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Aaron Brown

We All Followed His Script

Aaron Brown, Walter Cronkite CBS / Landov I was inspired to get into broadcast journalism by Walter Cronkite. He taught me once I was there. And now I’m proud to share his lessons and carry his name forward to the next generation.

In an odd way Walter Cronkite bookends my professional life. Lots of people knew him far better: his colleagues at CBS all those years, his family and his small staff in his later years. But Walter—as he insisted that I call him—was there for me at the beginning of my professional life, there for me on the most important day, and still there now in the students I teach.

Shortly after 9/11 he called. He wanted to know if I was all right. He wanted to tell me that he saw me on CNN, and he thought I had done well. No call meant more to me, ever.

On the 22nd of November 1963, Walter invented the heart and soul of what a network anchor still is today. Not simply the reporter with facts to report or the editor who decides what to report and what can wait—that other part, the part where the anchor connects us to each other and to an event that really matters.

There he was, in shirtsleeves and those big black glasses telling us that our president had been shot and killed in Dallas.There I was, just 15 years old in Hopkins, Minnesota, in shock and enthralled. My president was dead, but this Cronkite guy was at the center of the biggest moment ever, reporting immediately about a guy named Oswald and a cop named Tippit. He was careful and calm and clearly sad and I looked at my mom and said, “that’s the job I want.” I never thought about it again. I knew.

Today I am the Walter Cronkite Professor of Journalism at Arizona State University. I teach in the Cronkite School of Journalism and Mass Communications. My students see pictures of him every day. It concerns me that they don’t really understand why he mattered, why journalism and television are different because of his presence and work. It’s been three decades since Mr. Cronkite anchored the Evening News. They weren’t even born when he last signed off “that’s the way it was.” I try to show them.

Over the years Walter helped me understand Vietnam and I use his work to help my students understand war reporting in that time. His work also taught me that there are times when the anchor, having reported the story, has a special responsibility to the audience. In his case it was after the Tet Offensive, when talked of a stalemate in Vietnam and suggested rethinking the mission in the way an honorable country should. I tried to practice that with the same discipline he did, and I teach that too. He taught me that there are times—men landing on the moon, for one—where the anchor can be excited, can marvel just the way a normal person does. I teach that lesson to my students as well. We are not machines, Walter was not a machine.

Shortly after 9/11 he called. He wanted to know if I was all right. He wanted to tell me that he saw me on CNN, and he thought I had done well. “This is your Kennedy” he said that day. “This is how people will think of you.” No call meant more to me, ever.

As often happens when people live a long time, Walter saw age as a blessing and a curse. There were too many times he struggled to complete a thought he had started and that frustrated and angered him, and I think scared him some too. If I was there, as I sometimes was, I would remind him that on his worst day he was still 10 times the anchor the rest of us could dream of being. He wrote the book, we just followed his script.

He loved being Cronkite. He loved that everywhere he went people admired his work. But he loved more that he was able to do the work. He loved that he was there, that he helped us through November 1963 and through the Vietnam, and Watergate and men on the moon and the rocky road to get there. He loved being a reporter. As much as anyone I’ve ever known he cherished the honor of having the box seat for the great events of our lives, cherished being the one to tell the great stories. He didn’t teach me that love directly, but back in November of ‘63 he inspired me to find it and I believe I did. And I try to teach that too.

Aaron Brown is the Walter Cronkite Professor of Journalism at Arizona State University. Previously he worked as an anchor and a reporter at ABC News and CNN.


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July 17, 2009 | 8:29pm
Comments ()
teedee1

I don't know what the world will be like in 100 years. I wonder if we can carry on the legacy of those great ones who are now gone. Who will step up with that integrity & humanity? Doubtless someone will, but what will we call "great" in 100 years? There will never be another Walter Cronkite. I grew up hearing about Viet Nam from him, and for years he was the standard. Those of us who remember him are fortunate. The younger ones don't know what they missed.

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9:57 pm, Jul 17, 2009
auntcorky

I'm an old lady who's missed you since you left CNN. My husband and I thought you were the best! You are the Walter Cronkite of the next generation. It's wonderful to know you are teaching a new generation of "real" journalists to take their responsibility to inform and teach seriously.

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11:15 pm, Jul 17, 2009
kathleen60

I turned 60 this year. Walter has been so much a part of my life, of who I am. And I have been dreading this day for years: Walter Cronkite gone. There is not one major (public) event in my life that Walter didn't lead me through. Not one. From Kennedy's death to the moon landing to the King & Bobby Kennedy assasinations to Vietnam (where my friends were dying), Walter was the one who gave me the news, who led us through the events, who gave permission to the complex emotions we all felt. I am crushed. I cannot stop crying. I feel so badly for all the younger people who are lacking an icon, a family member like Walter. He was there for the evening news (there truly was no other, no choices -- CBS & Walter. Who could choose otherwise?) But I also fondly remember "You Are There" -- which no one has mentioned. This was a major part of my Sunday nights as a kid. The TV was never on during dinner. Except Sunday. Sunday & Walter (we called him "Uncle Walter".) We watched the Civil War, WWII, major American events -- all with the introduction & the sign-off of, "You Are There." And I was. TV tray in front of me, history via Walter on the TV. That remains one of my most wonderful childhood memories. I will never get over missing Walter. I was furious when they made him retire in the '80s. I am furious that he's been taken away from us -- others of us will die, I will die -- but Walter? Never Walter -- I wanted him to be here throughout my life, just as he was at the beginning of my life. Some of us should live forever. My first nominee would be Walter. I guess the best I can do is to continue to carry him with me, just as he'd carried me for every day till now. This is an incredible loss -- even for those younger folks who don't yet realize it, Walter's death makes all of us a little bit less than we were yesterday. Walter -- thank you, from the bottom of my grateful heart, for all you helped me through, for all that you made simpler & more reasonable & more understandable & more compassionate. Till the day I die, I will never forget you, nor will I cease being grateful for your central presence in my life.But "that's the way it is"; goodnight, Uncle Walter.

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11:40 pm, Jul 17, 2009
OhSuzanna

You know, I was listening to CNN early this morning and heard one of the anchors say, in discussing the changes that have occurred in broadcast journalism since Cronkite's time: "that was before there was opinion."
And that, ladies and gentlemen, is precisely what's wrong with broadcast news today. How I long for the days when I could actually hear the news and didn't also have to listen to the damn personal opinion of every news reader on cable news.

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9:58 am, Jul 18, 2009

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11:21 am, Jul 18, 2009
larryfromkansas

Aaron, I was out of the country on 9/11, but CNN was there in my hotel room in Europe. You were there, too, to connect me to that horrible moment, to connect me and make me a real American that late night.

How good it is that you are teaching young people and how poorer we are that you've left the daily grind, because there are no Cronkites in leadership of networks today, This industry seems to spit out people from anchor seats (especially on cable, which could be a place for really responsible journalism, rather than talking heads) because they don't meet a demographic--that men aren't hip and women aren't coquettish enough.

While it's good you are teaching students at Cronkite's school, I wish we all were still being informed by you today. Regards.

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11:00 am, Jul 18, 2009

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11:19 am, Jul 18, 2009
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We All Followed His Script

by Aaron Brown

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