CBS Evening News anchor Walter Cronkite was a legend in his—and our—own time
PUBLIC FIGURES TEND TO fade from view, consigned to distinction and relevance solely in their particular time. We adjust to their absences because we have to, yet there are certain uncommon individuals whose loss seems more regrettable and glaring as years pass. One of them is Walter Cronkite.
Consider what he had: heft, presence; a certain inborn dignity. Also: a penchant for adventure, whether it was reporting bombing raids over Germany while flying in a B-17, or as an amateur race car driver, the latter a beloved hobby he relinquished reluctantly when the powers at CBS deemed it too dangerous.
What he didn’t have was the aura of the cosmopolitan; there was nothing coastal about him. He was determinedly Midwest. Were you to see him without knowing what he did, you might figure he was a guy who got the best table at the second-best steakhouse in the third-biggest town in his native Missouri. You couldn’t picture him, as you could Edward R. Murrow, smoking and downing 12-year-old scotch at the bar of the 21 Club, though it was Murrow who had risen from the proverbial humble beginnings: a log cabin on a hardscrabble farm in North Carolina. Yet by the early 1950s, when they began appearing on television, Murrow had acquired a sophisticate’s tony air, while Cronkite, a dentist’s son, raised in relative comfort, had eschewed the grand European salons where Murrow and his CBS colleagues—Charles Collingwood and Eric Sevareid—received their considerable burnishing in the wake of World War II.
Diese Geschichte stammt aus der April 2018-Ausgabe von CBS Watch! Magazine.
Starten Sie Ihre 7-tägige kostenlose Testversion von Magzter GOLD, um auf Tausende kuratierte Premium-Storys sowie über 8.000 Zeitschriften und Zeitungen zuzugreifen.
Bereits Abonnent ? Anmelden
Diese Geschichte stammt aus der April 2018-Ausgabe von CBS Watch! Magazine.
Starten Sie Ihre 7-tägige kostenlose Testversion von Magzter GOLD, um auf Tausende kuratierte Premium-Storys sowie über 8.000 Zeitschriften und Zeitungen zuzugreifen.
Bereits Abonnent? Anmelden
Yasmine Al-Bustami's Dallas
Welcome to the Lone Star State and bring your appetite. The NCIS: Hawai’i actress shows us around her hometown.
What Happens In Vegas
Mandeep Dhillon, Jorja Fox, and Paula Newsome are solving crimes, changing the game, and kicking ass in CSI: Vegas.
Survivor – Carrying The Torch
After a 16-month COVID-induced hiatus, the groundbreaking reality series Survivor is finally ready to don its buffs again. For its 41st season, 18 brand-new contestants will be marooned on the island of Fiji and will attempt to outwit, outlast, and outplay each other forthe $1 million prize and, if they strategize correctly, the chance to etch their names in Survivor lore. But first: Let’s hear from host Jeff Probst, meet the new cast, and get up to speed with a highlight reel of memorable players, twists, romances, and more. In the words of Probst, come on in, guys!
Full Speed Ahead
When he’s not catching bad guys on Magnum P.I., actor Tim Kang enjoys his life in the fast lane.
The Boo Crew
This Ghosts story tells how the new CBS comedy came together brilliantly in spite of the ghastly pandemic.
24 Hours With... Debra Martin Chase
The first Black woman to produce a $100 million blockbuster (1996’s Courage Under Fire) and land an overall deal at a major studio (she currently has a deal with Universal Television), executive producer Debra Martin Chase is the powerhouse behind the Queen Latifah drama The Equalizer. Here’s a look inside the world of a Hollywood trailblazer.
Day Dreamer
Emmy-winning The Young and the Restless costume designer David Zyla spills his wardrobe secrets.
That's Entertainment
Happy 40th anniversary, Entertainment Tonight! The history-making news magazine didn’t just talk about the stars … they were right there with them.
Nate Expectations
As a former football star, an analyst on The NFL Today, and a new co-host of CBS’s morning show, Emmy Award–winning Nate Burleson shows his versatility every time he’s on camera. And he’s just getting started.
Street Smarts
Weights, a skateboard, and protein-packed meals keep S.W.A.T.’s Alex Russell feeling fine.