BETWEEN THE LINER NOTES 
		
		Pat Boone and the New American Revolution 
		
		By Shannon Woodland and Scott Ross  
                	The 700 Club 
                	
		
		 
		 
		CBN.com 
		    		  Walking down memory lane with Pat  Boone is more like competing in a marathon.   This pop music icon has covered more ground in the past 50 years than  most. Believe it or not, this Tennessee boy  -- white  shoes and all -- has maintained his clean cut image and even his marriage of 53  years to Shirley.  
		Scott Ross: You live in Hollywood? 
		Pat Boone:  Beverly    Hills, yes. 
		Ross: Somehow, you, Shirley, and your daughters  have survived this thing. That’s  absolutely amazing. Some marriages are lasting weeks. 
		Boone: -- Or weekends. 
		Ross: You have to say God did it. 
		Boone: Yeah, no question.  No question. 
		Ross: It hasn’t always been happy  times for you. 
		Boone: No.  We’ve been in the briar patch. We’ve gotten scratched. We came through a time, and we’ve  written about it very honestly. I made some compromises that nearly destroyed our marriage.  But we made commitments to God, as well as  each other. We looked at our four kids, and we said we can’t be another Hollywood  statistic.  
		 Ross [reporting]: Pat hit it really big in the '50s, but his  music career was stunted by Elvis and the British Invasion.  Not only has he continued to sing prolifically  for years, he’s also an actor, motivational speaker, conservative political  commentator and television personality. 
		Ross:  You’ve walked a strange path. 
		Boone:  I have, but I know  I have inherited some of the DNA of my great, great, great grandfather, Daniel  Boone.  He liked to go where other people  didn’t go, and he liked being alone.  I have rarely in my life been lonely or lonesome.  I’ve been alone.  But there’s always been stuff to do.  I’ve always had a sense of God’s  presence.  I've had a wife and  kids who loved me.  Of course I did  something for seven years that no pop entertainer ever did --  that is I made my  wife and my kids part of my show.  You want to create a romantic  fantasy and have the ladies in the audience say, "I wonder what it would be  like to be married to Pat Boone." Well, out comes my wife and my four teenage  daughters, and all that goes out the window.  
		Ross [reporting]: So the life and times of Pat Boone, illustrated beautifully in his  autobiography, are more about this country, being an American, and living in  these days and times. 
		Boone:  That’s the main reason for writing the  book.  I wasn’t so interested in telling  my story, my career, my family, even though it’s interesting to me and some, but  the ground has shifted underneath us for the last 50 years. Our culture and our  notions of being right and wrong have been riddled.  
		I call for a new American revolution.  I just talked to the think tank, the Heritage  Foundation. They’re printing up the speech, and CSPAN is making it available. I’ll probably be more persona non grata in Hollywood then I am now.  They may tar and feather me and run me out of  town on a rail. 
		 Ross:  Over  the years, you’ve obviously taken the flack.  But  here you sit, all the various successes you’ve had, but you still take this  flack... 
		Boone: I do, so  much. Rolling Stone   did a story on me. Jann Wenner, the editor, put me on the  cover, and they called the lead article "The Great  White Buck" (laughs). 
		Ross: That  sounds like Rolling Stone. 
		Boone: They admitted that they sent a writer  out to turn over the rocks and see what crawled out. They said, "We’ve got to give  him credit.  He’s on the cover, because in  25 years, at that point, a lot of things have changed. A lot of people have  been inconsistent, gone by the wayside, but if you like him or not, he’s  remained consistent. So, we tip our hat." 
		Ross:  There’s so many different sides  to you. It appears  that you’re not quitting any time soon? 
		Boone: I’m promising Shirley that. 
		Ross: She wants you home. 
		Boone:  Yes, and I owe her that.  She says, "I guess I’m not going to have just  the two of us living a semi-anonymous life, where you’re not running all over  the world doing everything under the sun." I said, "I owe it to you. I’m going  to cut out this travel. I am winding down." I tell my audiences these days I  won’t be back.   
		Ross: So you’ll only have five  albums instead of 10. 
		 Boone: Cut down to only five in  a year and a book, and for my  country the ballad of the National Guard. 
		Ross: After all that free information  folks, what is the legacy? 
		Boone: The  legacy?  I just hope people remember me  as the guy in white shoes who pointed up. 
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