Posted on 08/16/2004 6:02:46 PM PDT by wagglebee
LOS ANGELES (Reuters) - Lamenting the lack of depth in television news, the man considered the most trusted person on TV, Walter Cronkite, ends his current job this coming Tuesday right back where he started, as a newspaperman.
In his final column in a year-long stint writing for the King Features Syndicate, Cronkite, 87, calls his decades as the nightly news anchor for broadcast network CBS "rewarding," but "not entirely satisfactory" due to time limitations that prevented deep reporting of any one story.
"We're talking about covering one of the most complicated and important nations of the world ... and it's patently impossible to do an adequate job of covering the major stories of the day, around the world, in 17 minutes," Cronkite recently told Reuters, alluding to the on-air time in any half-hour news telecast.
The veteran reporter, who has covered presidential elections and armed conflicts from World War II to the Vietnam War, said he would like to see the numerous news "magazines" on TV devote more time to "instant documentaries" of current topics instead of "so much coverage of sex and Hollywood and crime."
In his farewell passage for King Features, Cronkite writes that because newspapers can provide depth and breadth, they can become a "custodian of our history."
"The decent newspapers try to be fair and present both sides of a disputed story in the community and our nation, and that is the essential of our history," he said. "It is where historians go to do their research. This is an absolutely vital link in the chain of culture that we call our democracy."
BROADCAST VS PRINT
There are some things that each medium -- television and newspapers -- does distinctively. Television, of course, gives viewers a better sense of how people look and act, but newspapers provide a record that can be stored for people to read and study events for years to come.
In the case of presidential elections, Cronkite said the TV industry should be forced to give away air time to candidates to avoid multi-million dollar TV ad campaigns and keep offices from being up-for-sale to the candidate who raised the most money.
The newsman said he values the Internet as a research tool, but he finds some stories published on the Web -- scandals especially -- play too fast and loose with the facts.
"I am dumbfounded that there hasn't been a crackdown with the libel and slander laws on some of these would-be writers and reporters on the Internet. I expect that to develop in the fairly near future," he said.
In the past year, Cronkite's columns have been printed in 180 newspapers around the world through King Features Syndicates, which supplies some 5,000 newspapers worldwide with material. King Features is part of Hearst Corp.
Columns have varied from humanist topics to political comment. But, he said, it was time for him to put up his pen and shut down his computer.
Cronkite got his start as a newspaper reporter in Austin, Texas, some 68 years ago, and moved into television broadcasting in 1950. He said he has always considered writing for newspapers as being his "real home."
He said he is ending his yearlong stint writing for King Features to devote more time to working on television documentaries and speaking to conventions, sales meetings and college students.
And fortunately with Walter's retirement we have one less leftist journalist to contend with.
Don't get too excited, he's retired before.
One nice thing about him putting that pen down though, he'll be stabbing less Republicans in the back with it.
Hey Wally, isn't that your 72 virgins I hear calling...
"It is where historians go to do their research."
And if the question being researched is, "Where did the Monica Lewinski story 1st break into public counsciousness," where will the answer be found? I know! I know! Call on me. Call on me. "DRUDGE." So much for the thesis, or the sad truth of what will be future cover-up.
I remember reading Cronkite's endorsement of one world government. I couldn't believe it was the same Uncle Walt that I had grown up with!
Cronkite's politics did not change one iota over the decades. He has always been a dedicated leftist; it's just that he became more open about it as the years went by.
Translation: The 24 hour a day immediate access to all news has made it impossible for the leftist media to censor the truth, and "facts" are harmful to the liberal agenda. Far better in Cronkite's opinion to filter the news.
The commies couldn't have won the Vietnam War without Walter Cronkite.
It proved more than enough time, however, for you to single-handedly break our spirit in Viet Nam, didn't it, Walter?
What a lying S.O.S.
In depth reporting? What a moron. Flashback to 1963 when he dissed Goldwater on the air because a "note" was passed to him while he was on the air, that Barry did not offer condolences concerning JFK's asassination.
Nothing but a butt-boy for the liberal left. He gave nothing, he can offer no advice. Just a stooge.
blessings, Bobo
Agreed. Most trusted man in America? Which decade was that? The 60s? What a has-been fossil.
What this does point out though, is how shallow the socialist bull-pen truly is. Don't send in another lefty... I've had it with washed up game plans.
Shove it! Cronkite..sorry I heard that is the way Teresa Heinz Kerry talks to Journalist.
I thought he died years ago. His brain sure did.
The world is very capable of carrying on without your commentary.
Well can you name some decent ones then Wally? All I've ever known in the media is the one-sided liberal kind. If it wasn't for the internet you and your "Fourth Estate" pals would still be shoving that down our throats with nowhere else for us to go.
LOL.
Agreed!
So, Cronkit'es complaining about so little time and so many lies!
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