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Evening newscasts in 50s/60s/70s--which network was highest-rated?

All righty, then, friends, it is long past time for me to strike again. In the honorable tradition of Steve Urkel from Family Matters and Dennis the Menace (Jay North, of course), I come to agitate this hallowed forum and pester you ... well ... gentlemen for no particular reason (BTW, any ladies hit this forum? I dunno.).

And the question inquiring minds want to know this time is: network newscasts are a much more slippery thing in terms of impact and ratings than they used to be because of cable, internet, and the whole all-day media circus. But in the times when Pa had to go to the set at precisely 6:41 in the evening to fire up the thing in the time for the nightly news, does anybody really have an accurate idea about who, beginning with, say, the Eisenhower administration and the Korean War, was on top? We know the cast of characters here: Douglas Edwards helmed the Tiffany Network's 15-minute powwow every night, while across the dial on NBC, we got John Cameron Swayze and his somewhat rambunctious Camel News Caravan, the latter having been held up to ridicule in recent times for Swayze's pushing Camel cigs (both figuratively and literally, between his lips) in between stories, while in studio. If Wikipedia is to be believed, it looks like John Charles Daly, best known for his long stint on What's My Line?, was the mainstay on the Alphabet channel, but everybody who knows jack-squat about the history of American television knows that ABC didn't have anywhere near the number of stations that CBS or NBC did.

The Fifties probably weren't much to brag about in terms of network news division performance, but as the Kennedy presidency brought about crisis after crisis, TV news had to grow up quick, and this was BEFORE the November 1963 assassination. By 1956, though, NBC outgrew the antics of Swayze and gave him a pink slip (or perhaps a Timex watch?) in favor of the two of the most-memorable broadcasters on their age, Chet Huntley and David Brinkley. Inspired by a local newscast in West Virginia, the Peacock hierarchy came upon the idea of stationing Huntley at 30 Rock and Brinkley at Nebraska Avenue in D.C. Put together with a hard-hitting but rock-steady presentation by Huntley and the inimitable wit and genteel sarcasm of Brinkley, HBR got the upper edge as Eisenhower left office. Over at the Eyeball ranch on West 57th, Douglas Edwards had measured up for years to the gold standard of Edward R. Murrow as the statesman newscaster. But feeling the Huntley-Brinkley Report heat, CBS pulled the trigger and demoted Edwards to daytime, bringing in the personification of television news for a generation of viewers: one Walter Leland Cronkite.

Somebody on Wikipedia has muddied the issue of who was the first to expand to a full 30 minutes each night, but NBC and CBS did so by '63; ABC, meanwhile, would hold out for four years while it tried everything but circus acts in the anchor chair. For a while, it looked like a young Canadian by the name of Peter Jennings might be the Golden Boy for the Alphabet crew, but he didn't cut it right off (with his strong, British-inflected accent then, there was no way he could have), and he went back into the field for more seasoning. General wisdom holds that HBR held a narrow lead during the middle of the decade, but as Vietnam went full-blast in '65-'66 and America seemed to be careening out of control to many, Mr. Cronkite, with his measured, serious, but calming tone became the preferred supper-time companion for a growing number. It wasn't until toward the end of the decade that ABC finally settled on a stable lineup of Howard K. Smith and Frank Reynolds--or so it seemed for awhile.

The Age of Aquarius dawned on CBS' competitors rather sharply. Huntley hung it up in the summer of '70, and HBR became just plain generic NBC Nightly News, with, get this, a troika of rotating newsmen: Frank McGee stationed at 30 Rock, Brinkley staying put in Washington as he had for the past 14 years, and the senior correspondent of HBR, John Chancellor, going wherever one of the first two wasn't, meaning that when Brinkley was off for the night, on the East Coast line he went to D.C, probably not getting back to NYC until midnight. (Actually, McGee was sick for awhile in late '70, and Edwin Newman pinch-hitted in Gotham.)

And over at ABC, network execs got the itch for better ratings and a way to exploit the mess at NBC, so they busted Reynolds down to reporter and shelled out high moola to get Harry Reasoner from the Eyeball channel. Viewers balked at that also and decided that Cronkite was the Gibraltar rock of evening news, and "that's the way it was" until CBS' then-mandatory retirement policy required "Uncle Walter" to step down in '81. By '71, NBC had learned its lesson and decided on Chancellor every night, with Brinkley relieved of the nightly grind in favor of several commentaries per week, and McGee going to The Today Show (a job which more than one person has observed he thoroughly loathed) until his untimely death in Spring '74. It still wasn't happening, though, and the Peacock brass opted to bring Brinkley back in the anchor's chair in '76 and see if the old HBR chemistry night pull off a renaissance. No such luck.

ABC was still floundering at mid-decade, and the decision was to make to milk the Reasoner acquisition for all it was worth by easing HKS into semi-retirement with commentaries only (a la Brinkley and CBS' Eric Sevareid) and trying Reasoner solo. When that didn't fly, ABC went back to its old strategy of luring away rival talent and snatched Barbara Walters from Today and NBC. What ensued was what what TV critics deemed the worst pairing of anchors in American TV history. It looked for awhile like the Alphabet boys might have considered running Howdy Doody reruns as counter-programming or other desparation tactics. But salvation was on its way from the one strong suit ABC had: its sports division and its innovator head, Roone Arledge.

Arledge was given the commission in '78 to revamp everything. First off, he sent Reasoner packing back to his old haunt on West 57th and 60 Minutes, which he co-founded with Mike Wallace a decade earlier and, more importantly, which was now a big ratings hit. Barbara Walters was allowed to return to her natural habitat of sob-sister and celeb interviews, and wound up reunited not long after with her old Today chum, Hugh Downs, when he opted to come out of retirement for the new 20/20, one of Arledge's new aggressive ideas. Arledge decided to reverse not one, but TWO previous demotions from the anchor desk: Peter Jennings returned after a decade's absence at the London bureau, and the venerable, authoritative Frank Reynolds was vindicated from the unconscionable brushing aside he got eight years earlier. The result was World News Tonight, with multiple anchor desks: the third man would break the color barrier for a network newscast, Max Robinson, who set up in Chicago.

This configuration finally clicked with the American public, and gradually ABC built a solid reputation as a serious, thoroughgoing operation, rather than an afterthought as it had been in previous decades. NBC kept hitting the skids no matter what it did, thanks in no small part to the network's deterioration in all dayparts. John Chancellor finally called it a day in early '82 and handed the reins over to the Peacock's Golden Boy for nearly a decade, one Thomas John Brokaw. We must arbitrarily end the story there, as cultural changes such as cable were taking off around that time.

But does anyone have an idea if this understanding of the network's vagaries and fortunes over the three-decade period? I'm ready for a long thread on this one, so send 'em on.
 
IIRC, NBC was the ratings leader pretty much from the first Nielsen ratings in 1950 to about 1963, seeing it through the John Cameron Swayze "Camel News Caravan" era and the first seven years of the Huntley-Brinkley Report. Douglas Edwards at CBS was a close second. ABC (with various anchors in the early days, and John Daly from 1953 to 1960) did very well in the markets where it was seen but didn't have coverage parity with the other networks until the 1970s, so it was a fairly distant third overall.

After he arrived at the anchor desk in 1962 Walter Cronkite did help the ratings for CBS almost immediately, although he first really jumped into the lead in the Nielsens after he went to a half-hour nightly broadcast in 1963 (NBC was 15 minutes for several months longer, ABC until 1967). Cronkite would stay in the lead for the rest of his career until his retirement in 1981. NBC then was a respectable second, and ABC stayed third (although more respectably, as their affiliate lineup grew and strengthened in the 70s) until the combination of Cronkite's retirement, Dan Rather's occasionally erratic performance, Tom Brokaw's arrival at the NBC anchor desk, and the maturing of Peter Jennings at ABC made it a legitimate three way race.
 
NBC's advantage in news ratings in the early 1950's was predicated on one thing: their nightly newscast was available in more cities than either CBS or ABC.

While stations in one-station markets generally carried programs from ABC, CBS, DuMont and NBC, they often picked NBC's newscast.

Even in multiple-station markets, stations sometimes didn't carry network news. For example, here in Boston, there were two stations in the early 1950's: WBZ-4 (an NBC primary affiliate that also carried a couple of shows each from ABC and DuMont), and WNAC-7 (which was a primary CBS affiliate but carried a handful of ABC shows and a couple of DuMont programs). According to TV listings in various editions of the Boston Globe and Boston Post published in 1950 and 1951, WBZ carried John Cameron Swayze's "Camel News Caravan", but WNAC didn't carry any network newscast.

In nearby Providence, WJAR-11 (later on Channel 10) was the market's only TV station until 1953, and while it carried about half the CBS schedule (as well as about half of NBC's schedule plus a few ABC and DuMont shows; it was a primary NBC affiliate as it is to this day) in it's early years, it carried Swayze and not Edwards.

I believe there were a couple of years in the mid-1950's when WNAC did carry Douglas Edwards, but by 1957, they were again not doing so. When the original WHDH-5 signed-on in the Fall of 1957, they carried Edwards instead of ABC's own John Charles Daly. Channel 5 continued to carry Edwards until he was replaced by Walter Cronkite in April of 1962 (on January 1, 1961, the original WHDH became a CBS affiliate).

Interestingly enough, when WNAC became the ABC affiliate in early 1961, they began carrying ABC's evening newscast (which was anchored by Bill Shadel, who had just replaced Daly). But there was a brief time around 1968 and 1969 when it didn't carry ABC's network newscast (and in fact, independent WSBK-38 cleared the newscast for a time).

Swayze being seen in Boston and Providence while Edwards certainly had to help NBC and hurt CBS, especially since there were likely other markets like them where a viewer could watch Swayze but could not see Edwards.

Clearance of network evening newscasts, especially ABC's, was a major problem until the early 1970's. The turning point was when Harry Reasonear (who had just joined ABC to co-anchor with Howard K. Smith) made a speech criticizing TV stations that didn't carry network evening newscasts. After that, just about the only markets where ABC's evening newscast was not seen were those where the ABC affiliate also had affiliations with CBS and/or NBC and thus, preferred Walter Cronkite or John Chancellor.

I had thought that the "CBS Evening News", then with Douglas Edwards, passed John Cameron Swayze's "Camel/Plymouth News Caravan" in the ratings by 1955 (circa 1955, Plymouth sponsored the newscast one or two nights a week), and it's ratings were falling in 1956; hence, after their performance at the conventions, Chet Huntley and David Brinkley replaced Swayze.

I believe Huntley and Brinkley had pulled into a dead heat with Edwards in early 1958, but it wasn't until 1960 that "Huntley/Brinkley" pulled ahead.
 
I also thought Edwards passed Swayze around 1955, only to be
bested by Chet and David by the start of the '60s. I've also read
that Cronkite didn't take over first place for good until 1967, as people
felt that the times were too serious for Chet and David's more easygoing
style.

As for ABC, once the Alphabet Network got 100% clearance in 1972, Howard
K. and Harry frequently tied, and sometimes bested, Chancellor through the
Watergate period. But around 1974 their ratings began to drop again; Reasoner
wanted to anchor solo (to compete on equal terms with Cronkite), which turned
out to be a mistake, compounded by the teaming of Reasoner and Barbara Walters
(1976-78). "World News Tonight" may not have been number one at first but it did
attract a different audience from CBS and NBC, what with its different look; ABC
really established itself as a network to be taken seriously with its coverage of the
Iranian hostage crisis (which begat "Nightline" as well). And as pointed out, by the
'80s Peter Jennings sounded as if he knew what he was talking about; IMO, he may
go down as the last of the great network anchors (and I'll include Edward R. Murrow,
even though he never anchored the "CBS Evening News" but did do a nightly news
and commentary broadcast on CBS Radio in the late '40s and all through the '50s).

I do think, too, that CBS could have done more with Douglas Edwards; maybe it was
inevitable that Cronkite was going to replace him, but I think he could have had more
than just the five-minute daytime newscast he did for over 20 years, or a handful of
radio newscasts; why CBS didn't put him on weekends or on "CBS Reports" I'll never know.
I've told this story before, but it's worth repeating, I think: one day in the '70s Don Hewitt
(who had produced Edwards' newscast) was having lunch with Swayze's former producer.
Swayze's guy said that it was probably inevitable that Cronkite, Huntley, and Brinkley would
have eventually replaced Edwards and Swayze, "but at least your guy had the class to stay
in the news business; I mean, he didn't go out and become a (expletive deleted) watch salesman."
 
"I do think, too, that CBS could have done more with Douglas Edwards; maybe it was
inevitable that Cronkite was going to replace him, but I think he could have had more
than just the five-minute daytime newscast he did for over 20 years, or a handful of
radio newscasts; why CBS didn't put him on weekends or on "CBS Reports" I'll never know."

One thing I'll never know, is why, when Edwards was effectively demoted by CBS, ABC didn't make a run at him. He could have given the ABC network instant credibility in a way John Daly (who had been an outstanding radio journallist in the 1940s but was known by 1962 primarily for "What's My Line") was never able to do.
 
Just to correct an earlier post, The huntley-Brinkley Report was not several months behind CBS in expanding to a half hour evening newscast. NBC went to thirty minutes on September 9, 1963, exactly one week after CBS. Both newscasts included interviews with President Kennedy during their inaugural thirty minute broadcasts.
 
I believe ABC also wanted to expand it's evening newscast to a half-hour around 1964, but it's affiliates did not want to give up an extra fifteen minutes to a low-rated newscast and that it wasn't until late 1966 that ABC finally got the affiliates to agree, with the news expanding in January of 1967.

I believe that except for some 1966 editions (during space flights and the 1966 midterm election night), ABC's evening newscast remained in black-and-white until it expanded to a half-hour.
 
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