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Morley Safer

Morley Safer (November 8, 1931 – May 19, 2016) was a Canadian-American broadcast journalist, reporter, and correspondent for CBS News. He was best known for his long tenure on the news magazine 60 Minutes, whose cast he joined in 1970 after its second year on television. He was the longest-serving reporter on 60 Minutes, the most watched and most profitable program in television history.

Morley Safer
Safer in 1985
Born(1931-11-08)November 8, 1931
Toronto, Ontario, Canada
DiedMay 19, 2016(2016-05-19) (aged 84)
Resting placeRoselawn Avenue Cemetery, Toronto
NationalityCanadian, American[1]
Alma materUniversity of Western Ontario
(dropped out)[2][3]
Occupation(s)Broadcast journalist, reporter and commentator
Years active1955–2016[4]
Notable credit60 Minutes (1970–2016)
Spouse
Jane Fearer
(m. 1968)
Children1

During his 60-year career as a broadcast journalist, Safer received numerous awards, including 12 Emmys, a Lifetime Achievement Emmy from the National Academy of Television Arts and Sciences, three Overseas Press Awards, three Peabody Awards, two Alfred I. duPont-Columbia University Awards, and the Paul White Award from the Radio-Television News Directors Association. In 2009, Safer donated his papers to the Dolph Briscoe Center for American History at the University of Texas at Austin.

Jeff Fager, executive producer of 60 Minutes, said "Morley has had a brilliant career as a reporter and as one of the most significant figures in CBS News history, on our broadcast and in many of our lives. Morley's curiosity, his sense of adventure and his superb writing, all made for exceptional work done by a remarkable man."[5] He died a week after announcing his retirement from 60 Minutes.[6]

Early life edit

Safer was born to an Austrian Jewish family in Toronto, Ontario, the son of Anna (née Cohn) and Max Safer, an upholsterer.[7] He had an older brother, Leon Safer, and an older sister, Esther Safer.[8] After reading works by Ernest Hemingway, he had decided in his youth that, like Hemingway, he wanted to be a foreign correspondent.[9] He attended Harbord Collegiate Institute and Bloor Collegiate Institute[10] in Toronto, Ontario,[11] and briefly attended the University of Western Ontario before he dropped out to become a newspaper reporter.[9][12] He said, "I was a reporter on the street at 19 and never went to college."[2]

Career edit

Safer began his journalism career as a reporter for various newspapers in Ontario (Woodstock Sentinel-Review, London Free Press, and Toronto Telegram) and England in 1955 (Reuters and Oxford Mail). Later, he joined the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation (CBC) as a correspondent and producer.[13]

International news and war correspondent edit

One of his first jobs with CBC was to produce CBC News Magazine in 1956, where his first on-screen appearance as a journalist was covering the Suez Crisis in Egypt.[9] Still with the CBC, in 1961 he worked from London where he was assigned to cover major stories in Europe, North Africa and the Middle East, including the Algerian War of independence from France.[9] Also in 1961, he was the only Western correspondent in East Berlin at the time the Communists began building the Berlin Wall.[9]

In 1964, CBS hired Safer as a London-based correspondent. He worked from the same desk that had once been used by Edward R. Murrow.[9] The following year, in 1965, he became the first full-time staff reporter of the CBS News bureau in Saigon to cover the growing military conflict in Vietnam.[9] By 1967 he was made the CBS bureau chief in London where his news stories covered numerous global conflicts, including the Nigerian Civil War,[14] the Arab-Israeli war of 1967, and the Warsaw Pact invasion of Czechoslovakia in 1968.[9] With the help of some clandestine skills, Safer and his news team became the first United States-based journalists to report from inside Communist China, broadcast in 1967 as a Special CBS News Report, "Morley Safer's Red China Diary".[9]

Safer's August 1965 Vietnam report, "The Burning of Cam Ne," was notable and controversial because he had accompanied a company of Marines to the village for what was described as a "search and destroy" mission. When the Marines arrived, they were fired on by snipers. They told the inhabitants to evacuate the village, which the Marines then burned down. Safer's report was among the earliest to paint a bleak picture of the Vietnam War, showing apparently innocent civilians as victims. However, many American military and political leaders judged the story to be harmful to United States interests and criticized CBS News for showing it.[15] United States President Lyndon Johnson reacted to this report angrily, calling CBS's president and accusing Safer and his colleagues of having undermined America's role there.[16]

Some ex-Marines who saw Safer's story on television during the war shared President Johnson's opinion. They claim that Safer never had time to be properly briefed on the operation, and was therefore not aware that four Marines had already been killed there and 27 wounded.[17] Ex-Marine Larry Engelmann, author of a story on the Vietnam War, claimed Safer's story was "highly sensational". Justifying collective punishment, he alleged: "The fact is that this village had been a pretty tough village and these people had been warned repeatedly that the village would be torched if they continued to shoot at Marines … But there was none of that in Morley Safer's story."[18]

In the PBS series Reporting America At War, Safer himself said, " … the denials themselves were absurd. [Officials claimed] I had gone on a practice operation in a model village — a village the Marines had built to train guys how to move into a village. Or the whole thing was a kind of 'Potemkin' story that I had concocted. There are still people who believe that."[19]

After the incident was broadcast, Marines were forbidden from burning any more villages.[15]

While reporting another story from Vietnam, Safer and two CBS cameramen were shot down in a helicopter by Vietcong ground fire, although they all escaped serious injury.[20] Brig. Gen. Joe Stringham, who commanded a Green Beret unit with Safer reporting, commented that Safer "was all business and he reported what he saw. … We looked at eternity right in the face a couple of times … and he was as cool as a hog on ice."[5]

Safer received an Emmy Award in 1971 for his investigation and reporting of the Gulf of Tonkin incident.[9] Although the war reports were consistently broadcast on television, Safer said it was the country's inability to clearly explain to the public why they were at war that became the main source of people's "disillusionment":[21]

I've heard people say that if World War II had been televised we never would have stuck the course. That's bullshit. I think there was a pretty strong determination by most people in this country, not all, that this really was a war of survival of the most important things we hold dear, to put it in simple terms, including of our own democracy.[21]

External videos
  Booknotes interview with Safer on Flashbacks: On Returning to Vietnam, May 1, 1990, C-SPAN

During his career as a war correspondent, Safer covered over nine wars.[3] He authored the bestselling book, Flashbacks: On Returning to Vietnam. It describes his 1989 return to Vietnam and features his interviews with known and less-well-known Vietnamese people, most of them veterans of the war.[22] His trip was the basis of a 60 Minutes show in 1989, which Safer said got a reaction of annoyance from some veterans, and a positive reaction from others.[23]

60 Minutes reporter edit

Morley was one of the most important journalists in any medium, ever. He broke ground in war reporting and made a name that will forever be synonymous with 60 Minutes. He was also a gentleman, a scholar, a great raconteur – all of those things and much more to generations of colleagues, his legion of friends, and his family, to whom all of us at CBS offer our sincerest condolences over the loss of one of CBS' and journalism's greatest treasures.[9]

Leslie Moonves
CBS Chairman and CEO

 
Safer sits with First Lady Betty Ford in the White House Solarium in August 1975 before filming an interview with her for 60 Minutes

In 1970, CBS producer Don Hewitt asked Safer to replace Harry Reasoner on 60 Minutes, as Reasoner had just left to anchor the ABC Evening News. Hewitt had created 60 Minutes, and he was, according to Diane Sawyer, the program's "guiding, self-renewing, revitalizing genius."[2] Safer, who had been covering the funeral of Charles de Gaulle in Paris,[24] accepted the new position and joined 60 Minutes.

The show had by then aired for only two seasons, and Safer, who had until that time reported and traveled alone, recalled that he accepted the new position on condition that if the show failed, he would be given his old job back: "I was the new kid, with a lot of pressure, because we were trying something new. We were utterly unheard of. I was utterly a stranger to working in a head office."[2] Until that new position, says Safer, "my staff, when I was abroad, consisted of only me."[2]

Over the subsequent decades, along with Safer, the other veteran reporters for the program included Dan Rather, Mike Wallace, Walter Cronkite, Ed Bradley, Charles Kuralt, Diane Sawyer and Bob Simon. Reasoner had also returned to do some 60 Minutes segments before he retired. 60 Minutes eventually became the most-watched and most profitable program in television history.[25]

Safer's style of interviewing was consistently done in a friendly and gentlemanly manner, which gave him the ability to ask penetrating questions that average viewers might ask. He was persistent in the pursuit of facts needed to support the accuracy of his stories.[3] While he often added his own point of view to reports, Safer always maintained high professional standards, a style that helped establish the tone of 60 Minutes shows.[3] He typed stories on his manual typewriter even after computers were in common use. To investigate and write his 60 Minutes stories, Safer often traveled as much as 200,000 miles a year.[26]

Hewitt credited Safer with having a "great eye for stories", whether they were sympathetic or tough.[24] He could write about offbeat subjects to give the show flavor, such as a piece he did in Finland about the Finns' obsession with the tango dance.[24] Or he could write a hardcore report, such as one which helped save the life of a black man imprisoned in Texas. For that 1983 story, about Lenell Geter, a 25-year-old black aerospace engineer serving a life sentence for robbery, Safer sifted through details of the case and found factual inconsistencies and implied racial biases. After Safer's report was broadcast, Geter was released in 1984.[27]

In addition to the Emmy he was awarded for the Gulf of Tonkin report, he also won Emmys for other 60 Minutes stories: "Pops" (1979); "Teddy Kollek's Jerusalem" (1979); "Air Force Surgeon" (Investigative Journalism, 1982); and "It Didn't Have to Happen" (Correspondent, 1982).[3] In 1994 he hosted a CBS News Special, One for the Road: A Conversation with Charles Kuralt and Morley Safer, which marked Kuralt's retirement from CBS.[3]

Safer's remarks at the time of President Ronald Reagan's death brought charges of liberal bias. Safer said about Reagan: "I don't think history has any reason to be kind to him."[28]

He retired after 46 years with CBS, a week before his death; by then Safer had set the record for the show's longest-serving correspondent.[26][9] A few days after he retired, CBS broadcast an hour-long special, Morley Safer: A Reporter's Life.[26][29]

During his 60-year career as a broadcast journalist, Safer received numerous awards, including twelve Emmys, and a Lifetime Achievement Emmy from the National Academy of Television Arts and Sciences in 1966 when he was only 35; this was remarkable because the award is usually given after a lifetime of work. Including his three Overseas Press Awards, three Peabody Awards, two Alfred I. duPont-Columbia University Awards, and the Paul White Award from the Radio-Television News Directors Association, Safer won every major award given in broadcast journalism.[25]

Safer narrated several documentaries, including Exodus 1947 (1997), American Experience (1997), American Masters (1996), Bicentennial Minutes (1975), and Saigon (1957). [30]

The Morley Safer Award for Outstanding Reporting edit

In January 2019, the Morley Safer Award was created and sent out its inaugural call for entries. A program of The University of Texas at Austin's Briscoe Center for American History, where Safer's archival papers are preserved, the Safer Award seeks to recognize a story or series of stories of creativity, vision and integrity. The award is presented at a luncheon in Manhattan each fall.

Personal life edit

He married Jane Fearer, an anthropology student, in 1968 in London, where he was serving as bureau chief for CBS News.[31][32] Their daughter, Sarah Alice Anne Safer, is a 1992 graduate of Brown University[33] and a freelance journalist.

Safer maintained dual Canadian/American citizenship.[34]

Death edit

Safer died at his New York home from pneumonia[26] on May 19, 2016, just eight days after announcing his retirement from 60 Minutes following 46 seasons with the show.[35] Four days prior to his death, CBS aired a special 60 Minutes episode covering Safer's 61-year journalism career.[4][36] Safer was laid to rest at Roselawn Avenue Cemetery in Toronto.

Awards edit

 
Safer at the 64th Annual Peabody Awards, 2005

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ "Q&A Morley Safer". C-SPAN.org. Retrieved May 19, 2016.
  2. ^ a b c d e "Playboy Interview, Playboy magazine, March 1985.
  3. ^ a b c d e f Murray, Michael D. Encyclopedia of Television News, Greenwood Publishing (1999) p. 220
  4. ^ a b "Morley Safer: A Reporter's Life". CBS News. May 15, 2016.
  5. ^ a b "Morley Safer of '60 Minutes' to retire", USA Today, May 11, 2016
  6. ^ a b Schudel, Matt (May 19, 2016). "Morley Safer, longest-serving correspondent for CBS's '60 Minutes,' dies at 84". The Washington Post. Retrieved May 19, 2016.
  7. ^ "Morley Safer Biography (1931-)". Retrieved October 15, 2014.
  8. ^ "From the archives: As a reporter, Morley Safer has never played it safe". Maclean's. May 19, 2016.
  9. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m "60 Minutes' Morley Safer dies at 84". CBS News. May 19, 2016. Retrieved May 19, 2016.
  10. ^ @BloorCI (May 19, 2016). "Sad news of the passing of @bloorci..." (Tweet) – via Twitter.
  11. ^ Sweethearts, The Builders, The Mob and the Men, page 6 – author Catherine Wismer (ISBN 0-88862-384-4)
  12. ^ "If Anthropologist Jane Safer Finds Husband Morley Home, It's Rarely for More Than 60 Minutes". People. Retrieved October 15, 2014.
  13. ^ "Morley Safer, Canadian-born 60 Minutes correspondent, retires at 84". CBC News. CBC/Radio-Canada. May 11, 2016. Retrieved May 19, 2016.
  14. ^ Harold Evans (2003). War Stories: Reporting in the Time of Conflict from the Crimea to Iraq. Bunker Hill Publishing, Inc. p. 42. ISBN 9781593730055. {{cite book}}: |work= ignored (help)
  15. ^ a b Laurence, John. The Cat from Hue: A Vietnam War Story, Public Affairs (2002) ebook
  16. ^ Library, University of California, Berkeley, 2005, Pacifica Radio/UC Berkeley Social Activism Sound Recording Project: Anti-Vietnam War Protests in the San Francisco Bay Area & Beyond
  17. ^ Coram, Robert. Brute: The Life of Victor Krulak, U.S. Marine, Little, Brown (2010) ebook
  18. ^ Engelmann, Larry. Tears Before the Rain: An Oral History of the Fall of South Vietnam, Oxford Univ. Press (1990) p. 187.
  19. ^ "Reporting America at War . Morley Safer . The Burning of Cam Ne | PBS". PBS.
  20. ^ Rader, Peter. Mike Wallace: A Life, Macmillan (2012) ebook
  21. ^ a b Hallock, Steven. Reporters Who Made History, ABC-CLIO (2010) p. 73
  22. ^ Flashbacks, Safer, 1991, St Martins Press / Random House
  23. ^ C-SPAN booknotes: Flashbacks November 16, 2010, at the Wayback Machine from Vietnam, 1990, Brian Lamb / Morley Safer
  24. ^ a b c Hewitt, Don. Tell Me A Story: 50 Years and 60 Minutes in Television, Public Affairs (2001) p. 121.
  25. ^ a b "Newsman Morley Safer Dies At 84: ’60 Minutes’ Star Helped Change War Reporting", Deadline, May 19, 2016.
  26. ^ a b c d Robert D. McFadden (May 19, 2016). "Morley Safer, Mainstay of '60 Minutes,' Is Dead at 84". The New York Times. Retrieved May 19, 2016.
  27. ^ "How Morley Safer’s dogged reporting saved a black aerospace engineer’s life", Vox Identities, May 19, 2016.
  28. ^ heritage.org
  29. ^ video: "Morley Safer: A Reporter's Life", CBS News, May 15, 2016, 44 min.
  30. ^ "Morley Safer". IMDb. Retrieved October 17, 2022.
  31. ^ Trott, Bill (May 19, 2016). "CBS newsman Morley Safer dead at age 84, retired days ago". Reuters. from the original on November 8, 2020. Retrieved April 20, 2021.
  32. ^ "Morley S Safer". familysearch.org. Retrieved May 19, 2016.
  33. ^ a b "Morley Safer of CBS to receive University's first Welles Hangen Award". Brown University. May 19, 1993. Retrieved May 19, 2016.
  34. ^ "Q&A with Morley Safer". C-SPAN. September 13, 2012.
  35. ^ a b c d e f g Yu, Roger (May 11, 2016). "Morley Safer of '60 Minutes' to retire". USA Today. Retrieved May 19, 2016.
  36. ^ "60 Minutes' Morley Safer dies at 84". CBS News. May 19, 2016. Retrieved May 19, 2016.
  37. ^ "60 Minutes' Morley Safer Dies at 84". Overseas Press Club Of America. May 19, 2016. Retrieved May 19, 2016.
  38. ^ . Radio Television Digital News Association. Archived from the original on February 25, 2013. Retrieved May 27, 2014.
  39. ^ Haefner, Laura (May 19, 2016). "Morley Safer, Legendary '60 Minutes' Reporter, Dies at 84". Variety. Retrieved May 19, 2016.
  40. ^ . JCK. Archived from the original on June 17, 2016. Retrieved May 19, 2016.

External links edit

morley, safer, november, 1931, 2016, canadian, american, broadcast, journalist, reporter, correspondent, news, best, known, long, tenure, news, magazine, minutes, whose, cast, joined, 1970, after, second, year, television, longest, serving, reporter, minutes, . Morley Safer November 8 1931 May 19 2016 was a Canadian American broadcast journalist reporter and correspondent for CBS News He was best known for his long tenure on the news magazine 60 Minutes whose cast he joined in 1970 after its second year on television He was the longest serving reporter on 60 Minutes the most watched and most profitable program in television history Morley SaferSafer in 1985Born 1931 11 08 November 8 1931Toronto Ontario CanadaDiedMay 19 2016 2016 05 19 aged 84 New York City U S Resting placeRoselawn Avenue Cemetery TorontoNationalityCanadian American 1 Alma materUniversity of Western Ontario dropped out 2 3 Occupation s Broadcast journalist reporter and commentatorYears active1955 2016 4 Notable credit60 Minutes 1970 2016 SpouseJane Fearer m 1968 wbr Children1During his 60 year career as a broadcast journalist Safer received numerous awards including 12 Emmys a Lifetime Achievement Emmy from the National Academy of Television Arts and Sciences three Overseas Press Awards three Peabody Awards two Alfred I duPont Columbia University Awards and the Paul White Award from the Radio Television News Directors Association In 2009 Safer donated his papers to the Dolph Briscoe Center for American History at the University of Texas at Austin Jeff Fager executive producer of 60 Minutes said Morley has had a brilliant career as a reporter and as one of the most significant figures in CBS News history on our broadcast and in many of our lives Morley s curiosity his sense of adventure and his superb writing all made for exceptional work done by a remarkable man 5 He died a week after announcing his retirement from 60 Minutes 6 Contents 1 Early life 2 Career 2 1 International news and war correspondent 2 2 60 Minutes reporter 3 The Morley Safer Award for Outstanding Reporting 4 Personal life 5 Death 6 Awards 7 See also 8 References 9 External linksEarly life editSafer was born to an Austrian Jewish family in Toronto Ontario the son of Anna nee Cohn and Max Safer an upholsterer 7 He had an older brother Leon Safer and an older sister Esther Safer 8 After reading works by Ernest Hemingway he had decided in his youth that like Hemingway he wanted to be a foreign correspondent 9 He attended Harbord Collegiate Institute and Bloor Collegiate Institute 10 in Toronto Ontario 11 and briefly attended the University of Western Ontario before he dropped out to become a newspaper reporter 9 12 He said I was a reporter on the street at 19 and never went to college 2 Career editSafer began his journalism career as a reporter for various newspapers in Ontario Woodstock Sentinel Review London Free Press and Toronto Telegram and England in 1955 Reuters and Oxford Mail Later he joined the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation CBC as a correspondent and producer 13 International news and war correspondent edit One of his first jobs with CBC was to produce CBC News Magazine in 1956 where his first on screen appearance as a journalist was covering the Suez Crisis in Egypt 9 Still with the CBC in 1961 he worked from London where he was assigned to cover major stories in Europe North Africa and the Middle East including the Algerian War of independence from France 9 Also in 1961 he was the only Western correspondent in East Berlin at the time the Communists began building the Berlin Wall 9 In 1964 CBS hired Safer as a London based correspondent He worked from the same desk that had once been used by Edward R Murrow 9 The following year in 1965 he became the first full time staff reporter of the CBS News bureau in Saigon to cover the growing military conflict in Vietnam 9 By 1967 he was made the CBS bureau chief in London where his news stories covered numerous global conflicts including the Nigerian Civil War 14 the Arab Israeli war of 1967 and the Warsaw Pact invasion of Czechoslovakia in 1968 9 With the help of some clandestine skills Safer and his news team became the first United States based journalists to report from inside Communist China broadcast in 1967 as a Special CBS News Report Morley Safer s Red China Diary 9 Safer s August 1965 Vietnam report The Burning of Cam Ne was notable and controversial because he had accompanied a company of Marines to the village for what was described as a search and destroy mission When the Marines arrived they were fired on by snipers They told the inhabitants to evacuate the village which the Marines then burned down Safer s report was among the earliest to paint a bleak picture of the Vietnam War showing apparently innocent civilians as victims However many American military and political leaders judged the story to be harmful to United States interests and criticized CBS News for showing it 15 United States President Lyndon Johnson reacted to this report angrily calling CBS s president and accusing Safer and his colleagues of having undermined America s role there 16 Some ex Marines who saw Safer s story on television during the war shared President Johnson s opinion They claim that Safer never had time to be properly briefed on the operation and was therefore not aware that four Marines had already been killed there and 27 wounded 17 Ex Marine Larry Engelmann author of a story on the Vietnam War claimed Safer s story was highly sensational Justifying collective punishment he alleged The fact is that this village had been a pretty tough village and these people had been warned repeatedly that the village would be torched if they continued to shoot at Marines But there was none of that in Morley Safer s story 18 In the PBS series Reporting America At War Safer himself said the denials themselves were absurd Officials claimed I had gone on a practice operation in a model village a village the Marines had built to train guys how to move into a village Or the whole thing was a kind of Potemkin story that I had concocted There are still people who believe that 19 After the incident was broadcast Marines were forbidden from burning any more villages 15 While reporting another story from Vietnam Safer and two CBS cameramen were shot down in a helicopter by Vietcong ground fire although they all escaped serious injury 20 Brig Gen Joe Stringham who commanded a Green Beret unit with Safer reporting commented that Safer was all business and he reported what he saw We looked at eternity right in the face a couple of times and he was as cool as a hog on ice 5 Safer received an Emmy Award in 1971 for his investigation and reporting of the Gulf of Tonkin incident 9 Although the war reports were consistently broadcast on television Safer said it was the country s inability to clearly explain to the public why they were at war that became the main source of people s disillusionment 21 I ve heard people say that if World War II had been televised we never would have stuck the course That s bullshit I think there was a pretty strong determination by most people in this country not all that this really was a war of survival of the most important things we hold dear to put it in simple terms including of our own democracy 21 External videos nbsp Booknotes interview with Safer on Flashbacks On Returning to Vietnam May 1 1990 C SPANDuring his career as a war correspondent Safer covered over nine wars 3 He authored the bestselling book Flashbacks On Returning to Vietnam It describes his 1989 return to Vietnam and features his interviews with known and less well known Vietnamese people most of them veterans of the war 22 His trip was the basis of a 60 Minutes show in 1989 which Safer said got a reaction of annoyance from some veterans and a positive reaction from others 23 60 Minutes reporter edit Morley was one of the most important journalists in any medium ever He broke ground in war reporting and made a name that will forever be synonymous with 60 Minutes He was also a gentleman a scholar a great raconteur all of those things and much more to generations of colleagues his legion of friends and his family to whom all of us at CBS offer our sincerest condolences over the loss of one of CBS and journalism s greatest treasures 9 Leslie MoonvesCBS Chairman and CEO nbsp Safer sits with First Lady Betty Ford in the White House Solarium in August 1975 before filming an interview with her for 60 MinutesIn 1970 CBS producer Don Hewitt asked Safer to replace Harry Reasoner on 60 Minutes as Reasoner had just left to anchor the ABC Evening News Hewitt had created 60 Minutes and he was according to Diane Sawyer the program s guiding self renewing revitalizing genius 2 Safer who had been covering the funeral of Charles de Gaulle in Paris 24 accepted the new position and joined 60 Minutes The show had by then aired for only two seasons and Safer who had until that time reported and traveled alone recalled that he accepted the new position on condition that if the show failed he would be given his old job back I was the new kid with a lot of pressure because we were trying something new We were utterly unheard of I was utterly a stranger to working in a head office 2 Until that new position says Safer my staff when I was abroad consisted of only me 2 Over the subsequent decades along with Safer the other veteran reporters for the program included Dan Rather Mike Wallace Walter Cronkite Ed Bradley Charles Kuralt Diane Sawyer and Bob Simon Reasoner had also returned to do some 60 Minutes segments before he retired 60 Minutes eventually became the most watched and most profitable program in television history 25 Safer s style of interviewing was consistently done in a friendly and gentlemanly manner which gave him the ability to ask penetrating questions that average viewers might ask He was persistent in the pursuit of facts needed to support the accuracy of his stories 3 While he often added his own point of view to reports Safer always maintained high professional standards a style that helped establish the tone of 60 Minutes shows 3 He typed stories on his manual typewriter even after computers were in common use To investigate and write his 60 Minutes stories Safer often traveled as much as 200 000 miles a year 26 Hewitt credited Safer with having a great eye for stories whether they were sympathetic or tough 24 He could write about offbeat subjects to give the show flavor such as a piece he did in Finland about the Finns obsession with the tango dance 24 Or he could write a hardcore report such as one which helped save the life of a black man imprisoned in Texas For that 1983 story about Lenell Geter a 25 year old black aerospace engineer serving a life sentence for robbery Safer sifted through details of the case and found factual inconsistencies and implied racial biases After Safer s report was broadcast Geter was released in 1984 27 In addition to the Emmy he was awarded for the Gulf of Tonkin report he also won Emmys for other 60 Minutes stories Pops 1979 Teddy Kollek s Jerusalem 1979 Air Force Surgeon Investigative Journalism 1982 and It Didn t Have to Happen Correspondent 1982 3 In 1994 he hosted a CBS News Special One for the Road A Conversation with Charles Kuralt and Morley Safer which marked Kuralt s retirement from CBS 3 Safer s remarks at the time of President Ronald Reagan s death brought charges of liberal bias Safer said about Reagan I don t think history has any reason to be kind to him 28 He retired after 46 years with CBS a week before his death by then Safer had set the record for the show s longest serving correspondent 26 9 A few days after he retired CBS broadcast an hour long special Morley Safer A Reporter s Life 26 29 During his 60 year career as a broadcast journalist Safer received numerous awards including twelve Emmys and a Lifetime Achievement Emmy from the National Academy of Television Arts and Sciences in 1966 when he was only 35 this was remarkable because the award is usually given after a lifetime of work Including his three Overseas Press Awards three Peabody Awards two Alfred I duPont Columbia University Awards and the Paul White Award from the Radio Television News Directors Association Safer won every major award given in broadcast journalism 25 Safer narrated several documentaries including Exodus 1947 1997 American Experience 1997 American Masters 1996 Bicentennial Minutes 1975 and Saigon 1957 30 The Morley Safer Award for Outstanding Reporting editIn January 2019 the Morley Safer Award was created and sent out its inaugural call for entries A program of The University of Texas at Austin s Briscoe Center for American History where Safer s archival papers are preserved the Safer Award seeks to recognize a story or series of stories of creativity vision and integrity The award is presented at a luncheon in Manhattan each fall Personal life editHe married Jane Fearer an anthropology student in 1968 in London where he was serving as bureau chief for CBS News 31 32 Their daughter Sarah Alice Anne Safer is a 1992 graduate of Brown University 33 and a freelance journalist Safer maintained dual Canadian American citizenship 34 Death editSafer died at his New York home from pneumonia 26 on May 19 2016 just eight days after announcing his retirement from 60 Minutes following 46 seasons with the show 35 Four days prior to his death CBS aired a special 60 Minutes episode covering Safer s 61 year journalism career 4 36 Safer was laid to rest at Roselawn Avenue Cemetery in Toronto Awards edit nbsp Safer at the 64th Annual Peabody Awards 200512 time Emmy Award winner 6 35 3 time Overseas Press Award winner 35 37 3 time George Foster Peabody Award winner 35 2 time Alfred I duPont Columbia University Award winner 9 Winner of the Paul White Award from the Radio Television News Directors Association 1966 38 Recipient of a Lifetime Achievement Emmy from the National Academy of Television Arts and Sciences 2003 39 Received the 2003 George Polk Memorial Career Achievement Award from Long Island University 35 Received the Robert F Kennedy Journalism Awards first prize for domestic television for his insightful report about a controversial school School for the Homeless 35 Named a Chevalier dans l Ordre des Arts et des Lettres by the French government in 1995 35 Received Brown University s Welles Hangen Award for Superior Achievement in Journalism 1993 33 Recipient of The International Center in New York s Award of Excellence 40 See also editBetty Ford s August 1975 60 Minutes interviewReferences edit Q amp A Morley Safer C SPAN org Retrieved May 19 2016 a b c d e Playboy Interview Playboy magazine March 1985 a b c d e f Murray Michael D Encyclopedia of Television News Greenwood Publishing 1999 p 220 a b Morley Safer A Reporter s Life CBS News May 15 2016 a b Morley Safer of 60 Minutes to retire USA Today May 11 2016 a b Schudel Matt May 19 2016 Morley Safer longest serving correspondent for CBS s 60 Minutes dies at 84 The Washington Post Retrieved May 19 2016 Morley Safer Biography 1931 Retrieved October 15 2014 From the archives As a reporter Morley Safer has never played it safe Maclean s May 19 2016 a b c d e f g h i j k l m 60 Minutes Morley Safer dies at 84 CBS News May 19 2016 Retrieved May 19 2016 BloorCI May 19 2016 Sad news of the passing of bloorci Tweet via Twitter Sweethearts The Builders The Mob and the Men page 6 author Catherine Wismer ISBN 0 88862 384 4 If Anthropologist Jane Safer Finds Husband Morley Home It s Rarely for More Than 60 Minutes People Retrieved October 15 2014 Morley Safer Canadian born 60 Minutes correspondent retires at 84 CBC News CBC Radio Canada May 11 2016 Retrieved May 19 2016 Harold Evans 2003 War Stories Reporting in the Time of Conflict from the Crimea to Iraq Bunker Hill Publishing Inc p 42 ISBN 9781593730055 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a work ignored help a b Laurence John The Cat from Hue A Vietnam War Story Public Affairs 2002 ebook Library University of California Berkeley 2005 Pacifica Radio UC Berkeley Social Activism Sound Recording Project Anti Vietnam War Protests in the San Francisco Bay Area amp Beyond Coram Robert Brute The Life of Victor Krulak U S Marine Little Brown 2010 ebook Engelmann Larry Tears Before the Rain An Oral History of the Fall of South Vietnam Oxford Univ Press 1990 p 187 Reporting America at War Morley Safer The Burning of Cam Ne PBS PBS Rader Peter Mike Wallace A Life Macmillan 2012 ebook a b Hallock Steven Reporters Who Made History ABC CLIO 2010 p 73 Flashbacks Safer 1991 St Martins Press Random House C SPAN booknotes Flashbacks Archived November 16 2010 at the Wayback Machine from Vietnam 1990 Brian Lamb Morley Safer a b c Hewitt Don Tell Me A Story 50 Years and 60 Minutes in Television Public Affairs 2001 p 121 a b Newsman Morley Safer Dies At 84 60 Minutes Star Helped Change War Reporting Deadline May 19 2016 a b c d Robert D McFadden May 19 2016 Morley Safer Mainstay of 60 Minutes Is Dead at 84 The New York Times Retrieved May 19 2016 How Morley Safer s dogged reporting saved a black aerospace engineer s life Vox Identities May 19 2016 heritage org video Morley Safer A Reporter s Life CBS News May 15 2016 44 min Morley Safer IMDb Retrieved October 17 2022 Trott Bill May 19 2016 CBS newsman Morley Safer dead at age 84 retired days ago Reuters Archived from the original on November 8 2020 Retrieved April 20 2021 Morley S Safer familysearch org Retrieved May 19 2016 a b Morley Safer of CBS to receive University s first Welles Hangen Award Brown University May 19 1993 Retrieved May 19 2016 Q amp A with Morley Safer C SPAN September 13 2012 a b c d e f g Yu Roger May 11 2016 Morley Safer of 60 Minutes to retire USA Today Retrieved May 19 2016 60 Minutes Morley Safer dies at 84 CBS News May 19 2016 Retrieved May 19 2016 60 Minutes Morley Safer Dies at 84 Overseas Press Club Of America May 19 2016 Retrieved May 19 2016 Paul White Award Radio Television Digital News Association Archived from the original on February 25 2013 Retrieved May 27 2014 Haefner Laura May 19 2016 Morley Safer Legendary 60 Minutes Reporter Dies at 84 Variety Retrieved May 19 2016 Head of LVMH Watch amp Jewelry N A honored by International Center of New York JCK Archived from the original on June 17 2016 Retrieved May 19 2016 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Morley Safer Appearances on C SPAN Morley Safer at IMDb Morley Safer at The Interviews An Oral History of Television Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Morley Safer amp oldid 1187157284, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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