If fifty-something Boomers are asked that question, they are likely to say, without a moment’s hesitation, Walter Cronkite.
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He hasn’t anchored a newscast on CBS in 26 years, but the 90-year-old is still revered enough for CBS to produce a prime-time special about his career. It airs Friday night.
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He covered some of the most intense news of the 20th century, including the Cold War, the Viet Nam conflict, the civil rights movement and Watergate. He is also remembered for his marathon coverage of political conventions and early space flights.
During most of Cronkite’s anchor tenure there were only three TV networks so it was easier for a journalist to become a star. But he outlasted most of his competitors and continues to appear in television specials.
His reputation today is as rock-solid as it was on the night of March 6, 1981, when we watched him say for the last time, “and that’s the way it is.”
4 comments:
Two words: Geraldo. Wait, that's one word. Nevermind.
You trust Geraldo? Wow.
I'm at the age where I still remember him and I understand why he is as revered as he is.
There have been few who could even aspire to fill his shoes.
I'm not sure anyone could fill those shoes. The TV news landscape has changed and the expectations are different, but he oozed credibility and that's hard to find any more.
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