Showing posts with label CBS News. Show all posts
Showing posts with label CBS News. Show all posts
Thursday, July 13, 2017
CBS, BBC announce global newsgathering tie-up
WASHINGTON - CBS News and the BBC on Thursday announced a new editorial and newsgathering partnership that aims to boost their global strength against rivals such as CNN.
The US and British television news giants will share video, editorial content, and other resources in New York, London, Washington and around the world, according to a joint statement.
"There's never been a more important time for smart, courageous coverage of what's happening in the world," said James Harding, the BBC's director of news and current affairs.
"This new partnership between the BBC and CBS News is designed to bring our audiences -- wherever you live, whatever your point of view -- news that is reliable, original and illuminating. Our ambition is to deliver the best in international reporting on television."
The deal brings together two major television news organizations and comes weeks after US-based NBC finalized a deal to take a 25 percent stake in France-based Euronews to boost its global scale.
CBS News president David Rhodes said his organization "is completely committed to original reporting around the world -- a commitment clearly shared by the BBC."
He added, "There's no better partner to strengthen and extend our global coverage than BBC News."
The two groups sharing of content between CBS News and BBC News will begin immediately and that additional newsgathering elements would be rolled out in the coming months.
BBC News claims to be the largest broadcast news operation in the world with more than 2,000 journalists and 48 newsgathering bureaus, according to its website.
CBS News is part of the large CBS television network with offices around the United States and a handful of overseas locations.
This new partnership replaces the BBC’s current arrangement with Disney-owned ABC News, according to Harding who called that relationship "long and fruitful."
source: news.abs-cbn.com
Monday, April 9, 2012
Legendary US newsman Mike Wallace dies at age 93

WASHINGTON -- Mike Wallace, a legendary newsman known for impertinent, hard-nosed interviews on CBS' popular "60 Minutes" television program, has died at age 93, the network announced on Sunday.
Wallace, whose 60-year career began in radio, spanned roles from wrestling announcer to quiz show host before making an indelible mark on US television journalism as an interviewer of the news makers who defined his times.
From Malcom X to Ayatollah Khomeini, Wallace cut to the quick with tough, abrasive, "who-gives-a-damn" questions that proved ground-breaking in US television journalism.
He honed his pit bull persona in an interview show called "Nightbeat," beginning in 1959, and then brought it to "60 Minutes" when CBS launched that seminal television magazine show in 1968.
Wallace, who retired in 2006, racked up at least 20 Emmy awards and every other major prize for television journalism.
Some of his work also came in for criticism.
He and CBS were sued for libel by General William Westmoreland, a Vietnam War commander, for a 1982 documentary "The Uncounted Enemy: A Vietnam Deception." The suit was later dropped after CBS issued a statement saying it had not meant to question the general's patriotism.
He also was accused of buckling to corporate pressure kill a story about a tobacco company whistleblower, which later became the basis of a 1999 movie "The Insider" with Christopher Plummer.
But he was remembered as an indefatigable journalist, active well into his 80s, who probed the lives of the world's noted and notorious, fearlessly asking the impertinent question on everyone's mind.
He interviewed Malcolm X shortly before his assassination, asked Ayatollah Khomeini if he were crazy, and interviewed Iran's President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad in 2006 at the end of a 37-year stint with "60 Minutes."
He had said that his favorite interview was with pianist Vladimir Horowitz, an encounter described Sunday in a CBS remembrance as a duel between "sly, manic egos."
"All of us at CBS News and particularly at 60 Minutes owe so much to Mike. Without him and his iconic style, there probably wouldn't be a 60 Minutes," said CBS president and CEO Lesli Moonves in a statement.
source: interaksyon.com
Friday, March 23, 2012
Soldiers loot in Mali after coup, AU says president safe

BAMAKO - Soldiers looted petrol stations and hijacked cars in the Malian capital Bamako on Friday 48 hours after a military coup, as the African Union said it had assurances that President Amadou Toumani Toure was safe.
The AU also suspended Mali's membership after the coup which has left the West African nation in limbo and jangled nerves in a region already suffering aftershocks from the Libyan war.
"We have been told that the president is safe, protected by a certain number of loyalists," AU Commission head Jean Ping told reporters after a meeting of the bloc's Peace and Security Council in Addis Ababa.
"The president is in Mali for sure. The assurances we are getting from those that are protecting him is that he is not far from Bamako," Ping said.
The coup's leaders have sought to capitalize on popular dissatisfaction at Toure's handling of a rebellion by northern nomads. But they looked isolated as a coalition of parties condemned the coup and urged new elections, which before Wednesday's events had been scheduled for April.
"The signatories ... condemn this forceful takeover which is a major setback for our democracy," 10 parties including ADEMA, the largest in parliament, said in a joint declaration.
Amadou Sanogo, the army captain named as leader of the mutineers, told Africable television on Thursday that he would not hold on to power but refused to give a timeframe for restoring civilian rule.
Sanogo, who says he has had training from US Marines and intelligence, said there had been efforts to arrest Toure.
Residents in Bamako said looting had caused shortages, and fuel prices have doubled to over 1,300 CFA francs ($2.60) a liter in about 24 hours.
"I am a driver but there is no fuel for the car, I do not even have fuel for my bike to go back home," said Youssouf Diawara as he queued with other motorists for petrol.
Although most shops, petrol stations and businesses were closed some residents ventured out in search of necessities.
"People are afraid because of the soldiers. Often (they take) what is in the car or they make you get out and take the car or sometimes the soldiers themselves just break into shops," said Bamako resident Adama Quindo.
Civilians joined in the looting of a warehouse by soldiers, according to Reuters television.
"Bread is becoming scarce, I made a mistake this morning, I should have bought more," said another Bamako resident.
Mali, flooded with men and weapons after Libya's civil war, was already facing a food crisis, the Tuareg-led rebellion, and a growing Islamist threat when Sanogo's soldiers took over.
Rebels say gain ground
Tuareg-led MNLA rebels in northern Mali, aiming to capitalize on confusion in the distant capital, pushed south to occupy positions abandoned by government forces, sources said.
Sanogo said he was ready to negotiate with the rebels but that his aim was to maintain Mali's territorial integrity.
"That's (negotiations) what I want - because I want a united Mali in which all can prosper," he said in an interview with French RFI radio aired on Friday.
A Malian officer in the northern town of Kidal said rebels had occupied the military camp in Anefis, 100 km (60 miles) to the southwest, after government forces withdrew.
The MNLA said on its website that it had taken Anefis, which lies on the Gao-Kidal highway, after Malian troops abandoned their positions and withdrew to Gao.
The MNLA, whose numbers have been swollen by Malian Tuaregs returning from the ranks of Libya's army, have been fighting since mid-January for an independent north. They have pushed government soldiers out of remote towns but have not yet threatened the regional capitals of Kidal, Timbuktu and Gao.
Diplomats and officials believe Toure is being protected by a pocket of loyalist soldiers. The US embassy has denied widespread rumors the president was being sheltered there.
Toure, 63, a former paratrooper who seized power in 1991, had gained the nickname 'Soldier of Democracy' in Mali and had been preparing to cede power in April after an election.
Mali's neighbors, the United Nations and world powers from Paris to Washington called for a return to constitutional rule. Regional body ECOWAS said it would not recognize the junta.
The World Bank and African Development Bank on Thursday condemned the military coup and suspended funds to Mali.
US aid group Millennium Challenge Corporation, suspended operations in the country on Thursday, while the European Commission also suspended development operations. (Additional reporting by Adama Diarra in Bamako and Aaron Maasho in Addis Ababa)
source: interaksyon.com
Sunday, November 6, 2011
Andy Rooney Dead at 92
CBS icon Andy Rooney -- who was with the network for nearly 60 years -- died yesterday ... reps at CBS confirm.
Rooney had been hospitalized last month for "serious complications" following minor surgery.
Details of Rooney's condition had not been released.
"60 Minutes" executive producer Jeff Fager released a statement saying, "It's a sad day for everybody here at CBS News ... it's hard to imagine not having Andy around. He loved his life and he lived it on his own terms. We will miss him very much."
Rooney last appeared on "60 Minutes" on October 2 -- in which he marveled at the weight of his new laptop computer ... saying, "It weights less than 3 pounds ... I lose that much getting mad waiting to get on the plane through security at the airport."
He was 92.
Source: tmz
Rooney had been hospitalized last month for "serious complications" following minor surgery.
Details of Rooney's condition had not been released.
"60 Minutes" executive producer Jeff Fager released a statement saying, "It's a sad day for everybody here at CBS News ... it's hard to imagine not having Andy around. He loved his life and he lived it on his own terms. We will miss him very much."
Rooney last appeared on "60 Minutes" on October 2 -- in which he marveled at the weight of his new laptop computer ... saying, "It weights less than 3 pounds ... I lose that much getting mad waiting to get on the plane through security at the airport."
He was 92.
Source: tmz
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