The day after one of my heroes was murdered, I didn’t know exactly how important or relevant was this personal tragedy.
Walter Cronkite made it clear.
It was Dec. 9, 1980, the day after John Lennon was shot to death in New York City. The news broke in the most startling, out-of-context way, that it’s still hard to grasp: Howard Cosell announced it during a “Monday Night Football” game pitting the New England Patriots against the Miami Dolphins. “… probably the most famous of all The Beatles,” Cosell intoned, as if calling the kickoff to the Super Bowl. But what does this mean? Not much to my schoolmates at Bidwell Junior High School in Chico, Calif. Throughout the day after Lennon’s assassination, many teenagers mistakenly thought actor Jack Lemmon had been shot. Lennon had just made an album, "Double Fantasy," but resided almost completely out of the public eye for the previous five years. I was an oddity, a rabid Beatles fans amid kids who were embracing the likes of AC/DC, Queen and Blondie.
That night I watched the news. There was no other nightly national newscast than “The CBS Evening News,” and it played each night at our house. I thought I’d have to ride out the entirety of the newscast to get to the mention of John Lennon’s murder. Not so. It was the lead story. As I remember Cronkite's words, and I’ve not seen this clip anywhere since, it was, “On a night when war rages in Afghanistan and Americans are held hostage in Iran, our attention turns instead to the death of a rock and roll star.” The wording might not have been exactly that (and searching far and wide for exact verbiage is not the point here), but I do remember how simply yet powerfully Cronkite explained the cultural ramifications of John Lennon’s death. Larger than our hostages, which were so pertinent we counted each day by marking off calendar dates. Larger than the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan, which prompted our president to keep our athletes home rather than allow them to compete in the Summer Olympics in Moscow.
There were other massively important news events over the span of those years. Lunar landings. Nixon’s resignation. Presidential funerals. Each time, when Mom and Dad said, “Watch this. It’s history,” Cronkite was the one telling us what happened, and why it should be remembered.
I didn’t realize it at the time, but we were fortunate to grow up with him delivering the news of the day. I never imagined I’d feel lucky for that, but in the hours after his death at age 92, I do. His influence will never be matched, the broadcast journalism field so thinned out compared to the reach of the major networks of the 1960s and ’70s. But at a time when Cronkite could so powerfully sway public opinion, when he could have easily assembled a nation of followers so vast that by comparison today’s “Dittoheads” would look like a chess club, he held the reins and told the truth. In return, we trusted him entirely, and what we’re hearing in the immediate aftermath from those who followed Cronkite is we will not see his type again, ever.
In this instance, they all got the story right.
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RIP Walter. And that's the way it was.
We share that memory of John Lennon's Death and it is the most personally quoted Cronkite moment I remember and relate. I may be wrong, (like you, I've tried to locate the exact wording), but I believe Mr. Cronkite said "...our attention turns instead to a man who played the guitar."
The measured understatement threw me into a shiver and I flooded tears. No other man could have delivered the story with more respect and matter-of-fact elegance.
I didn't watch MNF back then, so I first heard about John Lennon's death at school the next morning. All of my classmates knew who he was, because we had all studied the Beatles in 8th grade music class the year before (thank you, Mr. Nielsen).
I will remember Walter Cronkite most fondly for the things he did after his retirement from the CBS Evening News, narrating quality documentaries, as well as the history of human communication for the "Spaceship Earth" ride at Disney's EPCOT Center.
The most trust man in America. - I believe I'm quoting that correctly, if not it's close. Be that as it may, I remember watching him at my grandparent's home when I was a child (we had no t.v.).
RIP. And that's the way it was.
Google is your friend:
http://www.dailymotion.com/video/x9gm9f_...
"The death of a man who sang and played the guitar overshadows the news from Poland, Iran and Washington tonight," is the actual quote. Same effect, though. Thank you, johnny-canuck.
It would be great if "journalists" would pause and think about how a reporter could be the most trusted man in America. Now it seems that there are more political activists masquerading as reporters than true journalists. Indeed, you now need to know the political stance of the entire news organization that you choose to get your news from. As I listen and read about the things that people say about Walter Cronkite, many say that while he was a newsman most were not aware of his political views. We would be much better off with news that is honest and without bias. In fact now more than ever with one party in complete control, the country is in desperate need of a watchdog media instead of what we have today. I hope that this will be Mr. Cronkite's legacy.
I grew up with this guy and I would never have called him the most trusted anything. You're kidding right?
Any living Vietnam combat vets who were in country when "The most trusted man in America" proclaimed after TET that the war was lost? Did you appreciate these comments? I posted I was not happy with those comments 'Uncle Walter" uttered in my local paper (San Jose) and was immediately flamed by many I assumed read about or escaped the war in safety. Maybe my memory (or I) am going soft, by my life became much more dangerous thanks to media-bought and paid for Cronkite. Correct me if I am wrong here, but Cronkite was No Friend of Viet Nam vets. Great Job WW2, etc, but also remember a man named Murrow for that as well... F Cronkite. Let him lie down next to warmonger McNamara who recently got his too... 56,000 dead Viet Nam heroes and their families do not weep for Cronkite today.