The June 10, 1968 issue of Broadcasting magazine has a recap of how the radio and TV networks, as well as some local stations, handled the assassination. CBS television coverage of the California primary had ended at 11:13 p.m. Pacific time and the network did not air Kennedy's speech live. KNXT in Los Angeles came on with local coverage of the speech at about 12:05 a.m. When Kennedy finished, Channel 2 cut back to the studio and anchor Jerry Dunphy. Word of a shooting reached KNXT "within seconds" (which would have been about 12:16 or so) and live video of the Ambassador ballroom was put back on the air.
According to the article, "At 12:38 a.m. CBS News came back on the network with bulletin reports. CBS News correspondent Joseph Benti, in New York, reported that Senator Kennedy had been shot. KNXT's live report of the scene at the Ambassador, via correspondent Drinkwater, was broadcast by CBS immediately after the shooting. CBS News took over complete coverage from KNXT at 3:30 a.m."
A few pages later, the report says "In New York, WCBS-TV was carrying a 1958 movie, 'Never Love a Stranger,' ... when CBS News correspondent Joseph Benti broke in with the news."
So it's a bit confusing as to who took to the network air first... was it simply raw video from the Ambassador? Or was it Joe Benti, perhaps speaking over a "Special Report" slide initially? Obviously the network had a direct feed from the remote truck that was minus any comment from Jerry Dunphy talking on KNXT. The video as preserved and presented on YouTube seems to have been taken a bit "upstream" from CBS central control.
According to the article, "At 12:38 a.m. CBS News came back on the network with bulletin reports. CBS News correspondent Joseph Benti, in New York, reported that Senator Kennedy had been shot. KNXT's live report of the scene at the Ambassador, via correspondent Drinkwater, was broadcast by CBS immediately after the shooting. CBS News took over complete coverage from KNXT at 3:30 a.m."
A few pages later, the report says "In New York, WCBS-TV was carrying a 1958 movie, 'Never Love a Stranger,' ... when CBS News correspondent Joseph Benti broke in with the news."
So it's a bit confusing as to who took to the network air first... was it simply raw video from the Ambassador? Or was it Joe Benti, perhaps speaking over a "Special Report" slide initially? Obviously the network had a direct feed from the remote truck that was minus any comment from Jerry Dunphy talking on KNXT. The video as preserved and presented on YouTube seems to have been taken a bit "upstream" from CBS central control.