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HEWITT, DON
 Don Hewitt Photo courtesy of Don Hewitt DON
HEWITT. Born in New York City, New York, U.S.A., 14 December
1922. Attended New York University, 1941. Married: 1) Mary Weaver
(died, early 1960s); 2) Frankie Hewitt (divorced), children: Jeffrey,
Steven, Jill, and Lisa; 3) Marilyn Berger, 1979. Served as merchant
marine correspondent and war correspondent for Stars and Stripes
during World War II. Office boy and head copy boy, New York Herald
Tribune, 1941; night editor, Associated Press, Memphis, Tennessee;
editor, Pelham Sun, New York, 1946; night telephoto editor,
Acme News Pictures, 1947; associate director, CBS TV News,
1948; sole producer-director, Douglas Edwards with the News, 1950-62;
executive producer, The CBS Evening News with Walter Cronkite,
1963-64; produced CBS documentaries, 1965-68; creator and executive
producer, 60 Minutes since 1968. Honorary degree, Brandeis University,
DFA, 1990. Recipient: gold medal, International Radio and TV Society,
1988; Broadcaster of the Year award, 1980; Peabody award, 1989;
named to Hall of Fame, National Academy of Television Arts and Sciences,
1990; Producers Guild of America Lifetime award, 1993. Address:
CBS News/60 Minutes, 555 W. 57th St., New York, New York 10019,
U.S.A.
TELEVISION SERIES(producer)
1950-62 Douglas Edwards With the News
1962-64 CBS Evening News With Walter Cronkite 1968-
60 Minutes
PUBLICATIONS
Minute By Minute. New York: Random House, 1985.
U.S. Producer
Don
Hewitt is a genius at what he does--and he does 60 Minutes.
But Hewitt has done more in his TV career than be the founder and
executive producer of that enormously successful progrm. It was
Hewitt who directed Edward R. Murrow's early TV experiment of bridging
the U.S. continent with TV. It was Hewitt who, while producing-directing
the first Kennedy-Nixon debate in 1960, attempted to advise Nixon
to use appropriate make-up to cover his wan appearance. Nixon didn't
listen, lost the debate, and lost the election. And moving from
the sublime to the entrepreneurial, Hewitt ventured (unsuccessfully)
into cable home shopping 33 years later.
Don Hewitt began his work in the world of print journalism, but
he quickly moved to CBS TV where he has spent the entirety of his
career. He not only produced-directed Douglas Edwards with
the News from 1948 to 1962, but also the first year (1963-64)
of the trend setting CBS Evening News with Walter Cronkite.
These two programs had a tremendous influence on the general development
of television news programming, as well as on CBS's own nightly
news. Hewitt was also responsible for CBS's coverage of the national
political conventions between 1948 and 1980, and directed Conversations
with the President (i.e., Presidents Kennedy and Johnson), programs
that were "pooled" for all three networks. Among this significant
body of work, however, his most notable, profitable, and successful
venture was the creation of 60 Minutes in 1968.
60
Minutes has been one of the premiere programs ever produced
by CBS. CBS counts the profits from this show significantly in excess
of a billion dollars. And such profits bring independence and power
to Hewitt. He doesn't hesitate to attack network executives as being
deficient in foresight and fortitude and he reportedly has the best
employment contract in the history of network broadcasting. The
unparalleled success of Hewitt's 60 Minutes has led to considerable
speculation regarding programming strategies. Some surmise that
the program benefited from following National Football League (NFL)
games on CBS for so many years. But the NFL moved to the FOX Television
Network in 1994 and 60 Minutes continued to flourish (as it had
before it followed the games). Reuven Frank, late of NBC, who clearly
suffered under the success of Hewitt's 60 Minutes, called
the show "star journalism," a form in which reporters such as Mike
Wallace are the heroes whose questions are more important than the
subsequent answers. And the Federal Communication Commission's (FCC)
Prime Time Access Rule (PTAR) has also been credited with contributing
to 60 Minutes' success. The PTAR limited network offerings
at 7:00-8:00 P.M. (EST) on Sunday to public affairs or children's
programming. When Hewitt's program moved to this time slot in 1975
the argument goes, there was no real competition from entertainment
programming and CBS began raking in huge audiences, hungry advertisers,
and giant profits. Most observers, however, give Hewitt the credit
for the success of 60 Minutes. As Peter Jennings of ABC put it,
the success of 60 Minutes is a "testimony to Don Hewitt's
imagination and his editing."
Hewitt
has an extraordinary news judgement and editing ability. He creates
stories in a manner that appeals to the average person. He admits
he is not college educated, is not really intellectual, and that
he identifies with the middle-of-the-road American. He knows what
the average person likes to watch on TV. His formula for 60 Minutes
stories is not complex. He simply understands that the audience
wants the hero--Wallace, or Morley Safer, or Ed Bradley, or Diane
Sawyer, or Leslie Stahl--to drive the bad guys out of town. These
people have been known in the TV industry as Hewitt's "anchor monsters."
Despite these formidable skills, Hewitt is not always known as a
nice or likeable person. His handling of 60 Minutes producers
and staff is at best volatile and heavy handed. When Harry Reasoner,
one of the first and best-liked anchors of the program, was dying
of cancer, Hewitt reportedly removed him from the program with very
little apparent sensitivity to Reasoner or other staff. On the other
hand, as Andy Rooney of 60 Minutes has observed of Hewitt, "I don't
think the show would last without him."
Hewitt's
accomplishments have earned him countless honors and awards, including
a place in the Television Hall of Fame. But perhaps the greatest
recognition came from one of his colleagues who said, Don Hewitt
"invented the wheel" in the business of television news.
-Clayland
Waite
FURTHER
READING
Campbell,
R. 60 Minutes and the News. Urbana, Illinois: University
of Illinois Press, 1991.
Flander, J. "Hewitt's Humongous Hour." Washington Journalism
Review (Washington, D.C.), April 1991.
Madsen,
A. 60 Minutes: The Power & The Politics of America's Most Popular
TV News Show. New York: Dodd, Mead, 1984.
Wallace,
M., and G. P. Gates. Close Encounters: Mike Wallace's Own Story.
New York: William Morrow, 1984.
See
also Cronkite,
Walter; 60
Minutes
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