July 19, 2009
Remembering Walter Cronkite
That's the Way it Was: The World of Politics, News and Entertainment Remember a Broadcasting Legend and American Icon
-
Play CBS Video Video Cronkite's Kennedy Coverage A look back at Walter Cronkite's emotional on-air announcement of John F. Kennedy's assassination with commentary from Robin Williams, Diane Sawyer and others.
-
Video Clooney Reflects On Cronkite In February 1968, Walter Cronkite told the public what he thought about the war in Vietnam. Actor George Clooney talks about the impact of Cronkite's statements.
-
Video Bill Clinton On Cronkite Former President Bill Clinton shares his thoughts on legendary newsman Walter Cronkite. He says Cronkite "represents the best of the First Amendment."
-
(CBS)
-
Perspectives On Cronkite Thoughts on the legendary newsman from the world of news, politics and entertainment
-
SPECIAL REPORT Walter Cronkite: 1916-2009 Remembering the legendary CBS newsman
- Stories
- Walter Cronkite Dies
"He took his job seriously, he took the responsibility seriously. And it's hard to say that he didn't take himself seriously. But you never felt that he was taking himself all that seriously," said Mike Wallace of Cronkite's sense of humor.
"The best time to be with Walter is when he ... was with [his late wife] Betsy, you know, and one cocktail... because then they both get kind of wonderfully salty and funny," Robin Williams joked. "It's the idea of him telling a joke at all... He's really elegant, but really kick-ass funny - if you can say kick on television."
"I remember when he started talking about retiring. I'm going, 'You know, I just can't see [him] with a button-down cardigan in the workshop building, you know decoys or something," said his daughter, Kathy.
"I couldn't shake the feeling when he retired that something more than one man was leaving the chair," said Brian Williams.
On March 6, 1981, Cronkite anchored his last broadcast of "The CBS Evening News."
Cronkite's Last Broadcast
This is my last broadcast as the anchorman of the CBS Evening News. For me, it's a moment for which I long have planned, but which, nevertheless, comes with some sadness. For almost two decades, after all, we've been meeting like this in the evenings. And I'll miss that.
Dan Rather was next in line for the anchor chair. "Walter Cronkite was a justified legend, nobody replaces Walter Cronkite. I succeeded him, but I didn't replace him," Rather stated.
In an interview at his home in 2007, Cronkite said of retirement, "I stepped down with delight that I was now going to have some free time… to be with my family. I must say that it lasted only a short time. I realized that I had left something behind that I was missing."
"The passing of the years did not diminish, as nearly as I could tell, one iota, his interest in and love for his country and his desire to see the world get better," Bill Clinton said.
Mike Wallace said a lot of people wanted him to run for office, "and he could have."
"President Cronkite. I like the way that sounds," said Hart. "You know, he was that popular. And he would have made a damn good President."
When asked at a San Francisco conference, "Who’s the most interesting person you've ever met and why?" Cronkite replied, "Oh, probably my wife."
"When he lost his North Star in life, when we lost Betsy Cronkite, a lot of us worried that there would be a wobble in his trajectory," said Brian Williams. "She was a fantastic, fantastic woman and a great leveling presence in his life. But life went on it turns out, for this man with so many lives."
And a man of so many talents.
"To see him conducting the orchestra ... that was a great thing to see," said Robin Williams. "That was another skill he had [that] I didn't know [about]. If, all of a sudden, he put on skates at that moment, I’d go, 'OK, a double axel.' [In Cronkite's voice:] 'I think I can do it. It seems appropriate.'"
"His legacy," George Clooney said, "will be one of the great legacies of, you know, great Americans. It sounds overstated. But it isn't. He's that important to us - not just to generations before him, but to generations coming up."
"Walter got early on that this job is part hand holding, so that all of us in this line of work, who on days like 9/11 have been forced into any kind of explanatory roll, Walter is with you whether you see him in the studio or not," Brian Williams explained.
"America kind of loved him, America had a love affair with Walter Cronkite," said Don Hewitt.
"He brought us all those stories large and small which would come to define the 20th Century," said President Barack Obama. "That's why we love Walter, because in an era before blogs and e-mail, cell phones and cable, he was the news. Walter invited us to believe in him, and he never let us down."
Obama Remembers Cronkite
Andy Rooney said it's simple as to why America loves Cronkite. "You know why? Because he was the best newsman. He was just dedicated to news. He really cared about what the news was and he thought it was important to tell it to the American people."
"And Walter's early lessons would be well kept in mind by all of us who have followed him," said Charlie Gibson. "And that is to keep it on the news, tell people what happened that day, keep it short, keep it direct and keep it accurate."
"A man of integrity at a time when we needed it. At a time when we still need it. A man, a legacy of someone who believes in the First Amendment as being one of the prime directives of democracy, but also of civilization. The idea of speaking out, and speaking directly," said Robin Williams.
"If someone has integrity, to me, that is the finest attribute they can have," said Katie Couric. "That means honor at a time when so many people are dishonorable… and I think Walter Cronkite was, and will always be, the personification of those qualities."
"You miss these people who stand above the horizon a little bit and remind you where to look," said Diana Sawyer. "You miss people who seem to stand for… not just something… but stand for us."
"There were others and they were very good, but they were not Walter," said Barbara Walters. "No one has that voice today. No one has that power today, either in print or in radio or television and maybe that's not the worst thing."
"That's probably good that there will never be a most trusted man in America again. Because if we're not lucky enough to get Walter Cronkite… then we might be in a lot of trouble, if they were really trusted," said George Clooney.
"It just so happens that everybody’s trust was put in the right place. That's the lucky part of all this," said Mickey Hart.
"We were proud to work with him… for him. We loved him," said Mike Wallace.
"What I miss about Walter… is that at 2:30, 3:30 in the morning [he'd say] 'Let's have another drink. Let’s find another friendly saloon,'" recalled Morley Safer. "No, not the more do-er, First Amendment man, it was that wonderful, fun loving, life loving, kid really."
"You will never again have a day when one man or one woman says, 'Alright, listen up America. I'm gonna tell you what happened. And at the end I’m gonna say, and that's the way it was. And you’re gonna believe me,'" said Ted Koppel.
"I've been delighted that I’ve been able to be a journalist all my life," Cronkite said. "From the time I was a boy in high school until today…"
He later said, "I think it all worked out pretty well."
© MMIX, CBS Interactive Inc. All Rights Reserved.
- Is there a DVD available of this show? (That's the Way it Was: Remembering Walter Cronkite). I watched the show, and absolutely loved it, but my Dad wasn't able to watch it, and I'd love to give him a copy, as he used to watch Walter Cronkite religiously when we were growing up.
Please let me know how I can get a copy!
Thanks very much!
Elizabeth - Reply to this comment
- My heart ached when I heard my favorite Uncle Walter had passing away. I began to have flashes of memories from when I was little to grown man about how be was part of my life and how he affected me when some horrible things have happened. I still do not know how he did it but he always made me feel good about the world and my life in it. I still remember many times through out my life when he broke the news to me, such as assignation of president kenedy,race riots after Doctor Martin being killed and the Apollo astronauts being killed on the launch pad where just a few. He was always there and he always new just what to say to make me fell everything would be alright. He was the man that I look to for the right answers all though out my life.
In recent years I often wondered where my Uncle Walter went and I missed him being there for the answers I so desperately needed. I have grown away from the TV news for the truth and looked at our modern news reporting more as a soap opera dramatizing events to gain ratings instead of reporting the news as it really was. Uncle Walter I will miss your voice of wisdom and most of all the security that your life brought to my life. I miss you, I love you but I know that God has called you to heaven to help him make sense out of this chaotic.
In loving memory your nephew Joseph - Reply to this comment
- Dearest Andy,
I am almost 50 and have grown up with You, Walter and 60 Minutes.
Tonight was the first time I have ever known You to be at lose for words.
Thank you my friend, no words can articulate such a loss.
Volumes can be said by silence.
Respectfully
Annemarie M Kucner - Reply to this comment
- All of my earliest memories of the news are of Walter Cronkite. I remember sitting with my family, eating dinner with the portable TV in the kitchen playing the CBS Evening News & Cronkite giving the current death toll in Vietnam. As a kid I was a huge fan of the space program like most kids who were old enough to be aware of it in the late 60's. It was "Uncle Walter" who had the voice that opened the galaxy for me and millions of other kids across the country. It was that same Uncle who broke the news to us that our President was, indeed, a crook and guided us through the ugly & messy aftermath of those events.
I was born almost exactly a month after the assassination of President Kennedy and still wasn't quite old enough to understand what was going on when he reported the murders of Bobby Kennedy and Martin Luther King, Jr. Those reports were required viewing later in life, however, part of the official record of the those events.
I made a decision at an early age to become a writer & journalist and Walter Cronkite has always been the standard by which all other work in this field has been and will be judged.
And that's the way it was....
fade to black..... - Reply to this comment
- IF WALTER CRONKITE'S MENTORS EDWARD R MURROW-CHET HUNTLY--DAVID BRINKLY ETC COULD SEE THE WAY THE NEWS IS HANDLED TODAY, THEY WOULD TURN OVER IN THEIR GRAVES!!
WHAT A JOKE!!!
FIRST THE NEWS IS REPORTED--THEN A PANEL DECIDES WHETHER THEY LIKE IT--AND THEN THEY TAKE A POLL!!!
I REMEMBER WHEN THE NEWS WAS JUST "THE NEWS"!!!
DOES ANYONE REALIZE THAT OUR INFORMATION IS BEING DRIVEN BY TWITTER--BUZZ--FACEBOOK ETC???
NO WONDER PEOPLE CAN'T THINK STRAIGHT!!! - Reply to this comment
- And That?s the Way He Was
We call them national treasures, those handful of Americans we have in mind when we say they don?t make ?em like that anymore. Walter Cronkite was one of those people.
If Alexander Graham Bell was there to witness two cans getting strung together, Walter was no less pioneer-in-chief when the first television camera began broadcasting its blurry black and white image into our homes.
He was the voice from Middle America, the man who, although every region wanted to claim him, had an almost undetectable accent and whose political views were equally as undetectable.
Growing up in a North Louisiana in the early 60?s, our antenna could only get three TV channels so we had to choose each evening between Cronkite and Huntley-Brinkley. We chose Walter.
When the world seemed on the brink of something historic, our family especially turned to Walter. He had a calming effect.
Like the meteorologist you prefer to watch when the weather is beginning to turn bad, getting the news from Walter Cronkite was like getting the skinny from a kindly old grandfather who could pat you on the knee and say, ?Due to a malfunction, the astronauts are trapped in their space capsule and are in danger of not being able to make it home again. But don?t worry. I?ll be here to keep you informed if there?s any new news to report.?
We studied Walter?s face and knew he would do just what he said. You don?t get to be known as ?the most trusted man in America ? for nothing. We trusted him because he never gave us a reason not to.
If you are old enough to remember when Walter removed his glasses long enough to compose himself during his reporting of John F. Kennedy?s death or as he rubbed his sweaty palms together upon hearing the eagle had landed, you too got a peek inside of who the man was, just enough of glimpse to know that Walter was one of us.
As an experienced World War II United Press war correspondent, Walter had seen war up close. He covered battles in North Africa and Europe including the famous Battle of the Bulge. He had seen first hand what little glory there is for those who fight our wars.
In Viet Nam during the 1968 Tet Offensive, Walter donned a helmet and flak jacket to cover what was to be one of his toughest assignments.
After years of reporting to us that we were winning that war, he returned home to tell us the hard truth:
?To say that we are mired in stalemate seems the only realistic, yet unsatisfactory, conclusion?But it is increasingly clear to this reporter that the only rational way out then will be to negotiate, not as victors, but as an honorable people who lived up to their pledge to defend democracy, and did the best they could.?
After hearing the broadcast, it was later reported that President Lyndon Johnson said, ?If I've lost Cronkite, I've lost Middle America.?
Now not just Middle America, but all of America, has lost Cronkite.
Since he retired, we?ve had a sampling of those who have followed in his footsteps and, with the possible exception of Tom Brokaw and his work with the Greatest Generation, it seems few have the potential of filling his journalistic shoes, few of his successors have the potential to become a national treasure.
So that?s the way it is, Uncle Walter. We?ll just have to live with the fact that they just don?t make ?em like you anymore.
May you rest in peace. - Reply to this comment
- Hello Katie couric,I just wanted to say when i was born in 1961.Mr.cronkite Always made me so calm and comfortable.When I was about 3 years old my first and only presidet was shot down and murdered!!MR cronkite Sadly told us all the truth!!!Jfk was dead!!Wow my father had been in ww2 just to stop things such as this????Some how Mr cronkite explained It would be okay!!Some years went on and the apollo missions did go to the moon!!!Again Mr. cronkite Explained and told us the play by play. I was about 9 or so..I was playing with my german neighbor friends..My father said that we are going to walk on the moon!!!ALL the children from the hood watched with AHHH!!Mr Cronkite thank you....I watched you until you retired..And thats the way it is!!!I salute you Mr.cronkite..And to have such a remarkable person such as Katie couric to carry on...I have to rush home every night to get the truth from katie couric!!!!luv yu walter ..luv you Katie..Scott
- Reply to this comment
- To: CBS management and especially to the Producers of 60 Minutes ?That?s The Way It Was, Remembering Walter Cronkite?
Along with millions of other viewers, your program treated us to delightful glimpses of Walter Cronkite?s life and a wonderful chronology of world events over much of the last half of the 20th Century. But for me it was more than a review of his many contributions to reporting the news.
In this 60 Minutes we saw a perspective of the very American experience of world events through the eyes and voice of a non partisan reporter. The program portrayed a range of the human experiences we felt as the events of those past days unfolded - the deeds and emotions, mankind?s good and evil mixed with the joy and grief the news produced. Walter showed us the emotions he felt, not telling us how we should feel. He understood his role to provide us with the highest quality information on what he felt to be the most important events of the day, letting a better informed public make their own decisions about how to deal with it.
I believe we saw the powerful value of a free press, news presented in a very personal way, setting a very high bar for television journalism. Walter Cronkite understood the value of trust, both in his personal and professional life, earned over a lifetime with the potential of being lost in an instant. While his audience benefited from and was comforted by his reporting style, let us hope the ?Fourth Estate? reflects and uses his body of work as their standard.
My congratulations to CBS for supporting Walter Cronkite?s approach to reporting the ?way it was? and for commemorating him with this extraordinary piece.
Your Regular Viewer,
John M. Leap - Reply to this comment
- One News broadcast in the late 1980s closed with 'Uncle Walter' reading a letter from a little boy, who said he had to go to bed every night when Mr. Cronkite said, "Good night", and would Uncle Walter please, just once, NOT say, 'Good night"? So, after reading the letter on-the-air, Cronkite said, " And that's the way... This is Walter Cronkite, CBS News.". He left the "Good night" out of his sign off that one time for the boys sake.
- Reply to this comment
- I wanted to separate this comment from my previous. While I've been a big fan of Michael Jackson, as a nation we offered a giant of a man, an honorable man, Walter Cronkite a fraction of air as compared to Jackson. Cronkite deserved better, and in the end I truly feel that CBS was flawed in their coverage no differently then when then ran Mr. Cronkite out of town because of his age. On that day, on that day when Cronkite closed his last newscast, it was on that day that CBS not only lost a brilliant star, but lost it's presence in quality evening news. Since then, the ratings speak for themselves.
- Reply to this comment
- Mr. Cronkite, there has been no other like you. None, absolutely none. A true American hero, from war to the networks you lured us in with your honest approach, insightful brilliance, and welcoming smile. I am truly grateful that I lived the years, the Cronkite years, but quite sad it ended so many years back. Paley was a wrong, the 65 y/o thing was wrong, and so have been those who through today sit at the desk that you made famous. Thank you Mr. Cronkite, thank you.
- Reply to this comment
- Katie was so right-on with her opening remarks. Back in the 60's and early 70's we did not call it "the news." We had to go watch Walter.
- Reply to this comment
- Outstanding piece. Well done. Thank you for elegantly and respectfully capturing Walter Cronkite's life and the impact he had on so many of our lives.
Echoing the above comment, where may I purchase a DVD copy? - Reply to this comment
- CBS, can we purchase a DVD copy of the Remembering Walter tribute?
- Reply to this comment
- Thank you CBS for this wonderful tribute to a wonderful, truly honest and sincere man. I am 67 years old and remember sharing many evenings watching "Uncle Walter" bringing us the news "as it was" no frills, just good honest and through reporting wheather it was good or bad. I also remember his many special reports, interviews and documentaries.
Not many people know he was an Amateur Radio Operator (HAM) like myself, and I believe he had his transmitter on his boat. The final shots of the tribute showed him sailing, one of his loves besides his wife and family.
Again thank you for this well done piece of work and Im sure he would have been pleased with your work as well.
Sail on Walter, we will miss yoU! - Reply to this comment
- Well it is fitting that we are celebrating the 40th anniversary of Neil Armstrong's moon landing, at the very time that the most trusted man in America passed on from this planet.
I mean no ill will or disrespect for the long time news anchor; but I have only a single memory of his "news" broadcasts.
At the very second that Armstrong was giving his famous "one small step for man" speech on the moon, there was the most trusted man in America on CBS news flapping off at the mouth about some totally inconsequential tripe that nobody had any interest in hearing at that time.
They even caught that in the Movie "Apollo 13" since they showed that very same news clip in the movie.
Nothing has changed; news people still think the news is all about them. - Reply to this comment
- I did watch it on TV. I had to. I 'member watching Walter on the news as he was the one that told it like it was. His voice was one of a kind. I loved the space flights and Walter educated us as we watched. i listen for the who,what,when,where,why and how when reading the opening a story that has to do with the news then the details follow. I don't care for the sanitising of the news as it is lost when done. Life is not always pretty. Good and bad happen. Walter will be missed. News should be told the way it is. He came into our homes years ago. A gentleman. No I never met him. His voice was one we each could trust to tell it as it is. That seems to be missing today.
- Reply to this comment
- I was born in the last part of 1966. I was too young to know about the Vietnam war, the civil right problems or the Watergate breakins. Yet as I grew up, I became to know that every night my Dad would always turn on the CBS channel and watch Walter Cronkite. He became known as "Uncle Walter", not that he was a relative or anything, we did not know him at all, it was just that my whole family felt like we did and we knew that we could trust him. I remember his last broadcast on March 6th, 1981. I had it set to memory not to forget to watch it, and though I missed 10 seconds, it was some thing special. I was crying by the end. My parents began to watch the news on PBS as they did not trust anyone after that. Watching that wonderful special last night, well it was brilliant. Whoever was responcible for producing that, getting all of those interviews, really knew "Uncle Walter" and his mark of excellence. Even though "Uncle Walter" was a newsperson, would give us the news both good & bad it is not how I will remember him. I will remember him being a sailor and being at peace as he would glide through the ocean on his boat. He might have been the best reporter, the best person in news and most trusted, however sometimes those people when given a chance, they are also best out on nature, enjoying what they have and being at peace. So thank you again for that great special last night, it was absolutely brilliant. .....and may God Bless Walter Cronkite.
- Reply to this comment





