
Boston: Houghton Mifflin, 1983.Īmerican television journalist Tom Brokaw (born 1940) retired from his NBC Nightly News broadcast in December of 2004 after 22 years at t… National Broadcasting Company, Inc. The Evening News: The Making of the Network News Anchor. Secaucus, NJ: Carol Publishing Group, 1990. Anchors: Brokaw, Jennings, Rather and the Evening News. Goldberg, Robert, and Gerald Jay Goldberg. Out of Thin Air: The Brief Wonderful Life of Network News. New York: Ballantine Books, 1996.Ĭronkite, Walter. Eleven Presidents, Four Wars, Twenty-Two Political Conventions, One Moon Landing, Three Assassinations, Two Thousand Weeks of News and Other Stuff on Television, and Eighteen Years of Growing Up in North Carolina. New York: Columbia University Press, 1991.īrinkley, David. Now the News: The Story of Broadcast Journalism.

Among the highest-profile contemporary anchors were CNN's Bernard Shaw (1940–), who retired in early 2001, ABC's Peter Jennings (1938–), CBS's Dan Rather (1931–), and NBC's Tom Brokaw (1940–).īliss, Edward, Jr. Two years later, ABC's Max Robinson (1939–1988) became the first African American network news anchor. In 1976, Barbara Walters (1931–) became the first woman news anchor, working beside Harry Reasoner (1923–1991) on ABC. However, Swayze, who opened his broadcasts with a cheerful "And a good evening to you" and closed them with "Glad we could be together," was more a news reader than a journalist. John Cameron Swayze (1906–1995), who began on NBC-TV in 1948, was the medium's first superstar anchor. and Goodnight for NBC News."Ĭronkite, Huntley, and Brinkley were not the lone pioneer anchors. They, too, had their own special way of ending each broadcast, with each declaring, "Goodnight, Chet. Huntley's sober, deliberate style played off of Brinkley's low-key wit to make their show a consistent ratings winner-usually besting Cronkite's broadcasts during the 1960s. Chet Huntley (1911–1974) broadcast from New York, while David Brinkley (1920–) was situated in Washington, D.C. During the final moments of a CBS documentary, he called for an end to the fighting-an action that helped turn millions of mainstream Americans against the war.Ĭronkite's most direct competition came from NBC, which between 19 featured a pair of popular anchors. A trip to Vietnam during the 1968 Tet offensive (a massive surprise attack on South Vietnam by North Vietnamese fighters) helped turn Cronkite against the Vietnam War (1954–1975). On occasion, an anchor of Cronkite's stature may become a news-maker. Kennedy (1917–1963) or adding cheerleader-style comments while anchoring coverage of America's space program. He did so in times of tragedy and triumph, whether tearfully announcing the death by assassination of President John F. When appropriate, Cronkite injected emotion into his broadcast. Fabled for his reassuring demeanor, Cronkite came to be known as "Uncle Walter" and "The Most Trusted Man in America." He signed off each broadcast by stating, "And that's the way it is." Few questioned the truthfulness of this declaration.

Cronkite brought to the job flawless journalistic credentials he had started out as a wire-service correspondent during World War II (1939–45). For nineteen years beginning in 1962, Walter Cronkite (1916–) anchored the evening news on CBS. The best news anchors have strong journalism backgrounds. The most successful anchors are recognized for their calming, steadying presence, particularly in times of crisis. The anchor described news events and introduced field journalists and news clips. Holding each program together was the news anchor, a constant presence throughout the broadcast. As such programs evolved, they consisted of field reporters passing along information on specific events, along with accompanying visual images on 16-millimeter (16-mm) film. Local stations did the same for local events. The major networks set aside a time period each evening to broadcast national and international news. When television (see entry under 1940s-TV and Radio in volume 2) was in its infancy during the late 1940s and early 1950s, news reports became an important part of daily programming.
