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Andy Rooney - Archive Interview Part 7 of 8 TVLEGENDS

Segment of 8 part interview. For all segments visit TVLEGENDS channel playlists or http://emmytvlegends.org

Commentator / Writer Andy Rooney speaks about his 50-year career as a writer and producer for television. He talks about his entrance into radio and television as a staff writer for Arthur Godfrey and later on television's The Morning Show with Will Rogers, Jr. and The Seven Lively Arts. He describes his shift to the non-fiction form working on such CBS series as The Twentieth Century and Calendar. He speaks in detail about the many CBS documentary specials he and Harry Reasoner collaborated on (Rooney as writer, Reasoner as narrator) including: An Essay on Doors (1964), A Bird's Eye View of America (1964), and The Strange Case of the English Language (1968). Rooney talks about several other documentaries: Sinatra (1965, re-shown on CBS in 1998) and Black History: Lost, Stolen, or Strayed (1968, Emmy winner). He talks about his long association with 60 Minutes, which began in 1968 when he wrote and appeared in (in silhouette) the recurring segment "Digressions," a tongue-in-check "debate" on current events. He talks about his temporary break with CBS when it refused to air an anti-Vietnam War piece An Essay on War, and the subsequent airing of it on PBS's The Great American Dream Machine. Rooney speaks of his work writing and appearing in "A Few Minutes With Andy Rooney," the essays on everyday life that appear as an end-of-the program tag to 60 Minutes.

Видео Andy Rooney - Archive Interview Part 7 of 8 TVLEGENDS канала tvoralhistory
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21 февраля 2008 г. 10:43:02
00:30:42
Яндекс.Метрика