To hell with MJ, WALTER CRONKITE is dying.


Walter Cronkite, easily America's most beloved news giver ever, is fading fast.

See, kids, a long, long time ago, the Networks actually covered the important things going on in the world rather than devoting their time to dead pop stars, news anchor colonoscopies, and the latest missing blond. They had actual Foreign Bureaus with real investigative journalists who reported on and shot true images of war as it happened. They weren't embedded PR people for the Pentagon.


But, those days are gone, along with the integrity which once epitomized reporting. If you are old enough to remember Walter's tearing up and choked voice when announcing the death of our 35th President, you know that he truly was America personified on that day. He felt and expressed the grief of a nation.

Nov.22, 1963

Who would do that today? O'Reilly? Brian Williams? Olbermann (close, but...)? Katie Couric??

Truly a gentleman, a truth teller, a voice of reason, and you could trust that what he was telling you wasn't handed to him from the White House as pabulum for the masses.

Walter, I have missed your presence on the small screen, and I will continue to judge all other newscasters by what you, Chet Huntley, David Brinkley, and Edward Murrow did - show us what REAL news was.


Walter
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Real News largely died when the firewall between the news and sales departments at networks vanished. The lust for ever expanding ratings and ad revenue created the fluffy, watered down infotainment bullshit we see today.

by Tom Hanc on 06/27/2009 04:12:42 PM EST

That he was already gone, Tim - thanks for making us aware... There will never be reporters like him again, but even Cronkite was not above bias. He just did a better job of hiding it... :)

by bobo1 on 06/27/2009 04:14:46 PM EST

Be wewy wewy quiet

by birdboy1 on 06/27/2009 04:36:46 PM EST

[ Parent ]

Glad to see you didn't give up on TYT completely.

by MedfordTim on 06/27/2009 07:03:13 PM EST

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I appreciate your kind words... I hope you have been well!

:)

by bobo1 on 06/27/2009 09:47:03 PM EST

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I mean when someone drifts in here from say TYT youtube channel to check out the forum for the first time and sees all that gay bashing , the drunken tirades, The Democat congress loves Al Queda stuff  etc etc etc etc.  Im  SURE they will sign right up! Who wouldnt? its free speech right?

A conservative believes nothing should be done for the first time

by C D on 06/28/2009 03:03:41 PM EST

[ Parent ]
Walter Cronkite cried on national TV in 1962.  When my mom saw it, that was when she cried, too, after holding it in for at least a couple of hours since the news first started to spread that Kennedy might be dead.  And the whole country cried with him, too.

And in 1968, when Cronkite returned from reporting on the Tet offensive to say that the best we could expect from the war was a stalemate, America almost turned on a dime.  Even President Johnson said, "If I've lost Cronkite then I've lost middle America."

Johnson was wrong, of course, because he had lost a much greater part of America.  And even though Cronkite was wrong -- the end was worse than a stalemate for our Vietnamese allies -- he was essentially correct, and the country knew it.  Cronkite had told us that we had nullified a treaty giving the Vietnamese the right to vote on the form of government that they wanted.  He had told us that what actually had happened in the Gulf of Tonkin -- Johnson's excuse to vastly expand the war -- might have been quite different from what the White House had told us.  And by the end of his broadcast on February 27, 1968, we knew that America had to get out of Vietnam. (Unfortunately, the final proof didn't come until 1982, when we learned from a CBS documentary that Gen. Westmoreland had lied to us about progress in the war.  Westmoreland sued CBS for libel, but dropped the suit when two of his former intelligence officers, Major Gen. Joseph McChristian and Col. Gains Hawkins, testified that they had been ordered to change Communist troop strengths reports for political reasons.  Although the process involved in the editing of the documentary has been criticized, its statements of facts stand unrefuted.  However, the lawsuit seriously eroded journalists' confidence in their abilities and freedom to make documentaries, and journalism never has recovered.)

There are people who vilify Cronkite as a traitor for expressing his opinion about Vietnam.  Cronkite was, after all, a liberal because he thought we should not have been fighting in Vietnam, and being a liberal means to some that you must be a traitor.

But what they don't recognize is that Walter Cronkite made a clear distinction between reporting the news and giving commentary.  Watching his broadcasts, you knew which was which.  Even though you might disagree with his opinions (leaving you with the minority of Americans), very few people deny that he reported the facts straight.

Walter Cronkite was called "The Most Trusted Man in America".  And he was, much to the chagrin of the minority far-right.  There's going to be some right-wing smirking in the media in the next few days.   But many, many more people will be saddened, and wishing Walter well.  They are grateful for his service to his country.

by EveningStarNM on 06/27/2009 07:37:34 PM EST

Kennedy was assassinated in 1963, not 1962.

Oops.  Sorry.

by EveningStarNM on 06/27/2009 07:44:01 PM EST

[ Parent ]
You have zero credibility now.

by Tom Hanc on 06/27/2009 07:54:35 PM EST

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You mean that I had at least some credibility before today?

But I've been working so hard to destroy it!

by EveningStarNM on 06/27/2009 07:59:31 PM EST

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You will end up on the credibility watch list

Millions around the world are gathering spontaneously in groups ranging into the thousands to mourn the  near passing of Walter Cronkite.

The internet nearly creaked to a halt. Google was having trouble and nearly crashed, Twitter was so jammed that it nearly put the Iranian protests at risk . At&t text messaging went down due to sustained and unbelievably high use.

He was a giant , a gifted genius who's legacy will live on in the hearts of people around the world  from China  to Kathmandu when he passes.

or  maybe not

I guess credibility is a matter of perspective

A conservative believes nothing should be done for the first time

by C D on 06/28/2009 03:00:49 PM EST

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I'll do anything to stay off the credibility watch list!  I'll even start lying if I have to.

I know that you were speaking tongue-in-cheek (be careful, or you'll stretch that cheek permanently), but I think Walter Cronkite probably won't be mourned the same way that people all over the world are mourning for Jackson.  While Cronkite was "a giant, a gifted genius who's legacay will live on", I doubt that anyone in China gives two hoots about him.  But I imagine that a lot of Chinese give several hoots about Jackson.

Credibility certainly is a matter of perspective.  But we're in the midst of this battle between substance and frivolity.  Let history be our judge.

by EveningStarNM on 06/28/2009 03:35:14 PM EST

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He might have been just an average height guy.

A conservative believes nothing should be done for the first time

by C D on 06/29/2009 02:42:44 AM EST

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I've got to stock up on antacid.  What passes for humor in this crowd is giving me all sorts of heartburn.

by EveningStarNM on 06/29/2009 06:09:33 AM EST

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I mostly remember him as the voice for Spaceship Earth at Epcot Center. (The ride in the big ball.)  I wasn't really into the news before I was born and when I was a youngster. =)

by jazzchic on 06/28/2009 04:04:25 PM EST

I was there as a kid.

The talk of Walter Cronkite does remind me of a time when news was driven by events and was treated with reverence the real 4th estate. They could be there and we couldnt so they presented what was going on and left it up to you to decide. They had credibility no question there.

fast forward. NOW I swear to god Wolf Blitzer is getting minute by minute ratings in his ear piece and instructions. Hype it more the ratings just went up a half percentage point. The ratings dropped slightly close out the news of the Earthquake in downtown LA and prepare for the  newly discovered Anna Nicole wedding pictures piece.

A conservative believes nothing should be done for the first time

by C D on 06/29/2009 02:38:08 AM EST

[ Parent ]
...in terms of his contribution to the world than was Michael Jackson (although Michael was an under-rated agent for change in the world and an advocate for ending African starvation, etc.).  But Cronkite is 92.  His death would not be seen as a shocking tragedy.  Michael Jackson, though his best days were clearly 15 years behind him, died at 50, and that should warrant emotion REGARDLESS of who it was.

by Milltycoon on 06/29/2009 01:02:27 PM EST

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