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IMDbPro

CBS Evening News with Walter Cronkite

  • TV Series
  • 1941–2025
  • 15m
IMDb RATING
6.6/10
199
YOUR RATING
CBS Evening News with Walter Cronkite (1941)
News

On May 3, 1948 Douglas Edwards begins "The CBS-TV News," a regular 15-minute nightly newscast later named "Douglas Edwards with the News." It is broadcast weeknights at 7:30 PM and is the fi... Read allOn May 3, 1948 Douglas Edwards begins "The CBS-TV News," a regular 15-minute nightly newscast later named "Douglas Edwards with the News." It is broadcast weeknights at 7:30 PM and is the first regularly scheduled television news program in American history.On May 3, 1948 Douglas Edwards begins "The CBS-TV News," a regular 15-minute nightly newscast later named "Douglas Edwards with the News." It is broadcast weeknights at 7:30 PM and is the first regularly scheduled television news program in American history.

  • Stars
    • Douglas Edwards
    • Dan Rather
    • Walter Cronkite
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.6/10
    199
    YOUR RATING
    • Stars
      • Douglas Edwards
      • Dan Rather
      • Walter Cronkite
    • 8User reviews
    • 1Critic review
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Won 2 Primetime Emmys
      • 11 wins & 18 nominations total

    Episodes2387

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    Top cast99+

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    Douglas Edwards
    Douglas Edwards
    • Self - Host
    • 1948–1962
    Dan Rather
    Dan Rather
    • Self - Anchor…
    • 1941–2025
    Walter Cronkite
    Walter Cronkite
    • Self - Anchor…
    • 1962–1981
    Joe Cipriano
    Joe Cipriano
    • Self - Announcer
    • 2019–2020
    Bob Schieffer
    Bob Schieffer
    • Self - Anchor…
    • 1941–2025
    Norah O'Donnell
    Norah O'Donnell
    • Self - Anchor…
    • 2019–2025
    Robert J. Thompson
    Robert J. Thompson
    • Self
    • 2000–2005
    Kimberly Dozier
    • Self - Correspondent
    • 2003–2005
    Roger Mudd
    Roger Mudd
    • Self - Anchor…
    • 1963–1980
    John Roberts
    John Roberts
    • Self - Chief White House Correspondent & Substitute Anchor…
    • 2003–2005
    Robert Pierpoint
    Robert Pierpoint
    • Self - Correspondent…
    • 1963–1981
    Tom Fenton
    • Self…
    • 1941–2005
    Charles Kuralt
    Charles Kuralt
    • Self - Correspondent…
    • 1968–1975
    Lesley Stahl
    Lesley Stahl
    • Self - Correspondent…
    • 1974–2005
    Allen Pizzey
    • Self - Correspondent
    • 2004–2005
    Bill Plante
    Bill Plante
    • Self - Correspondent
    • 1968–1980
    Richard Threlkeld
    Richard Threlkeld
    • Self - Correspondent…
    • 1968–1989
    Ronald Reagan
    Ronald Reagan
    • Self…
    • 1980–1988
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews8

    6.6199
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    Featured reviews

    9Catherine_Grace_Zeh

    Good news magazine show

    "CBS EVENING NEWS WITH DAN RATHER," in my opinion, was a good news magazine show. During the time he was on the air, I enjoyed seeing Dan Rather as the main anchor. Until he retired, I thought he had been terminated. When I leaned the truth, I was really sad. If you ask me, it seems that nobody stays with a TV show throughout its entire run anymore. Still, I enjoyed hearing him report about what was happening in the world. I still think about him to this day. The only thing I didn't like hearing about was when someone had been murdered or gone missing. Now, in conclusion, I'd like to say that Dan Rather was a fine reporter who will be sorely missed.
    1calind-71121

    New Please, Only News

    Today, unfortunately without Nora, in a less than neutral reporting of what Trump said in California regarding the water shortage during firefighting, you put the blame on an empty reservoir, & not at all the refusal of allowing the pumping of water from Northern California. 1. If a reservoir was empty, it should be considered criminally negligent to not have a back-up source to supply the needs/requirements of the areas affected. 2. This state has put the needs of a 3" fish, the Delta Smelt, over the needs of millions of residents. Why not tell the whole truth? Never mind. I'm watching Lester.
    4seminolejack

    Prime time medicine?

    The CBS evening news is an exemplary platform for informative news reporting. The journalistic integrity of the anchors has been a key ingredient through the years. It is somewhat laughable to have such an excellent platform marred by the unseemly and relentless pharmaceutical advertising that punctuates this program. Is America so drugged out that we must discuss personal medical conditions on prime time? Can we not leave this topic in a doctor's office? Many of the ads repeat several times in a half hour. Yes, there is help out there for critical lifestyle issues and yes, we (all) who eventually suffer from one or the other will hopefully find that help. Perhaps the MadMen money could be put to better use in our already stressed medical system
    RJC-4

    Bland corporate product, trained chimp at helm

    How fitting that the CBS Evening News should take its place among other entertainments in this database. For like the worst TV and movies, it rarely rises above its own melodramatic ambitions - namely, to stir in a dash of intrigue, to parade a cast of heroes and villains, to paint human complexities in broad strokes, to lurch toward awkward climaxes, and to conspire with its dull audience to expect no more and no less.

    Let it be recorded for successive generations that the highest paid news professional in the U.S. at the start of the new millennium has the easiest job. Dan Rather reads the news, and, in a sense, he inhabits the news, too, as a rheumy cough inhabits the throat. Moist-eyed, curiously abashed, folksy, stolid, and mottled, his voice arrhythmically skittering past abrupt silences, a body seeming to yearn to press itself against the camera: the 70-year old Rather is a bizarre physical presence to go along with the even stranger conceit that the world can be explained in thirty minutes and that the nation's leading corporations would like to underwrite the same as a public service.

    Rather reads a script, yet he also ad libs, and his lines are either unintentional howlers or hair-raising oubursts from the subconscious. The 2000 presidential election brought out the wordsmith in the man who earns a reported $7 million a year: the race was "tighter than spandex." Forget for a moment that you do not want a haggard 70-year old man to confuse politics with tight-fitting spandex; that's ok, he had other Viagrafied metaphors, too: the race was "like a too-small two-piece bathing suit." Then came banal yet creepy juxtapositions: "Close only counts with hand grenades and horseshoes." And finally a Zen riddle of sorts: "If a frog had sidepockets, he'd carry a handgun." All of this deadpan, without hint of irony. The effect was sheer bathos. But maybe also it suggested that after a career of professional tongue-biting, Rather, the epitome of U.S. journalism's chameleon-like sidling up to power, had no choice but to submit to the surreality of the election and become surreal himself.

    About the show's customary product, the less said the better. Nightly, we are entreated to accept this purée as gospel, although it never rises far above the level of rehashing "official" sources with but the lightest smattering of dissident opinion or observation. What do one's government and corporations want one to think? Tune in. His eyes bulging as if some internal pressure were about to jettison them straight from his head, Dan Rather knows. At the end of the show, there will be a nice human interest story (cats in trees, brave mountain climbers) to smooth over any feelings of disquiet caused by the disjunction produced by the eerily detached running commentary and the images of war, famine, pestilence, and greed that have passed over the screen - uncommented upon, neutrally observed, "objectively" quarantined - the sedative administered and the nation resting peacefully for another night.
    10barryrd

    CBS Evening News with Walter Cronkite

    This was the news with the master of news broadcasts, Walter Cronkite. I grew up watching him on weekly programs like You Are There and The Twentieth Century. He had a magnificent voice and he embodied the role. When I graduated from university and lived through the Nixon and Watergate years, it was Walter Cronkite I tuned to for the news. I felt that the audience was getting the best American journalism could offer. He was often popping up at political conventions as the head of a team of competent journalists but he was the boss. I always watched CBS over the others. It was rated the No.1 broadcast company at the time and it always came across that way. Roger Mudd was a very good replacement when Cronkite was on leave. I preferred him to Dan Rather, who actually replaced Cronkite when he stepped down as the anchor. When Dan Rather took over, it wasn't the same...so strong was Walter Cronkite's persona. So there it is! My rating is a perfect ten. No hesitation.

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    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      Walter Cronkite assumed the CBS evening anchor's chair from Douglas Edwards, who had been the newscaster since 1948.
    • Quotes

      Walter Cronkite - Anchor: [Cronkite's farewell newscast on March 6, 1981] This is my last broadcast as the anchorman for The CBS Evening News. For me, it's a moment for which I long have planned, but which, nevertheless, comes with some sadness. For almost 2 decades, after all, we've been meeting like this in the evenings, and I'll miss that. But those who have made anything of this departure, I'm afraid it made too much. This is but a transition, a passing of the baton. A great broadcaster and gentleman, Doug Edwards, preceded me in this job, and another, Dan Rather, will follow. And anyway, the person who sits here is but the most conspicuous member of a superb team of journalists; writers, reporters, editors, producers, and none of that will change. Furthermore, I'm not even going away! I'll be back from time to time with special news reports and documentaries, and, beginning in June, every week, with our science program, Universe. Old anchormen, you see, don't fade away; they just keep coming back for more. And that's the way it is: Friday, March 6, 1981. I'll be away on assignment, and Dan Rather will be sitting in here for the next few years. Good night.

    • Connections
      Edited into Smothered: The Censorship Struggles of the Smothers Brothers Comedy Hour (2002)

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • July 1, 1941 (United States)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • CBS Evening News with Dan Rather
    • Filming locations
      • CBS Broadcast Center, Manhattan, New York City, New York, USA(Studio)
    • Production company
      • CBS News Productions
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      15 minutes
    • Color
      • Black and White
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Stereo
      • Mono
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.33 : 1

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