Perhaps inadvertently, the text of the Associated Press's earliest video coverage (scroll down the right frame at the link) of Walter Cronkite's death would appear to say a lot about how journalists see themselves -- and it's not as objective communicators of what is occurring in the world:
Cronkite: "Hello, I'm Walter Cronkite."
AP's Diane Kepler, narrator: He was the most trusted man in America.
Cronkite (November 22, 1963): From Dallas, Texas, the flash apparently official. President Kennedy died at 1PM Central Standard Time, 2 o'clock Eastern Standard Time, some 38 minutes ago.
DK: Walter Cronkite, for many the quintessential TV journalist, has died. For most Americans he was the man to turn to on everything from the assassination of President Kennedy to what to think about the war in Vietnam.
Cronkite (1968): But it is increasingly clear to this reporter that the only rational way out then would be to negotiate, not as victims, but as an honorable people, who lived up to their pledge to defend democracy, and did the best they could.
DK: He covered battlefields, the coronation of Queen Elizabeth, and was a familiar presence to all of the presidents he covered. But it was his presence and his ability to tell a story with his Midwestern intonations that endeared him to Americans from coast to coast, always promising always to report an event the way it is.
Cronkite (apparently in the late 1950s or 1960, ahead of an interview with John F. Kennedy): Our interview with the Senator will be entirely unrehearsed. It will be spontaneous, it will not be edited. The questions have not been submitted to Mr. (John F.) Kennedy in advance. And I will be asking them of him for the first time.
DK: His familiarity led many to call him "Uncle Walter," and even though he didn't know them personally, he sometimes shared America's enthusiasm on the air, like when man first walked on the moon.
Cronkite (July 20, 1969): "Man on the moon!"
Apollo 11's Neil Armstrong: Houston, Tranquility Base here. The Eagle has landed.
Cronkite: Boy!
Apollo 11's Neil Armstrong: We're going to be busy for a minute.
DK: Cronkite left the anchor desk in 1981, handing the reins over to Dan Rather. However, Cronkite wouldn't soon disappear from the landscape. He backed then-President Clinton when he was suffering from the Lewinsky scandal. He also condemned former President George W. Bush's decision to go to war in Iraq.
Cronkite: If the war we are fighting cannot be sustained with the people knowing what it takes to win that war, then we shouldn't be there in first place."
DK: Walter Cronkite, dead at the age of 92. Diane Kepling, the Associated Press.
Cross-posted at BizzyBlog.com.
—Tom Blumer is president of a training and development company in Mason, Ohio, and is a contributing editor to NewsBusters




















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Uncle
July 18, 2009 - 18:42 ET by Vivaldi5The calling of Cronkite "Uncle Walter" couldn't help but remind me of an affectionate name paid in tribute to another man of the left--"Uncle Joe," a/k/a Joseph Stalin.
"Uncle Walter" was perhaps not quite as red as "Uncle Joe," but he certainly did subscribe to most of the laundry list of leftist causes, from global warming to one-worldism to opposition to the war in Iraq. That's what I'm going to remember about Cronkite--not all the "most trusted man in America" blarney.
V5... Same
July 18, 2009 - 20:29 ET by bigtimerV5...
Same here.
Doubling down on stupid is not a particularly good idea. ~Andrew Breitbart
"And That's the way it is"...
July 18, 2009 - 20:07 ET by kch50428Really wasn't. It's what he wanted us to know - true, or not.
" ... to what to
July 18, 2009 - 20:22 ET by ddm" ... to what to think about the war in Vietnam." says it all. Lets tell them how to view an issue, not the facts of the issue so they can think for themselves. Very telling indeed.
cronkite
July 18, 2009 - 20:45 ET by charlietexaswhat an arrogant sob. uncle walter was a snob. I'm from Texas and went to Texas U. He made a commercial for the University back a few years and our statement was "We're Texas". When he said it, I thought it was the most stuck up, arrogant motto we could have ever imagined.
He was a pacifist and proved it when he put many soldiers in jeopardy in Viet Nam. He personally crossed the journalist line with his personal calling for a truce in the Viet Nam conflict. His definition of going to war in the video shows just how powerful and naive he was. Surprising since he went through WWII. I would venture to say that no one in the United States knew when we entered WWII what it would take to sustain us. I think he might well have said "when your country has the WILL to WIN".
We did in WWII. Our peacenicks were out in force in Viet Nam and Iraq. Uncle Walter was right there beside them supporting the peacenicks. sorry Uncle Walter. bye, bye. There is no telling how many boys we lost because of you.
Of all the quotes from this
July 18, 2009 - 20:52 ET by ConservativeRexOf all the quotes from this now deceased windbag the one that sticks upmost in my mind is when he said just a couple of years ago..." I can see myself married to a man...." when discussing the 'gay marriage' bullcrap.
That pretty well sums up this windbag. He wasn't Texas, he was Upper West side Manhatten ultra-radical liberal.
CRex... That is one I
July 18, 2009 - 20:55 ET by bigtimerCRex...
That is one I missed regarding Uncle Walt, never heard that... you summed it up well.
Doubling down on stupid is not a particularly good idea. ~Andrew Breitbart
GONE & FORGOTTEN
July 18, 2009 - 21:29 ET by Der AlteI am sorry for his family at his passing. Other than that I will not miss him. One less liberal talking head newscaster!
Yes, Cronkite was the
July 19, 2009 - 05:37 ET by usinkoreaYes, Cronkite was the perfect example of what the media became and is today and how they feel about themselves:
They get a BA or MA in journalism, and that gives them the ability to offer "analysis" on everything from military straetgy to economics to foreign affairs to even geophysics --- analysis that the ignorant masses would be well advised to listen to --- and when those ignorant masses won't, the media babies ridicule them.
Walter Crokite helped make journalists in America bloggers before blogging...
Cronkite
July 19, 2009 - 09:32 ET by regimeofterrorSadly, it looks like the media loves Cronkite because he helped moved the media's role (in their eyes) from reporting to activism.
Saddam Hussein and terrorism. Working on telling the WHOLE story...http://www.regimeofterror.com