Cable News & Walter

H, A and F. Three words that are not feelings but reactions while watching the current source of news.

Hate ignites unbridled anger (the next word) with not outlet or release.

Anger is the reaction to unfolding hatred with a growing misplaced release

(Worst of all?) Fear is the culmination of H & A to totally scare the heebie-jeebeies into your watching and re-watching TV again.

The sequence can vary but the three combined, and mixed together, are both culturally and spiritually unhealthy.

Viewing television news of any sort needs listening and not hearing ears. Allow your mind and heart to absorb the information. Invite your soul to, most importantly, digest the news and enlighten the mind and heart. And, exactly where is your soul? It’s next to the pancreas. (Everybody knows that!)

I hope we all have people we can admire for their professional and honest approach to their work. For newscasters, a bar was set high with the work of Walter Cronkite. The weight of this man’s integrity and career continues to marvels viewers and fellow journalists. Even saying his name with his throaty baritone voice carried a trusted believability.

CBS News

For nineteen years, during the evening meal, he summarized the day’s events for us in as much an objective way as possible. Gimmicky graphics, moving cameras, split screens, arguing consultants and scrolling gibberish was not his presentation of the news.

The trusted honesty that he instilled in us was not because he was a personality. (He seemed to not have one, actually.)  He didn’t want or intend for that to happen. It was simply (and I emphasize that word) to deliver the news from around the world in a clear, concise fashion. As he spoke, you had time to absorb and make sense, or no sense, of what was occurring from the Vietnam War, to JFK’s assassination to the thrilling excitement of the first space shuttle.

It’s been said that President Johnson remarked, “If we lose Cronkite on the (Vietnam) war, we’ve lost the country.” He even reported as a corespondent during the Nuremberg Trials, following World War II.

He Had the Look of Trust & Authority

Integrity

Always a favorite word of mine, Cronkite believed in what he was doing and felt that he made a difference by doing it. (What more can anyone ask of life?) That is not only integrity, it is passion; the kind that gets you out of bed after only a few hours of sleep to return again to the work you just left.

Fellow newscaster, Robert MacNeil said after Cronkite’s death that, “He didn’t have to pretend to be anything that he wasn’t. He loved being Walter Cronkite, doing something valuable. People deserved the truth.” What a marvelous epithet for all of us to reach toward.

Too Much Stuff Moving & Yelling

Too Many Channels

With all the television news programs these days, I guess the devolution of news was bound to happen. The more “objective” reporting of yesterdays are now replaced with snipes, smug dismissal of public servants and self-serving newscasters who are more celebrities than journalists.

The only subjective view in Cronkite’s newscast was from a equally “non personality.” For years it was Eric Sevareid who in sixty seconds delivered a piercing, crisp and articulate analysis on a particular subject that left your ears speechless when he was finished.  He talked to us flatly while looking at the camera, talking into a huge microphone with nothing behind or beside him. I think Boris Karloff based his “Frankenstein” character on Eric’s stolid presence.

One camera, one man, one day’s news. I felt that Cronkite was objective and I hope I was right.  At least there is a hint of doubt in my mind about him but I’m definitely sure of the current cable breed.

H, A & F have no room in anyone’s life. Like cancer, they only grow inside us and then explode in ways we can never imagine. Mix those three “reactions” together with a group? You know what you get.

Unknown's avatar

About Rev. Joe Jagodensky, SDS.

A Roman Catholic priest since 1980 and a member of the Society of the Divine Savior (Salvatorians). www.Salvatorians.com. Six books on the Catholic church and U.S. culture are available on Amazon.com.
This entry was posted in Spirituality. Bookmark the permalink.

1 Response to Cable News & Walter

  1. mdelgado1@wi.rr.com's avatar mdelgado1@wi.rr.com says:

    Thank you, Joe.This was so well thoughtout and written.I miss those days. McNeil/Leheehr report – another steadfast hour of news.

    -----------------------------------------
    

    Like

Leave a comment

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.