Lkeller said:FredLeonard said:Supposedly, Putnam along with Jerry Dunphy, were the models for Ted Baxter. Baxter looked sort of like Dunphy but the way he talked with pure Putnam.
Before he moved to California, Putnam did a national radio news broadcast on NBC from New York. It's sort of interesting that he gave up a chance to get into network TV news for local news in LA. I wonder what the nightly news would look like today if NBC had gone with Putnam instead of John Cameron Swayze. Putnam might have beaten Doug Edwards in the ratings and there would not have been a Huntley-Brinkley. Or a Cronkite.
He was like a traffic accident. It was impossible not to look.
True. When he bolted back to KTTV, KTLA initially replaced Putnam with Stan Chambers, but after a couple of months hired conservative former LA Police Chief Tom Reddin as anchor. Reddin didn't last long - he was wooden on camera and had a high thin voice - hardly competition for the bombastic George. After Reddin's first night, the LA Times printed a political cartoon showing Reddin and Putnam tugging from both ends on the American flag. Reddin reportedly thought it was funny, and asked the Times to send him a framed original. When I saw the cartoon in the morning paper, I made sure to tune in Putnam on KTTV that night, because I figured he'd go ballistic. Predictably, he did - on his "One Reporters' Opinion" editorial segment, blasting the Times' liberal Republican publisher as a "com-symp pinko loser." Then he talked about respecting the flag, and his his voice got all thick, choked with emotion. I had an audio recording of it for years, then sadly, lost it.
The producers of the MTM show were always coy, saying Ted Baxter was an amalgam of different anchors. But the only comparison to Dunphy was the white-gray hair, which was Ted Knight's hair color. And around that time, KABC-TV had an anchor named Baxter Ward. But Ted's personality was all Putnam, and MTM herself admitted one night on Johnny Carson that Baxter was built almost entirely around Putnam's delivery and personality.
The only element of Dunphy that made it into the Ted Baxter character was the prompter-dependency. Jerry was an excellent reader as long as there were words to read. He was not an ad-libber, nor did he have a huge interest in the stories themselves. Jerry was a reader and not a reporter.