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Murrow and Friendly
* March 9 – American journalists Edward Murrow and Fred W. Friendly produce a 30-minute See It Now documentary, entitled A Report on Senator Joseph McCarthy.
It was created by Edward R. Murrow and Fred W. Friendly, Murrow being the host of the show.
* Edward R. Murrow and Fred W. Friendly 1954 investigation for CBS's See It Now of Senator Joseph McCarthy's conduct in the anti-communism hearings and their 1960 CBS Reports television documentary, along with David Lowe, Harvest of Shame on the condition of migrant workers in agriculture.
It was created by Edward R. Murrow and Fred W. Friendly, Murrow being the host of the show.
The show was an adaptation of radio's Hear It Now, also produced by Murrow and Friendly.
By using mostly recordings of McCarthy himself in action interrogating witnesses and making speeches, Murrow and Friendly displayed what they felt was the key danger to the democracy: not suspected Communists, but McCarthy's actions themselves.
Friendly later recalled how truck drivers pulled up alongside Murrow and shouted, " Good show, Ed.
Eventually, according to co-producer Friendly, Murrow and Paley had a blazing showdown in Paley's office.
The entire CBS network picked up the broadcast, later preserved in the Edward R. Murrow and Fred W. Friendly record series, I Can Hear it Now.
For months, Murrow, producer Fred Friendly and the See It Now team had debated on how to address McCarthy's witch hunt, until the Radulovich affair.
* The 2005 film Good Night, and Good Luck, which dramatized the work of television journalists Edward R. Murrow and Fred Friendly at CBS, uses footage of the Army – McCarthy hearings, including Welch's challenge to the Senator.
Fred W. Friendly ( October 30, 1915 – March 3, 1998 ) was a president of CBS News and the creator, along with Edward R. Murrow, of the documentary television program See It Now.
It was in this role that Friendly ( who had changed his name during his Providence days ) first worked with Murrow on the Columbia Records historical albums, I Can Hear It Now.
That fall, Murrow and Friendly collaborated to produce a CBS Radio documentary series inspired by their record albums — a weekly show called Hear It Now that was hosted by Murrow.
Murrow and Friendly had produced a notable See It Now episode on the topic the previous fall, when the show probed the case of Air Force Reserve Lieutenant Milo Radulovich, who had lost his security clearance because of the supposed leftist leanings of his sister and father — evidence the Air Force kept sealed.
After See It Now ended in the Summer of 1958, Murrow and Friendly worked together on its successor, CBS Reports, although Friendly alone was executive producer and Murrow no more than an occasional reporter and narrator.
The first wildly-successful spoken word album was a 1948 Masterworks entry, the first I Can Hear It Now album, edited by Edward R. Murrow and Fred W. Friendly and supervised by former CBS staffer J. G.

Murrow and broadcast
* December 3 – Edward R. Murrow delivers his classic " Orchestrated Hell " broadcast over CBS Radio, describing a Royal Air Force nighttime bombing raid on Berlin.
" Murrow began assembling the staff of broadcast journalists — including William L. Shirer, Charles Collingwood and Eric Sevareid — who would become known as " Murrow's Boys.
Smith became a significant member of the " Murrow Boys " that made CBS the dominant broadcast news organization of the era.
Michele McCormack ( 1985 Chicago Rose ) has gone on to win an Edward R. Murrow Award in her chosen profession of broadcast journalism.
"-Edward R. Murrow, on the first broadcast of WNDT on September 16, 1962.
With legendary CBS reporter Edward R. Murrow at the helm on the maiden broadcast, ETMA — now the non-profit Educational Broadcasting Corporation -- flipped the switch to WNDT ( for " New Dimensions in Television ") on September 16, 1962.
One of the most popular of the See It Now reports was a 1952 broadcast entitled Christmas in Korea, when Murrow spoke with American soldiers assigned to the United Nations combat forces.
Murrow produced a number of episodes of the show that dealt with the Communist witch-hunt hysteria ( one of the more notable episodes resulted in a U. S. military officer, Milo Radulovich, being acquitted, after being charged with supporting Communism ), before embarking on a broadcast on March 9, 1954 that has been referred to as television's finest hour.
The broadcast provoked tens of thousands of letters, telegrams and phone calls to CBS headquarters, running 15 to 1 in favor of Murrow.
She was married to Edward R. Murrow ( April 25, 1908 – April 27, 1965 ) who was an American broadcast journalist.
* Edward R. Murrow: ( 1908 – 1965 ) American broadcast journalist
Henderson, who had hoped to become Canada's answer to Edward R. Murrow, had spent several years travelling the world with his Headliners radio broadcast.
** 527 British bombers raid Leipzig, Germany, with the American broadcast journalist Edward R. Murrow riding as an observer in a Lancaster of No. 619 Squadron.
Later, in his final broadcast with CBS, in 1977 he would call Murrow the man who " invented me.
The broadcast included reports from correspondent William L. Shirer in London ( on the annexation, which he had witnessed firsthand in Vienna ) and Murrow, who filled in for Shirer in Vienna so that Shirer could report without Austrian censorship.
His year-and-a-half tenure on the show ended in September 1947, when Murrow — who had been CBS's vice president for public affairs — returned to on-air work and took over the broadcast.
In 1948, he had to re-create his broadcast of his announcement of Japan's surrender so a " cleaned-up " version of that announcement could be included in the first of Ed Murrow and Fred Friendly's I Can Hear It Now historical albums.
Meanwhile Murrow had " covered the London air raids from the streets and rooftops ... went on 25 bombing missions over Germany and broadcast from a British minesweeper in World War II.
Edward R. Murrow defined American broadcast journalism with his World War II reporting from Europe relayed back to CBS in New York and onward to the rest of the nation.

Murrow and See
Kaye entered the world of television in 1956 through the CBS show See It Now with Edward R. Murrow.
Mitropoulos, known for championing new composers and obscure operas-in-concert, pioneered in other ways ; adding live Philharmonic performances between movies at the Roxy Theatre and taking Edward R. Murrow and the See It Now television audience on a behind-the-scenes tour of the Orchestra.
President Harry S. Truman presented her with the Women's National Press Club trophy Award for outstanding accomplishment in art in 1949, and in 1951 she appeared on See It Now, a television program hosted by Edward R. Murrow.
The " See It Now " segment on Grandma Moses, presently available on DVD in " The Edward R. Murrow Collection ", unfortunately contains but one-third of the actual 25-minute produced interview.
On his weekly news show See It Now on CBS, Murrow presented live reports from journalists on both the east and west coasts of the United States — the first program with live simultaneous transmission from coast to coast.
When the quiz show phenomenon began and took the world of TV by storm in the mid-1950s, Murrow realized the days of See It Now as a Tuesday-night fixture on CBS were numbered.
During the years See It Now was an occasional series of specials appearing on Sunday afternoons at 5: 00pm ( et ) by 1957, Murrow became upset by the network repeatedly granting ( without consulting Murrow ) equal time to subjects who felt wronged by the program.
After CBS granted another such request — regarding a See It Now show on whether or not Alaska and Hawaii deserved statehood — Murrow complained to CBS head William S. Paley he could not continue doing the program if CBS continued to accede to such equal-time requests under those circumstances.
* Complete text and audio of Senator Joseph McCarthy's Prosecution of Edward R. Murrow on See It Now from AmericanRhetoric. com
* See It Now ( Edward R. Murrow, Howard K. Smith ) ( November 18, 1951-July 8, 1957 )
His friendship with Ed Murrow, one of the leading lights in the CBS news division ( and by then a vice president of CBS ), suffered during the 1950s over the hard-hitting tone of the Murrow-hosted See It Now series.
His case was publicized nationally by Edward Murrow on October 20, 1953, on Murrow's program, See It Now:
The Air Force stripped Radulovich of his commission, which came to the attention of Edward R. Murrow, host of the popular See It Now program on CBS.
" ( See TIME magazine, Monday, September 30, 1957:: This is Murrow ) This close relationship between Murrow, Paley, CBS and the British Establishment led to an offer after the War for Murrow to become part of the editorial diarchy at the British Broadcasting Corporation, an offer that was not endorsed by the BBC Board of Directors.

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