August 19, 2009

TV News Giant Don Hewitt Dies At 86

CBS News Legend And "60 Minutes" Creator's Career Spanned 60 Years

  • Video '60' Team Remembers Hewitt

    No man in television history accomplished more in an hour, than "60 Minutes" creator, Don Hewitt. As everyone pays tribute to Hewitt, members of the "60 Minutes" team remember Don Hewitt best.

  • Video TV News Giant Dies at 86

    Don Hewitt was a pioneer in broadcast Journalism; he helped create the blueprint for television news. He lost a battle with cancer at the age of 86.

    • Don Hewitt

      Don Hewitt  (CBS Photo Archive)

    •  (CBS)

    • Don Hewitt, right with Frank Sinatra in St. Louis, Missouri, as Sinatra prepares for a concert to benefit Dismas House on June 20, 1965.

      Don Hewitt, right with Frank Sinatra in St. Louis, Missouri, as Sinatra prepares for a concert to benefit Dismas House on June 20, 1965.  (CBS Photo Archive)

    • Don Hewitt, pointing, with President John F. Kennedy, seated, on December 16, 1962.

      Don Hewitt, pointing, with President John F. Kennedy, seated, on December 16, 1962.  (CBS Photo Archive)

    • Don Hewitt(left) with Edward R. Murrow on the set of SEE IT NOW.

      Don Hewitt(left) with Edward R. Murrow on the set of SEE IT NOW.  (CBS Photo Archive)

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  • Photo Essay Don Hewitt: 1922-2009

    A look at the career of the legendary CBS News producer and executive who created "60 Minutes"

  • Timeline Man Who Made "60 Minutes"

    A look at the life and career of broadcast journalism legend and "60 Minutes" creator Don Hewitt.

(CBS)  Don Hewitt, recognized as a father of modern television news and the creator of the medium's most successful broadcast, 60 Minutes, died of pancreatic cancer Wednesday. He was 86 and had homes in Manhattan and Bridgehampton, New York, where he was with family at the time of death.

Hewitt was executive producer of CBS News, the title he took when he stepped down from his post as executive producer of 60 Minutes in 2004.



This Sunday, Aug. 23 at 7 p.m. ET/PT: 60 Minutes will devote its entire hour to Hewitt. The 60 Minutes correspondents are working on individual segments that will tell the story of the legendary newsman's life, lasting contributions to the television news industry and especially their favorite stories about their boss and his times at 60 Minutes.



Hewitt's remarkable career in journalism spanned over 60 years, virtually all of it at CBS. As a young producer/director assisting at the birth of television news, it was usually Hewitt behind the scenes directing legendary CBS News reporters like Edward R. Murrow and Walter Cronkite, using a playbook he had to write himself.

He played an integral role in all of CBS News' coverage of major news events from the late 1940s through the 1960s, putting him in the middle of some of history's biggest events, including one of politics' seminal moments: the first televised presidential debate in 1960.

Hewitt produced and directed coverage for the three networks of the debate between Richard Nixon and John Kennedy, an event that instantly transferred the political king-making powers print news once held to a new and more powerful medium where appearances mattered. Critics have long maintained that Kennedy won the debate because he looked better. As Hewitt recalled in many interviews, he offered makeup to Kennedy first, who refused. Nixon, following Kennedy's cue, also refused. But the suntanned Kennedy was a vigorous contrast to Nixon, whose pasty complexion put his five o'clock shadow in high relief.

Hewitt often rued the day as the first step in the dangerous dance between politicians and the special interests that provide the big money to buy the now crucial political television advertising.



"It is a sad and difficult time for all of us who work at 60 Minutes. Don was a giant figure in our lives and will always have an impact on this broadcast - there's a part of him in every one of us, and it affects every decision we make. He will be remembered as a brilliant editor and story teller, an irrepressible force who changed journalism forever. Those of us who knew him and worked with him will remember him simply as a great guy to be around. He was full of life, usually armed with a joke, and he always found a way to make our stories better. I will miss Don very much." - Jeff Fager, executive producer, 60 Minutes.



Hewitt also directed the first network television newscast, featuring Douglas Edwards, on May 3, 1948. He was the executive producer of the first half-hour network newscast when the "CBS Evening News With Walter Cronkite" became the first to go to a 30-minute format on Sept. 2, 1963. Among Hewitt's innovations was the use of cue cards for newsreaders, the electronic version of which, the TelePrompTer, is still used today. He was the first to use "supers" - putting type in the lower third of the television screen. Another invention of Hewitt's was the film "double" - cutting back and forth between two projectors - an editing breakthrough that re-shaped television news. Hewitt also helped develop the positioning of cameras and reporters still used to cover news events, especially political conventions.


Photo Gallery: Don Hewitt 1922 - 2009

Photo Gallery: Reaction

Timeline: Hewitt's Life and Career

A Producer's Memories: Working For Don

CBS Pays Tribute to Don Hewitt


Hewitt had seemingly done it all for broadcast news when he topped those achievements by producing his magnum opus, the television news magazine 60 Minutes - a new concept that changed television news forever and became the biggest hit in the medium’s history. "His real monument is 60 Minutes," said another broadcasting legend, the late Roone Arledge, when he presented Hewitt with the Founder's Emmy in 1995. "He is truly an innovator in this business…[the news magazine] is an innovative format no one had done before. It's been copied all over the world…He's been a leader in our industry. He has inspired all sorts of people," said Arledge.

Hewitt's idea for 60 Minutes was to break up the traditional hour documentary into a three-segment magazine - a Life of the airwaves.

The 60 Minutes Debut:




Hewitt on Creating 60 Minutes:





It would work if he and his team could "package an hour of reality as compellingly as Hollywood packages an hour of make-believe," Hewitt often recalled. His first step was to pick a "white hat" and a "black hat." Hewitt put the black hat on the grand inquisitor, Mike Wallace, and made the avuncular Harry Reasoner the white hat to launch his news magazine on Sept. 24, 1968.

Don Hewitt Obituary:




Continued



© MMIX, CBS Interactive Inc. All Rights Reserved.
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by criseldaquiblat August 25, 2009 6:06 PM EDT
I came to America in 1985 and the first television program I saw was 60 Minutes. It was a Sunday evening in April and one of the stories was about a man named Farrakhan. From then on, I became a fan and indocrinated everyone in my household that 60 Minutes always tells the truth. I was sad about Harry and Ed's passing but never really knew this guy Don Hewitt. I do veer off on other networks sometimes but I always made sure that at 7 o'clock Sunday night, supper is done and I'm comfortably on the couch ready to watch another edition of 60 Minutes....
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by dburdick01 August 24, 2009 9:00 PM EDT
I have watched 60 Minutes every week almost from the first program. I believe the program you did last night was possible the best you have ever done! Don Hewitt would have been proud. You told us a great story. I know he would have loved to see it or even better have edited it. He was special person and I'm sure he is very proud of the job all of you did last night. I know I am.
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by alfonsoteja August 24, 2009 12:55 PM EDT
My name is Alfonso Teja. I am a mexican TV journalist and for ten years was a correspondent on our version of 60 minutes. Everyone there had the greatest respect for the original american team, and a special consideration for Don Hewitt, creator of the original idea and the motor drive on this step ahead kind of electronic journalism than 60 minutes put on the screen. Our deep prayers and condolences to the family and colleagues. He will be remembered.
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by eileenfleming August 23, 2009 8:07 PM EDT
The "Big Get" Don Hewitt Didn't Get:

"Sixty Minutes from the United States from the beginning they wanted to do a program, but because of the censor situation they decide not to do it."-Mordechai Vanunu, the Whistle Blower of Israel's WMD Program said in 2006.


In 2006, I mailed 60 Minutes a DVD copy of my "30 Minutes with Vanunu" which was taped a few weeks after Vanunu's Freedom of Speech trial began in Israel:

View it here:

http://video.google.com/videoplay?docid=-8079102468952529881&q

I never received a reply.

I have persisted in telling this story and "13 minutes with Vanunu" was taped in 2008:

View it here:

http://video.google.com/videoplay?docid=2059606750949786468&hl=en

A little history:

On January 25, 2006, Vanunu was convicted by the Jerusalem Magistrates Court of 15 violations of a military order that prohibited him from talking to non-Israelis and because he supposedly attempted to leave Israel by taking a cab to go from Jerusalem to Bethlehem to attend Christmas Eve mass at the Church of the Nativity in 2004.

The original indictment included 22 different violations; Vanunu was charged with 19 and acquitted of four. He was acquitted of speaking to foreign nationals on the internet and via video and voice chats.

On July 2, 2007, Israel sentenced Vanunu to six more months in jail for speaking to foreigners-who happened to be media-in 2004.

On September 23, 2008, the Jerusalem District Court reduced Vanunu?s sentence to three months, "In light of (Vanunu?s) ailing health and the absence of claims that his actions put the country?s security in jeopardy."

On June 14, 2009 Mordechai Vanunu told me during my 7th trip to Israel Palestine since 2005:

?The Central Commander of the General Army testified in court that it is OK if I speak in public as long as I do not talk about nuclear weapons.?

On July 6, 2009, Supreme Court President Dorit Beinish continued to deny Vanunu the right to leave the Jewish State, claiming his "case is still generating great interest, like any other security-related case. The media's attention he gets is proof of that."

Much more on this story at VANUNU ARCHIVES:
http://www.wearewideawake.org/
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by lporcaro August 23, 2009 7:59 PM EDT
Why was Dan Rather missing from this entire story? He certainly was a significant part of 60 Minutes.
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by finnyboy August 23, 2009 7:45 PM EDT
Thankyou for the retrospective. Now I understand why I have been such a fan of 60 MInutes for the last 30 years. I hope the integrity of his broadcast will continue.
Thankyou Don and Co.
Tracie Diederich
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by buenastardes August 23, 2009 6:58 PM EDT
What a brilliant and honorable gentleman. What a loss for all of us! Don was a man of good moral character and kudos to him for his guts, courage and bravery. I most respect him for his integrity. He was a pioneer, forging paths that hadn't yet been created. May he rest in peace and my condolences to his family, friends and of course his colleagues at 60 Minutes. We love 60 Minutes in this household. In fact, my husband has missed only maybe a handful of episodes since we've been married for 16 + years!! And it's because of the integrity of Don and the 60 Minutes crew!
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by smallmind August 21, 2009 9:03 PM EDT
Thanks for inventing ambush journalism, and teaching all the haircuts to lean left.
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by wyzguy11 August 21, 2009 11:22 PM EDT
Get a grip buddy. Before there was cable TV and FoxNews....people actually read papers and watched broadcast television to get their daily news and people like Don Hewitt actually had to "work" for a story........not brain dead rehashed mush we get from Fox.
by jab232 August 20, 2009 12:49 PM EDT
Hewitt came from a different era when the media tried to report, clarify, and expose corruption. Nowadays, too often that is not the case.

It is a whole lot cheaper to film rowdy town hall rallies than it is to do the kind of thing PolitiFact and FactCheck.org does. Check the facts and explain them clearly.

And it is a lot easier to have to talking partisans blabbering at each other than it is to do the kind of in-depth reporting the best 60 Minutes reporting represents.

Oh, that we could return to the old days.
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by sam-kiley August 20, 2009 4:44 AM EDT
bonjour
don hewitt, je connais, j'ai vu son nom a maintes reprises...j'ai regardé cbs evening aussi ..quel grand homme ce qui est dommage et désolant, c'est que ces grands journlistes sont souvent oubliés,
et on attend toujours leur déces pour leur rendre hommage, en parler longuement c'est bien mais il fallait le faire de son vivant, cela s'applque pour kronkite..etc..
repose en paix don hewitt condoléances a sa famille au revoir
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by Brucefff August 20, 2009 4:38 AM EDT
IN PLAIN WORDES DON IS ONE [1] OF A KINED!!! WILL NOT BE MISSED IN MY MINED!!! MY CONDOLANCES 2 THE FAMILY!!! bf 5
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by PanCANvolunteer August 19, 2009 11:50 PM EDT
I sympathize with Don Hewitt's family and colleagues. I hope their loss will bring awareness to the most fatal type of cancer--pancreatic cancer. Many of us have lost loved ones to this awful disease, for me it was my mother. I am a volunteer for the Pancreatic Cancer Action Network-Philadelphia Affiliate. There are many volunteers in the U.S. & around the world that dedicate their time & efforts to advance pancreatic cancer research, support pancreatic cancer patients, & create hope for them and their families. However, in terms of research funding, Pancreatic Cancer is where breast cancer was in the 1930's. You can contact the Pancreatic Cancer Action Network at their website, www.pancan.org to get the most up-to-date information on Pancreatic Cancer. Please dedicate some of your on-air time to familiarize the public with Pancreatic Cancer. This would demonstrate the appropriate respect for Mr. Hewitt and his legacy in television journalism.
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by onlystarspt2 August 19, 2009 6:56 PM EDT
Today on cbsnews.com, I have some sad news. Now that CNN News Team has lost a colleague yesterday, This is a meloncholy day for the cbs news family, the early show, sunday morning, face the nation and you and rest at 60 minutes. 1922-2009 is the born on this day and dead today at aged 86 when Don Hewitt loses his life. 60 Minutes will coordinate the loss of the creator who became a comentary and his new format. First we lost Eric Sevari, Douglas Edwards, Voiceover of the 50s, Charles Kuralt, Ike Pappas, Ed Bradley and Walter Cronkite Last Month. Now we saw an obit on your legendary figure. It's no wonder why obituaries include longtime CBS Newsman and Creator of 60 Minutes Don Hewitt. Kidney Failure at 86. A True professional magazine maker done with anchore on the green wall with special effects pioneer. And sadly Pancreatic Cancer with his family at his side survived by his wife, his sons, his daughters and great grandchildren took his own life. All the rest at CBS News helped make 60 minutes before some of these other shows a simple ticking and tocking of the clock and the sound effect I heard most of all was when I was a little baby. But I what life's about after the loss of your colleague Ed Bradley in 2008. He made Andy Rooney show a little respect as we look back at Ed's Career and now sunday mourn 60 Minutes' loss Long after he's gone. Condolences to the men and women with Only CBS News and WRAL.
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by G-I_Jesus August 19, 2009 6:26 PM EDT
Get Your News From The Internet

News nowadays is fed to us already digested. Don Hewitt's Sixty Minutes gave us a look at what the news should look like. Too bad nobody listened...
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by thgdriver August 19, 2009 6:19 PM EDT
The interview with Vick on CBS/60 Minutes must have been the last straw a good man like Don could live with. CBS has fallen a long way from the days of Ed Murrow, Walt Cronkite, and Don Hewitt. Too bad, they once had some credibility now they try to get all the millage they can off the likes of Vick.

Mike Vick does not belong in the NFL, he does not belong on the Eagles Team, he does not rate an interview anywhere let alone 60 minutes.

Sorry Don, the CBS I remember and you help build does not exist anymore. RIP!!
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by lasvegastea1 August 19, 2009 5:41 PM EDT
Goodbye Don, I can only pray someone with your guts, determination, and creativity will dare to walk in your shoes. We need innovators in news reporting who can return integrety to that profession. You were once stumped by big business (the tobacco industry) but came through in the end. Big business is dominating the news outlets today. We need heros like you who will dare to challenge them.
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by credibility2 August 19, 2009 4:37 PM EDT
Those that celebrate the death of another they didn't like, know or despised are evil incarnate and immoral. No one's death should be celebrated.
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by credibility2 August 19, 2009 4:35 PM EDT
God bless his departed soul and comfort his family and friends. He was a man of integrity and creative genius. He'll be sorely missed.
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by donnerwetter August 19, 2009 1:35 PM EDT
I hope God will have mercy on his sole. Amen
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by jab232 August 19, 2009 1:25 PM EDT
He was part of the news establishment when its purpose was to report and clarify. Now, most news organizations just compound the confusion.
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