Art Collection Portrayed This Am on Cbs News Sunday Morning

American newsmagazine television receiver program

CBS News Sunday Morning
SundayMorning2020.jpg

Title card, used since 2020

Also known equally Sunday Morning
Genre Newsmagazine
Created by
  • Charles Kuralt
  • Robert Northshield
Directed by
  • Ken Sable
  • William M. Brady
  • Nora Gerard
Presented by Charles Kuralt
(1979–1994)
Charles Osgood
(1994–2016)
Jane Pauley
(2016–present)
Theme music composer Gottfried Reiche
Opening theme "Abblasen"
Country of origin United States
Original linguistic communication English language
No. of seasons 40
Production
Executive producers
  • Robert Northshield
  • Linda Mason
  • Missie Rennie
  • Rand Morrison
Camera setup Multi-camera
Running fourth dimension 63 minutes (with commercials)
Production company CBS News
Release
Original network CBS
Movie format NTSC (1979–2009)
HDTV 1080i (2009–present)
Original release January 28, 1979 (1979-01-28) –
present
Chronology
Related shows CBS Mornings
CBS Saturday Morning
CBS Morn News

CBS News Dominicus Morn (normally shortened to Sunday Morning on the program itself since 2009) is an American news magazine television program that has aired on CBS since January 28, 1979. Created past Robert Northshield and original host Charles Kuralt, the 90-minute programme currently airs Sundays from 9:00 a.m. to 10:thirty a.thou. Eastern, and from 6:00 a.m. to vii:30 a.m. Pacific. Since Oct 9, 2016, the evidence has been hosted by Jane Pauley, who also hosts news segments, after the retirement of Charles Osgood. Osgood was the host for twenty-two years (and is the plan'south longest-serving host), taking over from Kuralt on April 10, 1994.

History [edit]

The program was originally conceived to be a broadcast version of a Lord's day newspaper magazine supplement, nearly typified by the Sun New York Times Magazine. The format was conceived every bit the Sunday equivalent of the CBS Forenoon News, which following Sunday Morn 'southward debut was retitled to reflect each solar day of the week (such as Monday Morning, Tuesday Morning, etc.).

Although an attempt to utilise the same format to weekday broadcasts proved unsuccessful, the Dominicus survived and retains its original format. Long subsequently the daily editions ended, the Sunday edition'due south opening sequence continued to display all vii days of the week until the early 2000s. On January 25, 2004, CBS News Sunday Morning celebrated its 25th anniversary with clips and highlights from the show's start quarter-century on the air. Host Charles Osgood showed clips from former host Charles Kuralt.

The February 1, 2009, broadcast celebrated Sunday Morning time 's 30th anniversary. Segments examined how the world has changed in the three decades since the plan began, the history of Sundays in America and – every bit a tie-in to the show's logo – the physics of the sun. An artist was deputed to create new sunday logos for the programme, which debuted on that edition and were used in future broadcasts. CBS News correspondent Steve Hartman periodically revisits some of Charles Kuralt'due south memorable personal profiles. On May 17, 2009, CBS News Sunday Morning began dissemination in high-definition. In 2014, rebroadcasts of the program began ambulation on sister cable network Smithsonian Channel (endemic by CBS'southward parent visitor ViacomCBS), but has since been pulled from that aqueduct'south programming.

Charles Kuralt era (1979–1994) [edit]

On January 28, 1979, CBS launched CBS News Dominicus Morning with Charles Kuralt as host. On October 27, 1980, he was added as host of the weekday broadcasts of CBS' Morning testify besides, joined with Diane Sawyer as weekday co-host on September 28, 1981. Kuralt left the weekday broadcasts in March 1982, but continued to anchor the Sunday morning programme until Apr 3, 1994, when he retired after 15 years as host and was succeeded by Charles Osgood.

Charles Osgood era (1994–2016) [edit]

Osgood'south first broadcast as host was on April 10, 1994. Ultimately, his tenure of 20-two years as host exceeded Kuralt's fifteen years. Osgood's final broadcast every bit host was on September 25, 2016.

Amid his personal trademarks were his bow-necktie, his weekly TV signoff "Until and so, I'll see you on the radio", and his propensity for delivering his commentaries in whimsical verse. Example: When the Demography Bureau invented a designation for cohabitant(due south) as "Person(s) of Opposite Sex Sharing Living Quarters", or "POSSLQ", Osgood turned it into a pronounceable 3-syllable discussion and equanimous a prospective love poem that included these lines, which he later used as the championship of one of his books:

"There'south nothing that I wouldn't do
If you would be my POSSLQ."

Osgood regularly pronounced the 21st-century years 2001, 2002, etc., as "xx oh i, 20 oh two..." as opposed to the more than mutual "two thousand one, two 1000 two", etc.

Jane Pauley era (2016–present) [edit]

In 2014, Pauley appeared as an interview subject on the CBS Sunday Morning; positive audience response to this segment led to Pauley existence hired every bit a contributor to the testify later in 2014. She was elevated to the office of the program's host in 2016, succeeding Charles Osgood, once once more making her the ballast of a regular morning news programme for the commencement time in over 25 years and becoming her first job as the host of any tv program since 2005; she continues in this role every bit of 2022.[one]

It was appear on September 25, 2016, that Pauley would take over every bit host of CBS Sunday Morning following the retirement of Charles Osgood. "We first got to know Jane when we did a story about her on Sun Morning," said Rand Morrison, the show's executive producer, in a statement. "Our viewers immediately responded by suggesting she belonged on Sun Morning permanently. And – as is so often the instance, they were correct. She'southward a dedicated, experienced broadcast journalist. But – every chip every bit important – she's a delight to work with. A worthy successor – and a perfect fit."[two]

Pauley began her function every bit host on October 9, 2016, nigh 40 years to the twenty-four hour period since her debut on Today.

Relationships with CBS' weekday morning news programs [edit]

As noted, for the beginning few years of Sunday Morning's run, CBS News' weekday morning broadcasts were similarly branded Monday Morning time through Friday Morn respectively, and were produced on the same set. However, these broadcasts emphasized hard news as opposed to Sunday Morning time 's focus on feature stories. Originally anchored by Bob Schieffer,[3] Kuralt eventually took over the daily role, and was for a short fourth dimension joined by Diane Sawyer as co-host. However, the weekday program's so-express vii:00 to viii:00 a.m. Eastern air fourth dimension (the long-running Captain Kangaroo was entrenched in the 8:00 a.grand. 60 minutes) hampered its ability to compete with NBC and ABC's rival two-hour morning shows Today and Expert Morning America, though information technology expanded to 90 minutes (from 7:30 to 9:00 a.k. Eastern Time) in 1981 and was renamed but Morn. In 1982, the weekday version was extended to 2 hours (seven:00 to 9:00 a.one thousand.), and reverted to its previous championship every bit the CBS Morning News, adopting a different set and distinct graphics in the process; by March, Kuralt had been replaced by Nib Kurtis. Meanwhile, Sunday Morning maintained its format and set with Kuralt as host.

For almost all of the side by side four decades, Lord's day Morning and CBS' other morning news programs, nether varying names and formats, remained fully separate productions, though with occasional cross-promotion and some sharing of correspondents. On August 31, 2021, the network announced that its weekday morning show would be relaunched for the latest time as CBS Mornings, and its Sat counterpart every bit CBS Sabbatum Forenoon. Nether this latest reformatting, both programs accept taken on some branding elements of the Lord's day program similar its Sunday of May-style logo and "Abblasen" fanfare, though in a much more modern studio layout.[4] To date, Sunday Forenoon itself has not been afflicted past these changes, apart from some minor graphics updates to accommodate a revised CBS bug, which took effect on the September 12 edition.

Format [edit]

Each edition follows a story totem pole in the center of the CBS soundstage, with previews of featured stories set to air during the circulate (the first iv of which feature clips from the story packages with preview narration by the respective correspondent) during the introduction. Each story covered in a given episode has a glass plate with its headline on this pole (digitally inserted on the pole as a prepared graphic since the late 2000s), which the camera follows subsequently Pauley'southward introductions. Music in the show is usually express to the opening and closing championship theme. Pauley introduces each story with a short monologue, then sends the show out to the taped segment. The prove usually ends with a preview of next week'south Sunday Morning circulate. Afterward the commercial pause, in that location is a 30-second tranquil nature scene. [ citation needed ]

For most of its history, the programme was typically presented live, with a brusk summary of national and international news headlines, sports, and a national weather forecast correct after the featured story teasers, and a preview of the guests and topics to air on that week'southward Face the Nation (which follows the programme on nearly CBS stations) near the stop of the program. During the occasional weeks that Sunday Morning aired a pre-taped theme broadcast, the headlines segment would instead be presented live by some other ballast. In mid-2020, Sunday Morn quietly shifted to a pre-taped format without morning time headlines, and the weather presented without voiceover during a suspension bumper. In the occasional event of a major overnight news story, it may be presented with a generic introduction and/or live voiceover by the host. [ citation needed ]

Notably, Sunday Morning includes meaning coverage of the fine and performing arts, including coverage of topics usually non covered in network news, such equally architecture, painting, ballet, opera and classical music, though increasingly more than popular forms of music have been included every bit well. The program'southward correspondents tend to inquire nontraditional questions of guests (for instance, actor Brad Pitt was asked nearly his love of architecture, and Grant Loma about his painting drove). Goggle box essays similar to the kinds delivered on PBS too appear, and the program generally has a stable of equally positive and negative news stories to fill up up the program when in that location is no breaking news of note. Story lengths are longer (lasting up to twelve minutes at a time) and the pace of the programme is considerably quieter and more relaxed than CBS Mornings and CBS Saturday Morning, even subsequently those programs began sharing some of Sunday Morning 'south branding elements. Commentators Ben Stein and Nancy Giles appear in recurring segments, delivering their opinion, and contributor Bill Geist also contributes human interest stories.[5] [6] The program ends with a nature scene, non given a formal title for most of the program'southward history, merely since entitled "Moment of Nature" as it is at present a sponsored element.

Despite the stereotype of the programme highly-seasoned primarily to senior citizens,[7] Dominicus Morn actually placed get-go in its time slot in the key demographic of adults 25–54, beating all of the political discussion-driven Sun morning talk shows.[8] [9]

On one occasion, the entire program served as a showcase for classical music; this took place in Apr 1986, when a alive broadcast of Vladimir Horowitz's historic Moscow piano recital was aired. For that presentation only, the programme departed from its usual newsmagazine format and devoted the unabridged 90 minutes to a complete presentation of the recital. Considering the recital was given at 4:00 p.k. Moscow time, CBS was able to broadcast it at 9:00 a.m. Eastern Fourth dimension. The presentation was such a disquisitional and popular success that information technology was repeated ii months subsequently, and was subsequently released on VHS and DVD. [ citation needed ]

Segments [edit]

  • Cover Story: The principal topic of that week'south broadcast
  • Annual: A notable event or the birth or death of a person that happened on the same calendar day of the weekly broadcast
  • Profile: A look at the accomplishments of people
  • Pulse: A wait at facts by different sources
  • Passage: A person who died within the by week
  • Calendar: A await at the week ahead
  • Moment of Nature: A look at animals and plants at the end of the weekly broadcast

Production [edit]

The programme is marked past its distinctive "Sun" logo, which is prominent in the plan's title sequence. In addition, in betwixt some segments, images of the sun in various forms also appear. The show's theme is the trumpet fanfare "Abblasen", attributed to Gottfried Reiche. A recording of the piece on a baroque trumpet by Don Smithers was used equally the bear witness'due south theme for many years, until producers decided to supersede the vinyl recording with a digital of a piccolo trumpet by Md Severinsen; the current version is played past Wynton Marsalis.[10]

Notable on-air staff [edit]

Host [edit]

Jane Pauley (pictured in 2012) has hosted the program since 2016.

  • Jane Pauley (2016–present)[xi]

Correspondents [edit]

  • Serena Altschul
  • Rita Braver
  • Lee Cowan
  • Mo Rocca
  • Tracy Smith
  • Martha Teichner

Contributors [edit]

  • Luke Burbank
  • David Edelstein – film and television critic
  • Bill Flanagan – stone music critic
  • Jim Gaffigan – commentator
  • Nancy Giles – commentator
  • Steve Hartman
  • Hua Hsu
  • Conor Knighton
  • Ted Koppel
  • Ben Mankiewicz
  • Erin Moriarty
  • David Pogue
  • Mo Rocca
  • Faith Salie – commentator
  • Kelefa Sanneh
  • Susan Spencer
  • Ben Stein – commentator
  • Marking Whitaker

Notable erstwhile on-air staff [edit]

Hosts [edit]

  • Charles Kuralt (1979–1994; now deceased)
  • Charles Osgood (1994–2016; at present retired)

Correspondents [edit]

  • Faith Daniels (1988–1989)
  • Bill Geist (1987–2018; now retired)
  • John Leonard – motion-picture show, book and drama critic (1988–2005; now deceased)
  • Russ Mitchell – now at WKYC in Cleveland
  • Ron Powers – moving picture, volume and drama critic (1979–1988)
  • Terence Smith – senior correspondent (1990–1998)
  • Baton Taylor – jazz and modern music correspondent (1981–2010; at present deceased)
  • Roger Welsch – Postcards from Nebraska (1988–2003)
  • Tim Sample – Postcards from Maine (1993–2004)
  • Eugenia Zukerman – classical music contributor (1980–2009)

Controversy [edit]

Neurologist Steven Novella and paranormal investigator Joe Nickell wrote in separate Skeptical Inquirer articles about Erin Moriarty'southward lack of skepticism and "complete journalistic fail" over her segment on CBS Dominicus Forenoon in March 2018. In her segment she showed clips of spoon-bender Uri Geller from the 1980s performing "'psychic parlor tricks'" but instead of explaining to her audience that Geller had been debunked many times she instead said he was "'unreliable,'" with no mention of the work of James Randi. Novella states of Moriarty "She is (most likely) just an onetime-school journalist who thinks of paranormal pieces equally '"fluff"' pieces that don't require journalistic rigor." And that this segment could accept run "thirty years ago with no change."[12] In another segment Moriarty interviewed psychic Angela Dellafiora Ford, who claims that she "psychically tracked down fugitive drug smuggler Charlie Jordan in 1989." Nickell writes that Moriarty "simply takes Ford at her word" and "gushes" over her. Nickell states that Ford's claims are an case of '"retrofitting"' and wrong.[13]

Center for Inquiry editor Kendrick Frazier wrote of his disappointment that the network of Murrow and Cronkite would air a pro-paranormal segment with Geller and a psychic detective. They also featured parapsychologist Dean Radin calling him a scientist, which he is not. In a tweet the next day in response to criticism, Moriarty wrote '"We reported on authorities experiments with the paranormal – supported by declassified Govt documents. We gave time to both those involved and scientists."' Frazier responded that "But because some part of the authorities initiated a bizarre trivial inquiry plan at some point in the by, that is not itself a validation of the claims it was studying." Further research by CFI timed the segment and "found it more than 97 per centum pro-paranormal and only 3 percent skeptical".[14] In a press release, CFI called the CBS Sun Morning segment a "regrettable lapse ... in the ... usually objective and reliable coverage." They called on the show to "take steps to correct the record" and to "provide a more truthful and scientifically rigorous view of this topic."[15]

Awards and nominations [edit]

Kimberly Dozier and the crew of CBS Dominicus Morning time "The Way Home" at the 67th Annual Peabody Awards

The program won its kickoff Daytime Emmy Award for Outstanding Morning Programme in 2013, chirapsia out Today and Good Morning time America in the category. It also won a Peabody Award in 2007 for the feature segment "The Way Home."[sixteen]

Nielsen ratings [edit]

The program'south special food-themed edition on November 24, 2013, earned Lord's day Morning one of its highest ratings since Feb 4, 1996, watched by over 6.25 million full viewers.[17]

This was surpassed by the Jan eighteen, 2015, broadcast, which had a total viewership of 6.79 meg viewers, the second largest audience the program earned since January 23, 1994.[18]

March 1, 2015: 6.63 1000000 viewers (sixth-largest audition since the 1987 advent of people meters).[19]

March 22, 2020: 6.82 1000000 viewers (largest audience since 1994).[20]

References [edit]

  1. ^ "Jane Pauley named ballast of CBS News' "Lord's day Morn"". www.cbsnews.com. September 25, 2016. Retrieved February xv, 2021.
  2. ^ "Jane Pauley Will Succeed Charles Osgood equally 'CBS Sunday Morning' Anchor". Diversity . Retrieved September 25, 2016.
  3. ^ "CBS rebuilding morning news show" (PDF). Broadcasting. December 4, 1978. pp. 49–52. Retrieved June 7, 2020.
  4. ^ Steinberg, Brian (Baronial 31, 2021). "CBS News to Launch 'Mornings' in Bid to Capture A.Yard. Viewers Across The Week". Variety . Retrieved August 31, 2021.
  5. ^ David Bauder (March 24, 2005). "CBS Lord's day Morning time sticks to tradition". Columbia Daily News. Associated Press. Archived from the original on December 24, 2015. Retrieved March 15, 2009.
  6. ^ Richard Corliss (February 13, 2004). "That Sometime Feeing:Sun Morning time going strong". Time. Archived from the original on Jan 14, 2009. Retrieved March fifteen, 2009.
  7. ^ Joel Keller (April 7, 2006). "Does anyone nether 40 watch CBS Sunday Morning time ... besides me?". TVSquad . Retrieved March xv, 2009.
  8. ^ Jon Friedman (Apr vii, 2006). "CBS' 'Sunday Morning' stands apart". MarketWatch. Retrieved March fifteen, 2009.
  9. ^ ""CBS Dominicus Morning" Celebrated Its 30th Anniversary By Once more Ranking As The #1 Sunday Morn News Program In All Primal Demos". CBS (Press release). TV by the Numbers/Tribune Media. February 6, 2009. Archived from the original on May 13, 2009. Retrieved April 29, 2009.
  10. ^ "Nearly CBS News Sunday Morning". CBS. July 9, 1998. Retrieved March 15, 2009.
  11. ^ "Who nosotros are". CBS. Retrieved July 12, 2021.
  12. ^ Novella, Steven (2018). "Gullible Reporting about ESP on CBS". Skeptical Inquirer. Committee for Skeptical Inquirer. 42 (4): 15–xvi.
  13. ^ Nickell, Joe (2018). "CBS Sunday Morning Seers Don't See And then Well". Skeptical Inquirer. Commission for Skeptical Inquirer. 42 (4): 17.
  14. ^ Frazier, Kendrick (2018). "CBS Drops Skepticism in Sunday Morning Paranormal Segment CSI Issues Critical Statement". Skeptical Inquirer. Committee for Skeptical Inquiry. 42 (4): v–7.
  15. ^ Fildago, Paul. "CBS Condemned by Commission for Skeptical Enquiry for 'Sunday Morn' Segment on the Paranormal". CSICOP. Eye for Inquiry. Archived from the original on July 4, 2018. Retrieved July 4, 2018.
  16. ^ "67th Almanac Peabody Awards". Peabody Awards. May 2008.
  17. ^ "'CBS Dominicus Morning with Charles Osgood' Posts Its Best November Sweep Viewers Commitment Since the Appearance of People Meters in 1987". CBS (Printing release). Goggle box by the Numbers/Tribune Media. December 2, 2013. Archived from the original on December 24, 2013.
  18. ^ "'CBS Dominicus Morning time with Charles Osgood' Delivers Its Largest Audition Since 1994". CBS (Printing release). Television set by the Numbers/Tribune Media. January 23, 2015. Archived from the original on Jan 23, 2015.
  19. ^ "'CBS Lord's day Morning With Charles Osgood' Delivers Sixth-Largest Audience Since the 1987 Appearance of People Meters". March 5, 2015. Archived from the original on April two, 2017.
  20. ^ "SKEDBALL: Weekly Sports Tv set Ratings 3.16-3.22.2020 | Showbuzz Daily". www.showbuzzdaily.com. Archived from the original on March 24, 2020. Retrieved March 24, 2020.

External links [edit]

  • Official website
  • CBS News Sunday Morning at IMDb

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Source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/CBS_News_Sunday_Morning

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