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Dan Rather
Biography Filmography Links Contact Galleries Date of birth:31 October 1931
Rather was born in Wharton, Texas, the son of Daniel Irvin Rather Sr. and his wife, the former Byrl Veda Page. In 1953 he received a bachelor's degree in journalism from Sam Houston State Teachers College where he was editor of the school newspaper, The Houstonian. Rather began his career in 1950 as an Associated Press reporter in Huntsville, Texas. Later, he was a reporter for United Press International (1950–1952), several Texas radio stations, and the Houston Chronicle (1954–1955). In 1959, he entered television as a reporter for KTRK-TV in Houston. Prior to joining CBS News, Rather was news director for KHOU-TV, the CBS affiliate in Houston.
In 1961, Rather reported live from the Galveston seawall as Hurricane Carla threatened the Texas coastline. This action, which has been imitated by countless other reporters to this day, impressed the network executives at CBS, and they hired him as a CBS News correspondent in 1962. In his autobiography, Rather notes that back then TV stations didn't have their own radar systems, and of course nobody then had the modern computerized radar that combines the radar image with an outline map. So he took a camera crew to a US Navy radar station in Galveston, where a technician drew a rough outline of the Gulf of Mexico on a sheet of plastic, and held that over the radar display to give Rather's audience an idea of the storm's size and position. Rather—quite by accident, as described in his autobiography—was the first television journalist to report that President John F. Kennedy had died of wounds received from an assassin. He is also known by Kennedy researchers to have seen the Zapruder film taken by an eyewitness to the passing Dallas motorcade and incorrectly reported that JFK's head went "violently forward" when he was hit. In fact it went violently backwards. Rather's reporting during the national mourning period following the Kennedy assassination and subsequent events brought him to the attention of CBS News management, which rewarded him in 1964 with the network's White House correspondent position. After serving as a foreign correspondent for CBS News, he drew the assignment as primary anchor for the CBS Sunday Night News, while serving as White House correspondent during the Richard Nixon presidency. His hard punching coverage of the Watergate Investigation and Impeachment proceedings became legendary. After President Nixon's resignation, Rather took the assignment of chief correspondent for CBS News Special Reports. He later became a correspondent of the long-running Sunday night news show 60 Minutes, just as the program was moved from a Sunday afternoon timeslot to primetime. Success there brought Rather in line to succeed Walter Cronkite as main anchor and Managing Editor of the CBS Evening News. Rather assumed the position upon Cronkite's retirement, making his first broadcast on March 9, 1981. From the beginning of his tenure, it was clear that Rather had a significantly different style of reporting the news. In contrast to the avuncular Cronkite, who ended his newscast with "That's the way it is," Dan Rather searched to find a broadcast ending more suitable to his tastes. For one week during the mid-1980s, Rather had tried ending his broadcasts with the word "courage" and was roundly ridiculed for it. He eventually found a wrap up phrase more modest than Cronkite's and more relaxed than his own previous attempts. For nearly two decades Rather ended the show with "That's part of our world tonight." While Rather had inherited Cronkite's ratings lead and held it for a few years, his ratings declined as his network competition changed. Simultaneously, CBS went through an institutional crisis and ultimate purchase by Laurence Tisch. When Dan Rather took the helm at the CBS News anchor desk the United States had only three commercial television networks: CBS, NBC and ABC. When he retired the three commercial networks were in competition with many more news outlets, including FOX, CNN and the internet. These broadcast competitors have dampened the financial resources of the "Big Three" networks. In 1984, Tisch oversaw the layoffs of thousands of CBS News employees, including numerous correspondents such as David Andelman, Fred Graham, Morton Dean, and Ike Pappas. Fewer videotape crews were dispatched to cover stories, numerous bureaus were shuttered. The Evening News was transformed overnight from a newscast featuring enterprise reports from seasoned CBS News correspondents to one in which Rather would read "voice-over" stories to footage shot by other news organizations. The events depicted in the movie Broadcast News are thought to closely parallel those of CBS' downsizing; Rather is thought by many to be the model for the part played by Jack Nicholson, the anchor whose own astronomical salary was deemed sacrosanct as the little people were let go. For a short time from 1993 to 1995, Rather co-anchored the evening news with Connie Chung. Chung had anchored short news updates for a number of years. Once joining the Evening News, however, she became embroiled in distracting and embarrassing attempts to hound "pop news" stories. One famous incident had her on an airplane interviewing Tonya Harding, accused of being behind the plot to injure fellow Olympic ice skater Nancy Kerrigan. The Rather-Chung duo was cancelled and Rather went back to doing the newscast solo. At the end of Rather's career, the CBS Evening News had fallen to a distant last place in network viewership. Although still garnering some 7 million viewers each evening, the broadcast was behind NBC Nightly News and ABC World News Tonight and the networks were all losing influence to cable and the internet news. Rather's departure from the anchor chair was troubling for CBS, as his journalistic credentials were questioned during the 2004 Presidential campaign between George W. Bush and John Kerry. Rather retired, possibly under pressure, as the anchor of the CBS evening news at 7:00 eastern time, 9 March 2005. Rather is also a columnist whose work is distributed by King Features Syndicate. His daughter, Robin, is an environmentalist and community activist in Austin, Texas. [edit] CBS apparently considered firing Rather; its news president met with administration official John Ehrlichman to discuss the situation. According to NBC’s Tom Brokaw, the network considered hiring him as its White House correspondent to replace Rather. But these plans were scrapped after word was leaked to the press. The controversy did little to dent Rather's overall tough coverage of the Watergate scandal which helped to raise his profile. [edit] Later on during the 1980s, Rather gained further renown to some for his forceful and skeptical reporting on the Iran-Contra Affair that eventually led to an on-air confrontation he had with then-Vice President of the United States George H. W. Bush: Bush referred to Rather's "dead air incident" saying, "I want to talk about why I want to be President, why those 41 percent of the people are supporting me. And I don't think it's fair to judge my whole career by a rehash on Iran. How would you like it if I judged your career by those seven minutes when you walked off the set in New York?" This incident was widely believed to have been a notable event in Bush's campaign to win the presidency in the 1988 election. It also marked the beginning of Rather's ratings decline, a slump from which he never recovered. Bush never forgave him and refused to grant Rather an interview after their initial tangle. His son George W. Bush has apparently followed suit, and declined to grant Rather an interview during his presidency. Shortly after the Gulf War began, Dan Rather secured an interview with Iraqi leader Saddam Hussein, which, among other things, captured the flavor of Saddam's boldness towards the U.S. [1] "There is no powerful and quick strike that a people could deliver, whatever their overall power. The United States depends on the Air Force. The Air Force has never decided a war in the history of wars." On February 24, 2003, Rather conducted another very famous interview of Saddam Hussein before the 2003 Invasion of Iraq. In the interview, Saddam invited Rather to be the moderator for a live television debate between Saddam and George W. Bush. The debate never took place. [edit] In their book Stolen Valor: How the Vietnam Generation Was Robbed of its Heroes and its History, authors B. G. Burkett and Glenna Whitley said they had obtained the service records of all six men, documenting where each was stationed during the Vietnam War. According to the records, the authors said, only one of the men was actually in Vietnam; he claimed to have been a 16-year-old Navy SEAL but, said Burkett and Whitley, the records listed him as an equipment repairer. [edit] [edit] Rather is still a reporter for 60 Minutes. Since retiring, he has been on a speaking tour across the United States. On January 24, 2006, Rather spoke to a Seattle audience. Before the speaking engagement, he told a newspaper reporter, "In many ways on many days, [reporters] have sort of adopted the attitude of 'go along, get along.'" "What many of us need is a spine transplant," Rather added. "Whether it's City Hall, the State House, or the White House, part of our job is to speak truth to power." [3] [edit] [edit] Conflict along these lines most recently came to light when he refused to run stories about Chandra Levy, a former Congressional intern who went missing for several months before her remains were found in Washington Rock Creek Park about two miles from The White House. Levy disappeared while having an affair with U.S. Rep. Gary Condit (D-Calif.). Because of the congressman's intimate association with her, he was a suspect in her disappearance. During most of the search for Levy, Rather refused to run any stories about the case and routinely condemned his colleagues off the air for giving airtime to the search for her. Shortly thereafter in 2002, the American press began focusing on kidnappings (especially of children like Elizabeth Smart). This time, Rather followed suit in reporting the story. His defenders interpreted the move as an indication that Rather's authority within CBS News had declined, and that he was unable to insist on a more traditionalist approach. His critics interpreted this as his partisanship for refusing to report the Levy story. During a March 7, 2005 appearance on CNN, former CBS anchor Walter Cronkite said about Rather: "It surprised quite a few people at CBS and elsewhere that, without being able to pull up the ratings beyond third in a three-man field, that they tolerated his being there for so long." Another rationale, however, was that the lead-in from the local news stations in a few markets contributed to the lower ratings for Rather's program. Cronkite also stated that Bob Schieffer's succession was long overdue. For his part, Rather said he would not respond to Cronkite's "mudsliging". Back in 1981, Cronkite had vehemently denied he had been forced out by Rather's rising star, but his comments on CNN led many to believe that that had been the case. Conservatives dating back to Richard Nixon have complained for years that Rather's reporting reflected a liberal bias. [edit] As Rather approached the delegate to question the apparent strong-arm tactics of the Chicago political machine, he was punched in the stomach by one of the men, knocking him to the ground. "He lifted me right off the floor and put me away. I was down, the breath knocked out of me, as the whole group blew on by me...In the CBS control room, they had switched the camera onto me just as I was slugged." [edit] The incident and Rather's account led some to doubt the veracity of Rather's story, although the doorman and building supervisor who rescued Rather fully confirmed his version of events. The story entered popular lore and remained unsolved for some time. The incident inspired a song called "Kenneth, What's the Frequency?" by the band Game Theory in 1987, and in 1994 the band R.E.M. released the more widely-known song "What's the Frequency, Kenneth?" on the album Monster. It became the subject of many jokes over the years and slang for a confused or clueless person. Rather was a good sport about it, and actually sang with the band when they performed the song on the David Letterman show. In 1997, a TV critic writing in the New York Daily News claimed to have solved the mystery, and published a photo of the alleged assailant, William Tager. Rather confirmed the story: "There's no doubt in my mind that this is the person." Tager is currently serving a 25-year prison sentence for killing NBC stagehand Campbell Montgomery outside The Today Show studio in 1994. According to the theory, Tager, who is apparently mentally disturbed, was convinced that the news media was beaming signals into his head. It is further alleged, that he demanded that Rather tell him the frequency of the signals. Why he would refer to Rather as "Kenneth" remains a mystery although some have speculated that Tager, being Jewish, was actually saying "Goniff, what is the frequency?" (Goniff being Yiddish for a thief or dishonest person). In the December 2001 issue of Harper's Magazine, writer Paul Limbert Allman concluded that Prof. Donald Barthelme (who died in 1989) had somehow orchestrated the attack through other unnamed persons, citing unusual passages in Barthelme's writing, including the phrase "What is the frequency?", a recurring character named Kenneth, and short story about a pompous editor named Lather. [4] [edit] [edit] The then US Vice-President George H.W. Bush referred to the incident in an interview with Rather during the 1988 US Presidential Campaign saying, "I want to talk about why I want to be president, why those 41 percent of the people are supporting me. And I don't think it's fair to judge my whole career by a rehash on Iran. How would you like it if I judged your career by those seven minutes when you walked off the set in New York?" [edit] [edit] "This race is shakier than cafeteria Jell-O." Newspapers and magazines are fond of compiling his expressions, and many people enjoyed tuning in to Rather's broadcasts in the hopes he'd say something amusing. [edit] According to journalist Cliff Jahr, Rather said, "As a reporter - and I don't want to say that that's the only context - I've tried everything. I can say to you with confidence, I know a fair amount about LSD. I've never been a social user of any of these things, but my curiosity has carried me into a lot of interesting areas." [7] [8] "Larry King Live"
- Episode dated 20 September 2005 (2005) TV Episode .... Himself - Episode dated 8 August 2005 (2005) TV Episode .... Himself - Episode dated 2 June 2005 (2005) TV Episode .... Himself - Episode dated 28 November 2004 (2004) TV Episode .... Himself - Episode dated 29 June 2004 (2004) TV Episode .... Himself (4 more) The 57th Annual Primetime Emmy Awards (2005) (TV) .... Himself "Late Show with David Letterman" ... aka Late Show Backstage (USA: title for episodes with guest hosts) ... aka The Late Show (USA: informal short title) - Episode dated 3 March 2005 (2005) TV Episode .... Himself - Episode dated 20 October 1993 (1993) TV Episode .... Himself "The Charlie Rose Show" - Episode dated 31 January 2005 (2005) TV Episode .... Himself Why We Fight (2005) .... Himself (CBS News) 25th Annual News and Documentary Emmy Awards (2004) (TV) .... Presenter WMD: Weapons of Mass Deception (2004) .... Himself Barbecue: A Texas Love Story (2004) .... Himself Feeding the Beast: The 24-Hour News Revolution (2004) (TV) .... Himself Intimate Portrait: Paula Zahn (2002) (TV) .... Himself Breaking the News (2001) (TV) .... Himself "The Rosie O'Donnell Show" - Episode dated 15 June 2001 (2001) TV Episode .... Himself - Episode dated 9 June 1999 (1999) TV Episode .... Himself "The O'Reilly Factor" - Episode dated 15 May 2001 (2001) TV Episode .... Himself "60 Minutes II" (1999) TV Series .... Himself - Correspondent (1999-2005) Man on the Moon (1989) (V) .... Presenter "The Merv Griffin Show" "CBS Evening News with Walter Cronkite" (1962) TV Series .... Himself - Correspondent
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