — or so he thought until he was introduced to the morbidly fascinating work of Charlie and His Orchestra.

Created by Joseph Goebbels, Reich Minister for Propaganda, Charlie and His Orchestra was a band that played popular jazz and swing tunes rewritten with Nazi lyrics. They were regularly featured on a German radio show that reached airwaves in Britain and the US. The Reich hoped that the hateful messages of the songs would get through to faraway listeners and sway opinion in Hitler’s favor. Propaganda, the Germans figured, went down more easily when administered through a saxophone riff.

Simon heard the music and was hooked: appalled by the ways in which beloved songs had been twisted to promote a warped ideology, and yet mesmerized too. Chicago jazz and blues, and radio broadcasting, were worlds he knew and loved. He was outraged that musicians would be a part of such an enterprise. But he also knew that most of the musicians didn’t have a choice: They were too afraid to refuse the Reich, and some were Jewish prisoners recruited from concentration camps.

Simon’s story examines propaganda through the lens of his interest in this repugnant yet magnetic band from Nazi Germany. It examines the persuasive power of a new medium, radio, and how World War II played out for most people via spins of the dial. Simon’s audio narration contains many clips from Charlie and His Orchestra songs. As Simon wryly notes, it’s hard not to tap your foot to the beat. He also speaks to his own experience with propaganda. He’s seen it deployed many times in the former Soviet Union, China, Ethiopia, Bosnia, Rwanda, and other countries whose wars and tyrannies he covered in his decades at NPR. More urgently, he speaks to the hate speech we increasingly experience right here, right now. Propaganda is the blunt tool used by the intolerant and those who want to hold onto power at any cost. And unlike in Nazi Germany, it’s now in the hands of everybody. Anyone with a phone can reach millions with the aim to deceive and mislead. Social media platforms use algorithms that can insert unfounded, corrupt, and indefensible accounts almost surgically into the minds of those most willing to believe them. This fake news is old propaganda in a new guise. By comparison, Charlie and His Orchestra seem almost quaint.

Available September 13 as both an ebook and audiobook narrated by Scott Simon.