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Topic: Bernard Shaw CNN


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  CNN.com - Entertainment - CNN's Bernard Shaw calls last show tonight - February 28, 2001
Bernard Shaw was a sergeant in the Marine Corps, stationed in Hawaii, when he showed his journalistic gumption and tracked down CBS anchor Walter Cronkite, who was in Hawaii doing a story on Pearl Harbor.
Shaw left the comfort of network television for the chance to be a part of television history.
Shaw immediately demanded that CNN take the air, and soon he was revealing the news that Reagan had been shot.
archives.cnn.com /2001/SHOWBIZ/TV/02/28/bernie.shaw/index.html   (1265 words)

  
 Arab-Israeli Politics Profiles Archive 1997: CNN's Bernard Shaw - Reporting Live from Washington
Shaw insists on balance in news reporting, going as far as to say that verbal quotations must be matched with the same, and that even a written statement cannot be brought to be on par with a soundbite.
Shaw recognizes the influence which media has on the public and he attributes that power with a sacred responsibility — to ensure that whatever news he brings the American people is in every sense the truest, most objective fact that he can extract.
Shaw does also give his own interpretations of the facts, but he keeps this separate from the news itself, realizing that these are his personal opinions and that some would not tend to agree with him.
www.la.utexas.edu /chenry/mena/roles/aip/profiles97/0031.html   (703 words)

  
 Shaw, Bernard
Shaw's receipt of the Rhein Foundation award is particularly meaningful because it represents the first time this award was bestowed on a non-German.
Shaw was in the right place at the right time, and his coverage of the uprising earned him and CNN considerable recognition.
Shaw is a graduate of the University of Illinois, which established the Bernard Shaw Endowed Scholarship Fund to honor his career and assist promising young men and women who share his interests and integrity.
www.museum.tv /archives/etv/S/htmlS/shawbernard/shawbernard.htm   (569 words)

  
 Bernard Shaw (journalist) - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Bernard Shaw (born May 22, 1940 in Chicago, Illinois) was a leading news anchor for the Cable News Network from 1980 to his retirement in 2001.
Shaw is widely remembered for the question he posed to Democratic U.S. presidential candidate Michael Dukakis at his second Presidential debate with George H. Bush during the 1988 election, which Shaw was moderating.
Shaw retired from CNN in 2001 to write books and has occasionally appeared on CNN, including in May, 2005 when a plane flew into restricted air space in Washington, D.C. On January 4, 2006, CNN analyst Jack Cafferty relayed an anecdote about Shaw when discussing the role of the media in the Sago Mine disaster.
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/Bernard_Shaw_(journalist)   (336 words)

  
 GW Hatchet - CNN's Bernard Shaw reflects on four decades of reporting   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-19)
Shaw announced his decision to lessen his role at CNN in November, shortly after Election Night 2000.
Shaw said he hopes to spend much of his retirement time with his wife Linda and their two children.
Shaw signed a contract with the publishing company Random House 10 years ago and said it is time to honor his writing commitment.
www.gwhatchet.com /home/index.cfm?event=displayArticlePrinterFriendly&uStory_id=dd7c92e4-0fb6-485c-b511-a6fbe49c1056   (468 words)

  
 Amazon.ca: CNN Election 2000: DVD: Bernard Shaw,Judy Woodruff,Jeff Greenfield,Bill Hemmer,Bill Schneider,Greta Van ...   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-19)
A number of faces familiar to CNN viewers (including Judy Woodruff, Bernard Shaw, Bill Schneider, Jeff Greenfield, Candy Crowley, and Larry King) share their memories of events, and enough behind-the-scenes material is included to ensure that the program is more than just a review of what news junkies have already seen.
CNN: Election 2000 -- 36 Days That Gripped the Nation is a wrap-up of the whole debacle featuring behind-the-scenes footage and interviews with reporters involved, including Julie Woodruff, Bernard Shaw and Larry King.
CNN's Bill Hemmer does an excellent job of taking you through the events as do the other CNN Anchors and Reporters who covered this debacle which lead to our nations 42nd President of the United States of America.
www.amazon.ca /CNN-Election-2000-Bernard-Shaw/dp/B000059H3I   (1117 words)

  
 Online NewsHour: CNN Downsizing -- January 29, 2001
CNN executives and their corporate overseers at AOL Time Warner, principally chief operating officer Robert Pittman, are banking that it will.
CARL ROCHELLE, former CNN correspondent: Well, the CNN that I was part until last week had sort of been drifting away from the hard news coverage that I grew up with, that I learned, that we covered since the time I went with CNN.
That's not the CNN news that I had grown up working with and loving, and was proud to be a part of and would still be if I had a job there.
www.pbs.org /newshour/bb/media/jan-june01/cnn_1-29.html   (2659 words)

  
 Bernard Shaw
Bernard Shaw was one of the last of the "old school" journalists on TV.
Shaw ended the new network's first newscast with a promise: "You can depend on us being here all the time." And for years, it was true.
Shaw broadcast live from the 1989 protests in Tiananmen Square, until the Chinese government pulled the plug on CNN's satellite access.
www.nndb.com /people/175/000024103   (351 words)

  
 CNN - Bernard Shaw - November 8, 2000
Bernard Shaw is CNN’s principal Washington, D.C. anchor.
Bernard Shaw: Not to sound flippant, but under these circumstances, "anything" is possible within the realm of legality.
Bernard Shaw: I do not know the state of Florida's election laws, but it would seem to me that that would fall within the realm of possibility.
edition.cnn.com /COMMUNITY/transcripts/2000/11/8/shaw   (1119 words)

  
 Winning CNN Wars
CNN's coverage of the Gulf War was unique and completely redefined live satellite television news.[2] The Gulf War opened the possibility that new forms of war and diplomacy were being born.
Among the dilemmas of CNN war is this: the government machinery (e.g., the intelligence and policy staffs) suggested by Lippmann's advice tends to be bypassed and ignored; we should not be surprised if this machinery fails to help leaders fight and win CNN wars.
CNN and the networks went live to their reporters in Tel Aviv and Jerusalem, depicting a bedlam of news persons, thinking they were being gassed, trying to don gas masks, insert ear pieces, and speak into their microphones at the same time, while images gyrated wildly as camera persons attempted the same juggling feats.
www.ominous-valve.com /blog/cnn_wars.html   (8449 words)

  
 CNN.com - Entertainment - CNN's Bernard Shaw: A newsman's career - March 2, 2001
And those moments were recalled Friday, when Shaw dropped by CNN's "Inside Politics," the show where he spent his last day as a full-time anchor on Wednesday, on the network he helped launch and bring to international prominence.
Wednesday's show was supposed to feature a tribute to Shaw on the occasion of his retirement as full-time anchor, but news -- the earthquake in the U.S. Northwest -- scuttled his farewell for two days.
Bernard Shaw presented co-anchor Judy Woodruff with a gavel at the end of his last show for CNN's "Inside Politics" Wednesday.
archives.cnn.com /2001/SHOWBIZ/TV/03/02/bernie.shaw   (1376 words)

  
 Bernard Shaw
As a 12-year-old in 1952, Bernard Shaw already was honing the skills that would make him one of the country's top journalists.
On Friday, Shaw announced at the end of CNN's "Inside Politics," the daily show he anchors with Judy Woodruff, that he would leave CNN early next year to spend more time with his family and to write an autobiography.
As a Dunbar High School student, Shaw said he was "very active." He was the president of the student council, a member of the public speaking club, played baseball, hosted a morning school radio program and was the announcer for Dunbar's basketball games.
jaehakim.com /articles/tv/features/shaw.htm   (737 words)

  
 Bernard Shaw to leave CNN Milwaukee Journal Sentinel, The - Find Articles   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-19)
Shaw, 60, told viewers about his decision Friday at the end of "Inside Politics," the daily show he anchors with Judy Woodruff.
Shaw's reports from Baghdad at the beginning of the Gulf War in 1991, with bombs bursting outside his hotel window, were arguably the pivotal moment in establishing CNN as a network many Americans turn to during major stories.
Shaw set a goal of working for CBS News by age 30, and missed it by a year.
www.findarticles.com /p/articles/mi_qn4196/is_20001111/ai_n10642140   (480 words)

  
 CNN Transcript - Special Event: A Farewell Tribute to Bernard Shaw - March 2, 2001
You see, during his two decades at CNN, and his entire career in journalism, Bernie has believed the news is and should be the star, and that his job has been to report it fairly and accurately, with credibility and a healthy dose of humility.
SHAW: The No. 1 challenge is not just to tell you what and why things happen here, but to explain what developments mean to you and how they will affect your pocketbook.
SHAW: The situation in Tiananmen Square is that it is a standoff.
robots.cnn.com /TRANSCRIPTS/0103/02/se.07.html   (7019 words)

  
 CNN.com - Then & Now: Bernard Shaw - Jun 1, 2005
(CNN) -- As an original anchor for CNN, Bernard Shaw was a witness to the birth of the 24-hour news network.
After signing with CNN on June 1, 1980, Shaw covered some of the biggest stories of the past decades, providing live coverage of the student demonstrations in Beijing's Tiananmen Square, the 1994 earthquake in Los Angeles, the funeral of Princess Diana, President Clinton's impeachment trial and the 2000 U.S. election.
Throughout his career, Shaw -- a history major in college -- was often an eyewitness to some of the biggest events of the last quarter-century, a position he did not take lightly.
robots.cnn.com /2005/US/05/30/cnn25.tan.shaw   (724 words)

  
 CNN Interactive Chat Transcript - Bernard Shaw
Bernard Shaw was one of three CNN reporters who broadcast continuous coverage of the first night of the Allied Forces' bombing of Baghdad during Operation Desert Storm.
Bernard Shaw: First, my feeling and description of the opening moments of the war when I looked outside the hotel window and saw silvery pieces floating from the sky; instantly I knew it had to have been radar jamming chaff.
Bernard Shaw: The broadcasting difference between Vietnam and Gulf War coverage was fated with the inception of satellites.
www.cnn.com /chat/transcripts/2001/01/16/shaw   (1228 words)

  
 They Made America | Rebels | PBS
So we tend to look back, and we say, 'Well, obviously, CNN was going to be a big success.' But in fact, when it was started, there was no indication at all that it was going to be a success, and in fact, they were teetering on the edge.
Bernard Shaw: Roone Arledge and I had negotiated a new contract at ABC News, the country was in double-digit inflation, our children were about this high, and here I was thinking about going to work for a network that didn't exist.
Bernard Shaw: And it was his trying to maintain the team spirit and say, 'Hang in there.
www.pbs.org /wgbh/theymadeamerica/filmmore/s4_pt.html   (7644 words)

  
 CNN.com - Transcripts
And three CNN reporters, working from a makeshift news bureau in a hotel, became known as the boys of Baghdad, Peter Arnett, John Holliman, and anchor Bernard Shaw.
SHAW: CNN's original plan was for me to interview President Saddam Hussein and to depart.
SHAW: William Kennedy Smith was formally charged today in the alleged rape of a woman at the Kennedy family estate in Palm Beach, Florida.
cnnstudentnews.cnn.com /TRANSCRIPTS/0506/01/pzn.01.html   (5861 words)

  
 JNN: CNN - Bernard Shaw Retires (transcript)
SHAW: This is a very emotional time for me, but please permit me to share a decision with you, our viewers across the United States and around the world, and to share with every woman, every woman, every man working so hard day and night for my favorite network: I am leaving CNN.
This is a day that no one at CNN wanted to have come, and I know I speak for everyone at this news organization when I say how hard it will be to see you go.
SHAW: I had finished a cut-in, and we were the only ones in the hall, to the point that the hall was darkened except for the lights on the stage, of course, our lights way up in the rafters.
www.sfu.ca /~joes/jnn/cnn_features/bernard.html   (1377 words)

  
 RGJ.com - Bernard Shaw to quit CNN
Shaw, 60, said he planned to tell viewers about his decision Friday at the end of “Inside Politics,” the daily show he anchors with Judy Woodruff.
Shaw has been at CNN since the beginning, leaving a job as reporter for ABC News to join CNN in 1980 when it was an idea, not a network.
Shaw’s reports from Baghdad at the beginning of the Gulf War in 1991, with bombs bursting outside his hotel window, were arguably the pivotal moment in establishing CNN as a network many Americans turn to during major stories.
www.rgj.com /news/stories/lifestyle/973992427.php   (175 words)

  
 1993 Honorees - Bernard Shaw
Bernard Shaw, principal Cable Network News (CNN) anchor for Washington, D.C., is an eyewitness to history.
Shaw's life underscores the fact that excellence does not come overnight; it builds over time and depends upon one's ability and the quality of one's experience.
Shaw has carried the torch of broadcast journalism from Tiananmen Square where Chinese students demonstrated and died for human rights to reporting on the activities of the great and near-great throughout the world.
www.dom.com /about/education/strong/1993/bernardshaw.jsp   (193 words)

  
 Washington Bulletin
Occasionally Shaw did the right thing, which was to ask a question and then get out of the way.
Shaw's real failing, however, was in asking three of the worst questions ever heard at one of these forums.
Shaw's namesake, the playwright George Bernard Shaw, once wrote of "the nauseas sham goodfellowship our democratic public men get up for shop use." Apparently Shaw wants more of this fakery.
www.nationalreview.com /daily/nrprint100600.html   (509 words)

  
 CNN - Convention 2000 - Bernard Shaw
CNN's Bernard Shaw on the 2000 GOP Convention
Bernard Shaw: After listening to party leader Governor Bush, it would seem to me rather than an "issue," I believe Republicans will be arguing that theirs is a different, if not new, party, interested in helping all -- and I underscore ALL American citizens -- solve national problems.
Bernard Shaw: A close race was President Kennedy's victory over Richard Nixon, when he won by 100,000 votes in 1960.
edition.cnn.com /COMMUNITY/transcripts/2000/7/28/shaw   (1035 words)

  
 CNN Transcript - Inside Politics: Bush Condemns McCain Campaign Tactics; McCain Stresses Electability to Californians; ...
SHAW: While the presidential candidates are looking ahead top Super Tuesday, they are by no means brushing aside the primary votes being cast at this hour.
SHAW: Welcome back to INSIDE POLITICS, coming to you from Los Angeles, where Al Gore and Bill Bradley are due to debate tomorrow night.
SHAW: With the all-important California primary just a week away, Bill Bradley and Al Gore are spending two days in the state, looking for votes and preparing for that important debate tomorrow night.
www-cgi.cnn.com /TRANSCRIPTS/0002/29/ip.00.html   (6365 words)

  
 CNN.com - Transcripts
CNN has called the winner George W. Bush, that he will be the 43rd president of the United States.
SHAW: Well, speaking of change, there's a song whose lyrics begin, "the first time ever I saw her." When we come back, Bob Novak will fill in the words.
SHAW: Well, there is more to this tribute to our lady, the iron lady, Judy Woodruff, when INSIDE POLITICS continues in a moment.
premium.asia.cnn.com /TRANSCRIPTS/0506/03/ip.01.html   (6221 words)

  
 Your Choice. Your Voice. - CNN Election 2000 Coverage
CNN NEWSROOM is a FREE instructional program for teachers to bring the world into their classroom with in-depth news stories and world and regional events designed exclusively for students.
IP is anchored by one of network news' most successful anchor teams, Bernard Shaw and Judy Woodruff, from CNN's Washington, D.C. bureau.
Bill Schneider, CNN's senior political analyst, can regularly be seen on IP, providing insight into the latest political story.
learning.turner.com /cnn/election/coverage.html   (423 words)

  
 [No title]   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-19)
CNN vows to spend nearly 100 hours on each gathering, nearly a third more time than in 1996.
CNN, whose ratings are down dramatically in a slow news year, has learned that the hard way.
CNN will charge roughly 20% more for advertisements during the conventions, said Larry Goodman, the network's vice president of sales.
www.usatoday.com /news/opinion/e2292.htm   (736 words)

  
 Worldandnation: CNN's Shaw to moderate vice presidential debate
WASHINGTON -- CNN anchor Bernard Shaw will moderate the Oct. 5 talk show-style debate between vice presidential candidates Joseph Lieberman and Dick Cheney.
Shaw, a longtime CNN anchor and host of Inside Politics, has been with the network since 1980.
Shaw was moderator of the second 1988 presidential debate in Los Angeles between then-Vice President George Bush and Massachusetts Gov. Michael Dukakis.
www.sptimes.com /News/092000/Worldandnation/CNN_s_Shaw_to_moderat.shtml   (618 words)

  
 UGA News Bureau   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-19)
Shaw, who recently retired from the Atlanta-based cable network, will receive the Distinguished Achievement Award in Broadcasting from UGA’s Grady College of Journalism and Mass Communication and its student broadcasting society, Di Gamma Kappa (DGK).
Shaw covered the student revolt in China’s Tiannamen Square in the late 80s won numerous broadcasting awards for both Shaw and CNN.
Along with fellow correspondents John Holliman (ABJ '70) and Peter Arnett, Shaw became known as one of the "Boys of Bagdad" for his role in the 24-hour coverage of Operation Desert Storm.
www.uga.edu /news/newsbureau/releases/2002releases/0202/020206shaw.html   (520 words)

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