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NEW YORK (AP) — Bill Moyers, the former White House press secretary who became one of television’s most honored journalists, ...
Morley Safer had just finished interviewing comedian-actor Jackie Gleason, the television powerhouse of the 1950s and 1960s who lives on in reruns of "The Honeymooners." ...
PHOTOS: Remembering Morley Safer When he agreed to come to ``60 Minutes,'' he had it written into his contract that he would return to London if the show was cancelled for bad ratings.
Morley Safer was the correspondent. While most governments are concerned with gross national product, we found a place, perhaps the only place on Earth, where the government's first priority is ...
Morley Safer, the CBS correspondent known for decades of work on the Sunday news magazine "60 Minutes" died of pneumonia yesterday at his home in New York. He was 84.
"Morley Safer helped create the CBS News we know today," CBS News President David Rhodes said. To many viewers with a critical eye, that's not true at CBS, or at many similar outlets.
He goes, ‘Morley Safer,’” as he stuck out his hand, Colbert said. Colbert also mentioned a more recent encounter when he ran into Safer smoking a vape pen in an elevator in a CBS building.
Morley Safer, who was a correspondent on CBS’s 60 Minutes from 1970 until just last week, died Thursday at age 84. There will be hundreds of obituaries about Safer, but at least so far, there ...
By 2006 Safer had reduced his output, accepting half-time status. But he remained after the departures of Wallace — who retired in 2006 at age 88, and died in 2012 — as well as Don Hewitt, who ...
During his 46 years on "60 Minutes," Safer did 919 stories, from his first in 1970 about U.S. Sky Marshals to his last this March, a profile of Danish architect Bjarke Ingels.
NEW YORK (CBSNewYork) -- Legendary "60 Minutes" correspondent Morley Safer, who chased stories all across the globe over his 61-year television career, has died at age 84.
— In 1979, Morley Safer did a story for 60 Minutes on Palm Springs from an outsider's point of view. It played on every stereotype of the desert village as a habitat for the rich and famous.