PS I think you need to have a
look at your full stop button on the keyboard, it appears to be sticking.
He is merely paying tribute to one of the most popular people in American broadcast and journalism, who wrote in the same fashion ... Walter Winchell, who popularized the idea of publicity by those influential media personalities of the day shaping hopeful actors' careers, and giving birth to what are today referred to as ... '
influencers.' Winchill was probably the most-widely syndicated newspaper columnist of his day ... literally thousands of newspapers carried his column, at a time when even smaller cities had multiple newspapers, some printing a 'morning edition,' while others printed an 'evening edition,' and both carried Winchell's column. He was asked by FDR to publicize the idea of intervention in Europe's World War II ... when powerful politicians like Joe Kennedy, aviation hero Charles Lindbergh, and Senator Robert La Follette of Wisconsin preached isolationism for the USA.
Walter Winchell was also a radio show host, his broadcast was hugely-popular across the country, and he spoke like he wrote, judiciously-using pregnant pauses to emphasize his points. He would begin his evening radio broadcast with one of the most-famous sign-ons ever ... "
Good-evening Mr. and Mrs. America and all the ships at-sea"... Before there was television, there was Walter Winchell ... arguably the most listened-to radio show host in America ... whose support could catapult a little-known actor/actress into the public eye ... Jackie Gleason, Frank Sinatra, Arthur Godfrey, and for a later generation, Rowan and Martin benefitted from his public support/publicity. He also could ruin careers ... Josephine Baker and Ethel Barrymoore were two actresses whose careers suffered because of Winchell's public castigation.
Baby Boomers are familiar with the voice of Walter Winchell because of a medium an earlier generation didn't have access-to, as they were growing-up, that would be television, where Winchell's distinctive voice narrated the story of America's Chicago-based Prohibition agents ... starring Robert Stack as Elliot Ness.
...
Ness was a federal Treasury agent, and not a member of the FBI, he famously-fought against those who would violate Prohibition in the Chicago area ... Winchell's narration of
The Untouchables was drenched in
gravitas, and though it was only on from 1959-1963 as a first-run show, it helped to make Desilu Productions a TV success. Desilu was a business with Lucille Ball and her husband Desi Arnaz as its principals, using the first part of both their names for the company's name. Desilu went-on to produce another series hugely-popular with the Baby Boomers, and an integral part of popular culture, decades after it left first-run status,
Star Trek ... which spawned multiple spin-off tv shows, and a very-successful movie series, all of-which have imprinted popular culture with memes whose origins arise-from the original TV show, and the subsequent movie series.