Everything about Huntley-brinkley Report totally explained
The
Huntley-Brinkley Report (sometimes known as the
Texaco Huntley-Brinkley Report, for one of its early sponsors) was the
NBC television network's flagship evening news program from
October 29,
1956 until
July 31,
1970. It was anchored by
Chet Huntley in
New York City, and
David Brinkley in
Washington, D.C. It succeeded the
Camel News Caravan, anchored by
John Cameron Swayze.
The news show began as a 15-minute program, but expanded to 30 minutes in 1963, about midway through the program's run.
NBC producer
Reuven Frank took credit for development of the show; he derived the idea of having two individuals anchor a news broadcast from the practice of a local NBC affiliate,
WSAZ-TV in
Huntington, West Virginia. Huntley, who had previously been based in
Los Angeles, and Brinkley, in Washington, were first put together as a team to host coverage of the 1956 political conventions. When the time came to replace Swayze, NBC News management argued over possible successors. Frank, in his memoir,
Out of Thin Air, claimed that he suggested the combination. Frank also authored the broadcast's closing line, "Good night, Chet." "Good night, David. And good night for NBC News." This exchange became one of television's most famous
catchphrases although both Huntley and Brinkley disliked it.
The lead-in music for the broadcast was the second movement (scherzo) of
Beethoven's Ninth Symphony, from the 1952 studio recording with
Arturo Toscanini conducting the
NBC Symphony Orchestra.
Initially, the program struggled to attain viewership against its chief competition, the
CBS Evening News, anchored by
Douglas Edwards and directed by the legendary
Don Hewitt.
Texaco saved the program after its initial run by purchasing advertising on the program for an entire year.
Eventually, Huntley and Brinkley developed a strong chemistry. Along with
Edward R. Murrow and
Walter Cronkite, critics considered Huntley to have possessed one of the best broadcast voices ever heard. Further, Brinkley's dry, often witty, newswriting presented viewers a contrast to the often sober output from CBS News. The program soon had more viewers than the
CBS Evening News, and maintained higher viewership levels throughout most of the 1960s.
Huntley handled the bulk of the news most nights, with Brinkley specializing in Washington (for example, the
White House,
U.S. Congress,
the Pentagon) news. Having two anchors also helped during vacation periods; one could handle the full show if necessary, leaving viewers with a familiar anchor, instead of a little-known substitute such as a field reporter.
The impact of the
Huntley-Brinkley Report on popular culture of the 1960s can be illustrated by a verse from the 1965 song "So Long, Mom (A Song for
World War III)" by the satirist
Tom Lehrer:
» While we're attacking frontally,
Watch Brink-a-ley and Hunt-a-ley » Describing contrapuntally
The cities we've lost...
The newscast stayed atop the ratings until Huntley's retirement in 1970, although it started to slip as
CBS's
Walter Cronkite gained fame for his coverage of the space program, a field neither Huntley nor Brinkley had much interest in. Some contemporary observers at NBC felt the program began to slip after a 1967 strike by members of
AFTRA. Brinkley honored the picket lines but Huntley, who viewed himself as "a newsman, not a performer" did not, remaining at the anchor desk.
This split puzzled viewers, who had come to admire them for their teamwork. Unbeknownst to most viewers, that relationship was fairly limited—Huntley and Brinkley operated from different cities and rarely met in person, except for live coverage of events. However, each would hand off to the other by saying the other's name. Actually, that was merely a signal for network technicians to switch the long-distance transmission lines, going from New York to Washington, in the other direction, so that the other anchor could be seen.
Huntley-Brinkley Report originally only broadcast Mondays through Fridays; the network premiered a Saturday evening report in January
1969, anchored at first by Huntley and Brinkley, on alternating weeks. Later, after the report failed to garner sufficient ratings to justify major talent, veteran correspondent
Frank McGee took over as anchor, with
Sander Vanocur substituting; the broadcast took the name
NBC Saturday News. And it wasn't until two days after Huntley's retirement in summer 1970 that a half-hour Sunday evening newscast began. Both weekend newscasts replaced
The Frank McGee Report, a documentary-oriented program.
Huntley concluded his final newscast, after 14 years, with this statement:
» :
Chet Huntley:
At the risk of sounding presumptuous, I'd say to all of you: be patient and have courage, for there will
be better and happier news one day, if we work at it. And David, thanks for these years of happy association, and for being such an easy colleague to work with, and for all the kindnesses.
:
David Brinkley:
I really don't want to say it, but the time has come, and so, for the last time, good luck...and good night, Chet. » :
Chet Huntley:
Good luck, David, and good night for NBC News.
Upon Huntley's retirement, the network renamed the program
NBC Nightly News. At first, NBC decided to use a platoon of three anchors: Brinkley,
John Chancellor, and McGee. The arrangement, however, didn't attract viewers, and after several months, the network named Chancellor solo anchor of the program. From
1971 to
1976, Brinkley appeared on pre-taped commentary segments titled
David Brinkley's Journal and occasionally filled in for Chancellor; for three years after that, NBC resinstituted the old dual-anchor format. Chancellor and Brinkley initially both reported from New York, but Brinkley subsequently moved back to Washington and anchored from there. Still, none of NBC's moves managed to impede
Walter Cronkite and the
CBS Evening News from building a strong viewership lead, which it would maintain until Cronkite retired in
1981.
That same year, Brinkley defected from NBC to rival
ABC to host its Sunday interview show,
This Week with David Brinkley, a spot he held until his retirement in
1996; he died seven years later.
Chet Huntley retired from broadcasting in August
1970 and spent the remaining few years of his life as a land developer in his native
Montana, founding the
Big Sky Resort. Huntley died of
cancer at his Big Sky home in March
1974 at the age of 62.
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