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The CBS Morning News title was originally used as the name of a conventional morning news program that served as a predecessor to the network's current CBS Mornings.For most of the 1960s and 1970s, the program aired as a 60-minute hard news broadcast at 7:00 a.m., preceding Captain Kangaroo and airing opposite the first hour of NBC's Today.
In 1982, Kurtis joined Diane Sawyer on The CBS Morning News, the network broadcast from New York City. The two were also on the CBS Early Morning News, which aired an hour earlier on most CBS stations. He also anchored three CBS Reports: The Plane That Fell from the Sky, The Golden Leaf, and The Gift of Life. He returned to WBBM-TV in 1985.
It is the 11th distinct weekday morning news-features program format aired by CBS since 1954, and the 10th attempt to do so since CBS resumed programming in that time slot in 1963. It serves as a direct replacement for the second incarnation of CBS This Morning .
During the presidential elections of 1952 and 1956 Cronkite hosted the CBS news-discussion series Pick the Winner. Another of his network assignments was The Morning Show, CBS' short-lived challenge to NBC's Today in 1954. [16] His on-air duties included interviewing guests and chatting with a lion puppet named Charlemane about the news. [30]
The CBS Evening News is a daily evening broadcast featuring news reports, feature stories and interviews by CBS News correspondents and reporters covering events around the world. The program has been broadcast since July 1, 1941, under the original title CBS Television News, eventually adopting its existing title in 1963.
Anthology series; aired some adventure and drama episodes in 1965 5 For the People: January 31, 1965: May 9, 1965: 1 Our Private World: May 5, 1965: September 10, 1965: 1 Lost in Space: September 15, 1965: March 6, 1968: 3 The Wild Wild West: September 17, 1965: April 4, 1969: 4 The Loner: September 18, 1965: March 12, 1966: 1 Daktari: January ...
CBS This Morning did not produce a Sunday edition as a result of the long-running CBS News Sunday Morning, a newsmagazine that debuted in 1979 (and is a remnant of a short-lived reformatting of the original CBS Morning News broadcast that lasted until 1982).
Charles Bishop Kuralt (September 10, 1934 [1] – July 4, 1997) was an American television, newspaper and radio journalist and author. [2] [3] He is most widely known for his long career with CBS, first for his "On the Road" segments on The CBS Evening News with Walter Cronkite, and later as the first anchor of CBS News Sunday Morning, a position he held for fifteen years. [4]