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The CBS News Team pictured in 1972

The CBS News Team -- broadcast journalists Mike Wallace, Eric Sevareid, John Hart, Walter Cronkite, Roger Mudd and Dan Rather -- pictured in May, 1972.

CBS Photo Archive/Getty Images
 

In his new book, The Place to Be: Washington, CBS, and the Glory Days of Television News, Roger Mudd chronicles his trajectory from copy boy to network anchor, and he fondly remembers what it was like during "The Golden Age," as he calls it. "At the heart of the CBS News operation was its Washington bureau--a proud, competitive, and talented cadre of reporters, correspondents, producers, editors, and executives who so dominated the network's news division that it became almost an independent duchy."

Back then, he and four other correspondents, Dan Rather, Daniel Schorr, Martin Kalb, and George Herman, sat in a row of cubicles near the entrance to the network's Washington bureau:

Lesley Stahl said we looked like miniatures in a shadow box, maybe even mannequins in a Saks Fifth Avenue window. She was talking about her first look at five of America's most distinguished television correspondents on the first day she came to work at the CBS Washington bureau. What Lesley saw along the south wall of the newsroom were five cubicles, each about six-feet-by-eight, their walls covered in a beige textured paper, and each equipped with a desk, a chair, a typewriter, a telephone, and a television star.

Mudd joins us today, with his former colleague, Bob Schieffer, to talk about the heyday of network news, and to offer their thoughts on its future. There were a few grim reports about CBS News last week. (Our own media correspondent, David Folkenflik, summed it up last night.)

If you used to watch Mudd, share your memories with us. And if you have questions for him, leave them here.

 

Comments (Send a comment)

As a former co-worker of Roger's at WTOP and a former news director, I'm curious to know if he believes there was a "tipping point" at which CBS News stopped being considered THE authority in broadcast news.

Sent by Jim Lewis | 3:11 PM ET | 04-16-2008

At one point like CBS days Journalist competed with each other for the story, now is the day of Celebrity Journalist. rather then the story, they compete for fame. Now journalist are insiders rather then outsider holding the establishment accountable. No longer is a long distinguishes career the goal but quick fame and big money.

Sent by Rod | 3:19 PM ET | 04-16-2008

When I was in junior high, one of your nephews (maybe you only have one) was a substitute teacher of mine. He was used frequently by our school so I saw him often. This school was in Des Plaines, Ill. (a suburb of Chicago). I forget his first name but his last name is Mudd and I asked him if he was related to you.

Sent by Heide McILwraith | 3:26 PM ET | 04-16-2008

It isn't that there is "so much news on TV" - rather there is so much banal talk. What's missing is concise reporting of what is going on in the country and the world that's important to know.

Sent by Neil Trask | 3:36 PM ET | 04-16-2008

There seems to be a reluctance to guess from where/what will we be getting our news in 5 or 10 years.

Let me wade in.

By then we will have cut out the middle person and simply get it straight from the PR dept.

Sent by Frank Mueting | 3:44 PM ET | 04-16-2008

I can't tell you how much I appreciated Talk of the Nation today. All those familiar voices and memorable broadcasts that were so meaningful. The broadcast of the JFK funeral procession brought those same old tears to my eyes. The voices of Roger Mudd, Bob Schieffer kept me sitting in the car for half hour - I couldn't leave!
Neal Conan and Ira Flatow are favorites, as well as Robert Segal
Thank you.

Sent by Alice Gruber | 5:31 PM ET | 04-16-2008

A COMMENT WAS MADE ON THIS PROGRAM THAT BEGS ANOTHER QUESTION:

If news audiences have dropped from 52 million to 23 million, and American Idol audiences are now 127 million... what was the audience count for I LOVE LUCY and THE HONEYMOONERS in comparison to the news audience back int eh 1950s and 1960s respectively

Sent by BRIAN DURRANCE | 12:09 PM ET | 04-17-2008

As Mr. Mudd pointed out, the content of nightly news has evolved drastically over the last 25 years. Personally, I thought the decision to have Barbara Walters as a co-anchor as a turning point for the direction of 6:30 news, more entertainment at the expense of facts which is sometimes boring, but nevertheless important. Reporters and even anchors have become personality figures and become part of the story. Mr Mudd did offer some consolation in reminding us that PBS newshour is last last bastion of TV news without entertainment.

Sent by Tse-Ling Fong | 4:10 PM ET | 04-17-2008

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