Walter Cronkite

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Date created: April 2010

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 [About President Ford] "Ford was the genuine good fellow well met. He was the guy you wish you had known in college." 

 

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Birthdate :November 4, 1916

Location :St. Joseph , Missouri

Country : United States of America

Sign : Scorpio

Eyes color :

Hair color :

Etnhnicity:

Job :others

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Walter Cronkite Timeline

1928
Attended both the Republican and Democratic National Conventions in 1928. The former was on a boy scout field trip and the latter was during a visit to his grandparents in Kansas City.
1933
When he was 16 he went to Chicago's 1933 World's Fair. He volunteered to help demonstrate an experimental version of television.
1933
Makes a unique claim about his television career. When he attended 1933 World's Fair, he was present at an exhibit displaying an early example of television. At the exhibit, the attendees were allowed to sit in front of the camera and watch themselves on the screen. When Cronkite sat in front of the camera he did an improptu impression of a man he had seen playing two flutes at once. Therefore, he jokingly claims that he was definitely on television decades before his contemporaries.
1933
Makes a unique claim about his television career. When he attended 1933 World's Fair, he was present at an exhibit displaying an early example of television. At the exhibit, the attendees were allowed to sit in front of the camera and watch themselves on the screen. When Cronkite sat in front of the camera he did an improptu impression of a man he had seen playing two flutes at once. Therefore, he jokingly claims that he was definitely on television decades before his contemporaries.
1933
When he was 16 he went to Chicago's 1933 World's Fair. He volunteered to help demonstrate an experimental version of television.
1937
Journalist since 1937; with CBS television since 1950.
1945
Reported on the Nuremberg Trials of Nazi war criminals in 1945.
1951
At the birth of television, he and his team at CBS practically invented the institution of the evening news program. In 1951, one of the stage managers at CBS told him to sit at the desk and do the news. Cronkite asked what he meant and the managers simply said "I don't know just do it". His idea was to first just talk to the camera like another person and organize the news stories in the same vein as the newspaper beginning with the top story and working his way down to human interest stories.
1951
At the birth of television, he and his team at CBS practically invented the institution of the evening news program. In 1951, one of the stage managers at CBS told him to sit at the desk and do the news. Cronkite asked what he meant and the managers simply said "I don't know just do it". His idea was to first just talk to the camera like another person and organize the news stories in the same vein as the newspaper beginning with the top story and working his way down to human interest stories.
1956
On the day of the Kennedy assassination, he said the he had just come back from lunch and was standing at the teletype machine when rang a rare five bells - a bulletin. He shouted "Let's get on the air!" but getting on the air wasn't possible because the cameras had to be placed and then warmed up (after this, the networks always had a camera ready in the newsroom). He went to an audio booth just off the newsroom floor and, interrupting "As the World Turns" , made an audio announcement over a CBS logo. It took another 20 minutes to get on camera.
1956
On the day of the Kennedy assassination, he said the he had just come back from lunch and was standing at the teletype machine when rang a rare five bells - a bulletin. He shouted "Let's get on the air!" but getting on the air wasn't possible because the cameras had to be placed and then warmed up (after this, the networks always had a camera ready in the newsroom). He went to an audio booth just off the newsroom floor and, interrupting "As the World Turns" (1956), made an audio announcement over a CBS logo. It took another 20 minutes to get on camera.
1964
In 1964 he was fired from his anchorman duties at the Democratic National Convention. CBS had gotten a new president who had never worked on a presidential campaign and had definate ideas about how CBS would be covering it. It turned out to be a mess and as a result Cronkite got some of the blame so the network executives removed him from the coverage but kept him as the anchorman of the evening news. Jokingly Cronkite became buddies with the president of NBC and the people at CBS were horrified that he was being offered a job in the rival network. So when the Republican Convention rolled around Cronkite got to cover it without using the new president's tactics.
1964
In 1964 he was fired from his anchorman duties at the Democratic National Convention. CBS had gotten a new president who had never worked on a presidential campaign and had definate ideas about how CBS would be covering it. It turned out to be a mess and as a result Cronkite got some of the blame so the network executives removed him from the coverage but kept him as the anchorman of the evening news. Jokingly Cronkite became buddies with the president of NBC and the people at CBS were horrified that he was being offered a job in the rival network. So when the Republican Convention rolled around Cronkite got to cover it without using the new president's tactics.
1966
Is the 1966 recipient of the prestigious Connor Award given by the brothers of the Phi Alpha Tau fraternity based out of Emerson College in Boston, Massachusetts. He is also an honorary brother of the fraternity.
1969
In 1969 when Apollo XI was going to the Moon, Cronkite was on the air 27 of the 30 hours that it took for the flight, which many in the profession called "Walter to Walter" coverage. At the moment that Neil Armstrong stepped off the ladder of the Lunar Module onto the Moon surface, Cronkite was speechless for the first time in his career. All he could say was "Wow!" and "Oh Boy!". Famous words that will live in history.
1969
Has a Muppet on "Sesame Street" named after him, the grouch journalist "Walter Cranky".
1969
Has a Muppet on "Sesame Street" (1969) named after him, the grouch journalist "Walter Cranky".
1969
In 1969 when Apollo XI was going to the Moon, Cronkite was on the air 27 of the 30 hours that it took for the flight, which many in the profession called "Walter to Walter" coverage. At the moment that Neil Armstrong stepped off the ladder of the Lunar Module onto the Moon surface, Cronkite was speechless for the first time in his career. All he could say was "Wow!" and "Oh Boy!". Famous words that will live in history.
1971
Satirized by Ray Goulding as "Walter Chronic" in Cold Turkey .
1971
Satirized by Ray Goulding as "Walter Chronic" in Cold Turkey (1971).
1981
Was awarded the Presidential Medal of Freedom in 1981. This is the highest honor a U.S. civilian can receive. Was the lead anchor on the CBS Evening News from 16 April 1962 until 6 March 1981.
1991
He is outspoken in his distaste for Oliver Stone's film JFK . Calling the film "Oliver Stone junk" and "A dangerous work of fiction that seriously mid-leads a whole generation of Americans who were not alive at that time".
1991
He is outspoken in his distaste for Oliver Stone's film JFK (1991). Calling the film "Oliver Stone junk" and "A dangerous work of fiction that seriously mid-leads a whole generation of Americans who were not alive at that time".
1993
Father was Walter Cronkite Sr., a dentist. Mother was Helen Cronkite who died in 1993 at the age of 101.
1993
His mother Helen died in 1993 at the age of 101.
1997
In 1997, released his autobiography, "A Reporter's Life", which coincided with a two-hour TV special, "Cronkite Remembers" , in which he reminisced about his years as a reporter. A week later, an eight-hour version aired on The Discovery Channel.
1997
In 1997, released his autobiography, "A Reporter's Life", which coincided with a two-hour TV special, "Cronkite Remembers" (1997), in which he reminisced about his years as a reporter. A week later, an eight-hour version aired on The Discovery Channel.
1999
Inducted into the Hall of Famous Missourians in 1999.
2003
December 2003 - Underwent surgery to repair a previously injured achilles tendon.
2005
On March 15, 2005 he lost his wife of 64 years, Betsy, three weeks before their 65th anniversary.
2009
Longtime boyfriend of Joanna Simon until his death in August, 2009.

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