J
Joseph_Gallant
Guest
Twenty-five years ago today, Monday, March 30th, 1981, President Ronald Reagan (who had been inaugurated just ten weeks beforehand) was shot and wounded after leaving the Washington Hilton hotel, where he had made a speech.
That day, ABC, CBS and NBC broke into regular programming shortly after 2:30 P.M. EST, and aired nonstop coverage until about 9 P.M. EST, at which time the President was out of danger. That night, both the Academy Awards and the NCAA Division 1 men's basketball championship game were scheduled to take place. The NCAA's were held as scheduled; the Oscars were postponed a few days.
For a young Dan Rather, who was starting his fourth week as anchor of the "CBS Evening News", it was his first experience as prime anchor for a breaking-news story on network television. Had this incident happened as recently as four weeks earlier, Walter Cronkite would have been in the CBS anchor chair.
The best-remembered network broadcast was ABC's, due in large part to anchor Frank Reynolds' memorable remark when there were conflicting reports as to whether Press Secretary Jim Brady, who was also shot, was dead or alive. At one point, Reynolds (in an angry tone) urged his newsroom staff "Let's Get This Thing Nailed Down, Please! Let's Get This Thing Right!".
I did not see much of NBC's coverage that day (I watched mostly ABC and a little of CBS), but I seem to think that John Chancellor anchored, assisted by Edwin Newman. Had this incident taken place a year later, Tom Brokaw and not Chancellor would have anchored NBC's coverage.
Also, Chancellor, Newman and Rather were in New York; Reynolds was in Washington, where he did his portion of "World News Tonight" each weeknight. If my memory serves me correct, the old ABC News bureau was on DeSales Street (a block from the current home of the network's D.C. bureau) and in turn a block or two from the hotel outside which the shooting took place. I seem to recall White House correspondent Sam Donaldson ran the block from the hotel to the news bureau to get on the air.
Click here to launch a video presentation from ABC News' website containing fifteen minutes of excerpts of their coverage from March 30th, 1981. You will not hear Reynolds yelling "Let's Get This Thing Nailed Down!...", but you will see and hear extended clips from the network's mid-afternoon coverage, around the time that it was confirmed that President Reagan, in fact, was hit by a bullet.
VCR's were becoming a mass-marketed product by 1981 (although I did not get my first VCR until August of 1984). I suspect that afternoon, once they heard the news, there were at least a few people who grabbed a blank tape, put it into the VCR, and started recording the coverage, with the tape(s) becoming family heirlooms.
What are your memories of TV coverage from March 30th, 1981??
That day, ABC, CBS and NBC broke into regular programming shortly after 2:30 P.M. EST, and aired nonstop coverage until about 9 P.M. EST, at which time the President was out of danger. That night, both the Academy Awards and the NCAA Division 1 men's basketball championship game were scheduled to take place. The NCAA's were held as scheduled; the Oscars were postponed a few days.
For a young Dan Rather, who was starting his fourth week as anchor of the "CBS Evening News", it was his first experience as prime anchor for a breaking-news story on network television. Had this incident happened as recently as four weeks earlier, Walter Cronkite would have been in the CBS anchor chair.
The best-remembered network broadcast was ABC's, due in large part to anchor Frank Reynolds' memorable remark when there were conflicting reports as to whether Press Secretary Jim Brady, who was also shot, was dead or alive. At one point, Reynolds (in an angry tone) urged his newsroom staff "Let's Get This Thing Nailed Down, Please! Let's Get This Thing Right!".
I did not see much of NBC's coverage that day (I watched mostly ABC and a little of CBS), but I seem to think that John Chancellor anchored, assisted by Edwin Newman. Had this incident taken place a year later, Tom Brokaw and not Chancellor would have anchored NBC's coverage.
Also, Chancellor, Newman and Rather were in New York; Reynolds was in Washington, where he did his portion of "World News Tonight" each weeknight. If my memory serves me correct, the old ABC News bureau was on DeSales Street (a block from the current home of the network's D.C. bureau) and in turn a block or two from the hotel outside which the shooting took place. I seem to recall White House correspondent Sam Donaldson ran the block from the hotel to the news bureau to get on the air.
Click here to launch a video presentation from ABC News' website containing fifteen minutes of excerpts of their coverage from March 30th, 1981. You will not hear Reynolds yelling "Let's Get This Thing Nailed Down!...", but you will see and hear extended clips from the network's mid-afternoon coverage, around the time that it was confirmed that President Reagan, in fact, was hit by a bullet.
VCR's were becoming a mass-marketed product by 1981 (although I did not get my first VCR until August of 1984). I suspect that afternoon, once they heard the news, there were at least a few people who grabbed a blank tape, put it into the VCR, and started recording the coverage, with the tape(s) becoming family heirlooms.
What are your memories of TV coverage from March 30th, 1981??