Thursday, May 19, 2016

Morley Safer, "60 Minutes" Chronicler of the Offbeat, Dies at 84


Morley Safer"s 2001 CNN interview (Larry King Live)

Morley Safer, the Canadian-born television journalist who contributed wit and worldliness to CBS Newss flagship 60 Minutes program for 46 years, has died. He was 84.

Safer died Thursday in Manhattan, where he had a home, CBS News reported on its website. He also had a residence in Chester, Connecticut. Safer had retired just last week, and CBS News broadcast an hour-long tribute to him on May 15. His last story aired on March 13.

"Morley was one of the most important journalists in any medium, ever," CBS Chairman and Chief Executive Officer Leslie Moonves said in a statement.

Safer in 2009.

Photographer: Carolyn Cole/Los Angeles Times via Getty

The winner of 12 Emmy awards and three Peabody awards, Safer was the third correspondent hired for 60 Minutes, after Mike Wallace and Harry Reasoner.

For CBS News, Safer influenced public opinion against the Vietnam War with his report on Cam Ne, a Vietnamese village burned to the ground by U.S. Marines. For 60 Minutes, which he joined in 1970, he skewered modern art, chronicled a tango craze in Finland, visited a home in Milan for aging opera singers and helped free a wrongly convicted man from a life sentence behind bars.

An estimated 18.5 million people watched his 2011 interview with Ruth Madoff, the wife of Bernard Madoff, mastermind of one of the largest financial frauds in history. In the interview, she insisted she had no idea that her husbands business was actually a Ponzi scheme. She also said she and her husband, two weeks after his arrest, tried to kill themselves by overdosing on sleeping pills.

Morley has a great eye for stories, both the hard-edged and the softhearted, and certainly the offbeat, Don Hewitt, the founder of 60 Minutes and executive producer for its first 35 years, wrote in his 2001 memoir.

Foreign Correspondent

Dapper in patterned shirts and colorful ties, Safer carried the cosmopolitan air of the roving foreign correspondent he once was. Well into the word-processing age he insisted on composing his stories on a manual Royal typewriter, which he said produced copy that has some relationship to my humanity, according to a USA Today profile in 2000.

Safer in the 1970s.

Photographer: by Bachrach/Getty Images

Morley can cover war in Beirut in a navy blazer, white slacks and a pocket square and report it as if he were reporting on a cocktail party or a croquet match, said Steve Kroft, one of his many colleagues over his four decades on the show, according to USA Today.

In a 2000 interview with the Academy of American Television, Safer said 60 Minutes fed a public hunger for longer, more diverse stories than offered by the nightly news.

By the third or fourth year of being on at 7 oclock on Sunday, we became something like what Life magazine was to our house when I was a kid: you expected it through the mailbox, he said. It became one of the events of the week.

Early Focus

Morley Safer was born on Nov. 8, 1931, in Toronto, one of three children of Jewish immigrants Max Safer, an upholsterer, and the former Anna Cohn.

He left college after several weeks at the University of Western Ontario to begin pursuing journalism. I wanted to be a reporter; it was the only thing I wanted to be, he said.

Safer learned the ropes at the Woodstock Sentinel-Review and the London Free Press, both of Ontario, then at the Oxford Mail newspaper and Reuters news service in London.

He was working as a roving international correspondent for the Canadian Broadcasting Corp. when CBS News hired him in 1964 as its London-based correspondent. The following year, he opened CBSs bureau in Saigon and began covering the Vietnam War.

His report on the burning of the South Vietnamese village of Cam Ne, broadcast on Aug. 5, 1965, made the list of 100 best works of 20th-century American journalism compiled by New York Universitys journalism department.

Witnessing Carnage

As Safer recalled in an interview for a PBS series, Reporting America at War, the Marine Corps unit he was accompanying moved into the village and they systematically began torching every house -- every house as far as I could see, getting people out in some cases, using flame throwers in others.

Safer reporting during the Vietnam war.

Source: CBS via Getty Images

Safers South Vietnamese cameraman, Ha Thuc Can, set down his camera and stepped forward to stop the burning of one house, where he and Safer and a sergeant traced the sounds of crying to an underground shelter holding a family, including a practically newborn baby, Safer recalled.

After the family was coaxed out, the house was torched, as every house along the way was torched, either by flame throwers, matches, or cigarette lighters -- Zippos.

The report was denied and denounced by U.S. military and political leaders. CBS President Frank Stanton denied an oft-repeated story that President Lyndon Johnson personally cursed him out on the telephone.

Brutal Power

This conjured up not America, but some brutal power -- Germany, even, in World War II, Safer said. To see young GIs, big guys in flak jackets, lighting up thatched roofs, and women holding babies running away, wailing, this was a new sight to everyone, including the military, I suspect. Which is perhaps one reason why there was such immediate denial.

He was London bureau chief when CBS introduced 60 Minutes in 1968. ABC News plucked Reasoner in 1970 to become an anchor of its nightly newscast, and Hewitt enlisted Safer to join Wallace at 60 Minutes. Reasoner would return to the show in 1978 and remain until his retirement in 1991. Hewitt died in 2009, Wallace in 2012.

Hewitt, in his memoir, Tell Me a Story, recalled Safer agreeing to the job with one condition: When 60 Minutes folds, I go back to London. That would never happen.

In a 1983 story he called one of his favorites, Safer took up the cause of Lenell Geter, a black college graduate from South Carolina working as a mechanical engineer in Texas, who had been sentenced to life in prison for holding up a Kentucky Fried Chicken restaurant. Safers report, building off the work of journalists in Texas, led to Geter being freed.

Art Furor

An amateur painter, Safer created a furor in the art world with a 1993 report, Yes, but is it Art? It poked fun at the work of contemporary artists such as Cy Twombly, Robert Gober, Jean-Michel Basquiat and Jeff Koons, and at the buyers who were paying top dollar at auctions.

I discovered something that I absolutely could barely believe, Safer said in a 2012 interview with C-Span, that when you question someones taste in art, its more personal, more probing than their politics, religion, sexual preference. It is something that goes to the very soul when you say, You bought that? It is remarkable.

Survivors include his wife of 48 years, the former Jane Fearer; a daughter, Sarah Bakal; one sister, one brother and three grandchildren.

Source: http://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2016-05-19/-60-minutes-correspondent-morley-safer-dies-at-84-cbs-says

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Jeff Probst reacts to Sia crashing the Survivor reunion show


Survivor - Spoiler Alert Ponderosa 7

Something very odd and vey wonderful happened during Wednesday nights Survivor: Kaoh Rong reunion show. In the middle of the event, as host Jeff Probst was interviewing third place finisher Tai Trang, a voice started calling out from the audience. And then that voice starting rushing towards the stage. And then that voice start climbing on the stage. And that voice belonged to none other than pop superstar Sia.

Apparently, Sia is a massive Survivor fan and a massive fan of Tai and his love of animals. How massive? She announced form the stage she was giving Tai $50,000, and wanted to donate another $50,000 to the animal charity of his choosing. It was a wild, unpredictable, and emotional moment the kind that makes live television so exciting. After getting host Jeff Probst to answer all our finale burning questions, and to share scoop on next season, I asked him to also share his experience with the celebrity stage-crasher, and he did so with a little help from a former Survivor champion. Enjoy.

ENTERTAINMENT WEEKLY: Okay, I have to ask you about that Sia moment at the reunion show. You literally had a pop superstar b*m-rushing the stage! Tell me about that. Also, how can she see through that wig?

JEFF PROBST:Oh man, this one may take some time for me to fully unpack. Heres the short story. Sia and I are friends. We met through Survivor, specifically through John Cochran, whom Sia befriended the year he won. Thats another story entirely. But heres the most salient fact regarding Sia: I honestly dont think of Sia as a pop star, even though she is a global phenom. I know her as my friend who is so passionate about the rights of all humans and animals. Whether its LGBTF organizations or a random chicken on Survivor, Sia is someone who really cares deeply about equal rights and being a good person regardless your status in life. Shes a really kind soul who happens to write amazing music.

As a side note, Sia was over at the house watching an episode of Survivor this season and she randomly said, Jeff, I have to tell you something. It makes me uncomfortable when you do the marooning and you have chickens racing around a boat frightened. People are chasing them and tossing them off the boat into the water. They didnt ask to be there. I know they will get eaten and I understand that, but do you have to put them in such trauma? It really struck me. So for our 33rd season you will see that the chickens are in cages at the marooning. That came from Sia challenging me to see things differently.

So back to Wednesday I still have not watched it on TV so I truly do not really know what all went down. My recollection is hearing someone say something in the audience. But I often hear people shout things all the time, like I love you Tai! So it didnt even register. But about the third time I heard JEFF! I turned and suddenly everything slowed down. I saw Sia putting on her wig. In retrospect, I now realize Sia was smart enough to know there would not be a camera on her yet because she was in the audience, so she had a moment to obscure her identity.

Then she started walking toward me and my mind started racing. All I was thinking at that moment was, We dont have a camera on her, she doesnt have a microphone. Then I think I went a bit into autopilot. Okay, this is happening, so just go with it and tell the story. I knew I needed to explain that Sia and I were friends and that this really was Sia. After that. I just let her take over. Once I heard her start talking about how inspired she was by Tai and his approach to life and all living things I started to understand the moment. This is the woman I know. Sia is the most in the moment person that I know. She just does what she feels and says what she means. Like it or not.

I dont remember everything she said word for word, but I remember seeing Tai look at her in a way that I knew he connected with her. He was not star struck. It seemed to me as though Tai had simply found another human who felt like he did about the world and he was connecting. Then, another part of my mind was realizing, So wait, you are giving Tai $50K? Wow. Thats cool. Then she said, And I want to donate another $50k to your charity. Thats when I clicked in on the old fan favorite award we used to give. It was matching the $100k prize but in her own way.

Then the last part of the equation was the logistics of a live television show. I was staring at a red time clock, blinking down second by secondas the time in the live show counted down. I knew we had Drew Carey waiting for me to come to him to talk about Survivor players being on a prime time special of The Price Is Right. I knew Survivor fans would be interested, but the storyteller in me was frantically trying to decide: What is the right move? Do I go to commercial off the great moment of human connection? Or do I take a 180 and go to Drew?

If you saw the show, I went to Drew and he was a true pro and just kept on with the show. A completely different aspect was shared with me by another friend who was there. Elan Lee (who you might know from creating the game Exploding Kittens) was sitting by Sia and he said, What was crazy was watching the security guards initially start to move in on Sia because they didnt know what was happening and they thought it was a random Survivor fan getting ready to rush the stage. After the finale, I gave Cochran a ride home, because Cochran doesnt drive, even though he won a million dollars and lives in L.A. That too, is another story. But we were downloading on the night and I asked him to send me an email on his take on everything from his point of view. (And side note, Dalton, this is what you covering our show on EW.com for 17 years buys you. this kind of response. It is literally 1:30 a.m. and I am beat, but I am loyal to you because you have been loyal to us. Here is Cochrans unedited response to the evening.)

RELATED: Ranking Every Season of Survivor

From John Cochran:I think I understand why its difficult for you and me to fully put into perspective what happened. Weve had the rare opportunity to get to know and love Sia as an animal-rescuing, Coca Cola-drinking, TV-obsessed friend, but make no mistake: Shes a freaking huge pop music superstar. And not only that: Shes one of the most mysterious, enigmatic performers in the world a role she seemingly magically occupies the second she dons her famous fringed hat. So when Sia face obscured, naturally stormed the stage, it felt like an uncanny collision of private and public identities, making it all the more surreal for those of us who know her.

In that moment, Sia was a pop icon, a friend, a Survivor fan, and an animal advocate.It was a lot to process but it was unquestionably awesome.

And beyond that, it was a testament to the enduring power and cultural relevance of Survivor. This is a show in its THIRTY-SECOND season that still somehow manages to surprise audiences (and hosts, as it turns out) and create water-cooler moments even some involving international popstars. Sixteen years later, Survivor continues to be one of the best and most important shows on TV, andtonightsfinale proved why.

Okay, I hope that answers your questions. As for the inevitable fans who are mad that I didnt talk to Cydney or others blame Sia.

We will also have a separate Q&A where Jeff answers our finale burning questions, and another post where he shares scoop on NEXT season, but for now, check out an exclusive deleted scene from the episode above. Also make sure to read Daltons full episode recap. For more Survivor scoop, follow Dalton on Twitter@DaltonRoss, and check back soon for our exit interviews with the final three.

Source: http://www.ew.com/article/2016/05/19/survivor-sia-jeff-probst-finale-kaoh-rong

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Happy Birthday, Malcolm X: Relive Malcolm X"s Power Through His Speeches


WITNESSED: THE ASSASSINATION OF MALCOLM X (2015)

On what wouldve been Malcolm Xs 91st birthday, Vibe honors the honest, powerful, determined and loving leader in his own words.

So many times Malcolm is eulogized by those who summarize his 39 years as best they can. We here at Vibe decided that would be too lofty to take on. As humans, were multidimensional and complex and Malcolmdespite his love and commitment to see black people thrivewas no different. He was a father, a husband, a brother a believer and friend. A man who smiled, laughed and cracked jokes. But most importantly, he cared which is evident in the fact that he didnt hesitate to die, because he loved us so.

Happy Birthday, Malcolm X.

Who Taught You To Hate Yourself? (Los Angeles, 1962)

Standing before a packed Los Angeles crowd, Malcolm asked a simple question that has echoed throughout the African-American community long after his death. Who taught you to hate yourself?The powerful speecha snippet of which was sampled on Beyonces Lemonadeencapsulates all that Malcolm stood for: brutal self-reflection, ownership of mistakes made, white supremacys intentional destruction of the black community, and humor to drive the point home.

Who taught you to hate the texture of your hair? Who taught you to hate the color of your skin to such extent that you bleach it to get like the white man? Who taught you to hate the shape of your nose and the shape of your lips? Who taught you to hate yourselves from the top of your head to the soles of your feet?

READ A Letter From Malcolm Xs Pilgrimage To Mecca Was Found In A Storage Locker

Malcolm X On Education (Harlem, 1960s)

While speaking at a rally in Harlem, Malcolm touched on the harsh living conditions of the community. He began his speech by addressing the negative effects of a dilapidated neighborhood and how it creates a vicious cycle for people of color. A key aspect to why Malcolm was (and still is) revered as such a powerful historical figure is because for all of Malcolms intellect and wisdom, Malcolm also took a simplistic approach in his speeches, which allowed for his messages to penetrate.

It doesnt make any difference what else you have, if you dont have a place to rest your head, youre in bad shape. Here in Harlem, the reason we say housing is such a key problem, when you live in a poor neighborhood, youre living in an area where you have to have poor schools. When you have poor schools, you have poor teachers, when you have poor teachers you get a poor education and when you get a poor education you are destined to be a poor man and a poor woman.

READ Malcolm X On Death: I Have No Fear Whatsoever Of Anybody Or Anything

Oxford University Debate (Oxford, England, 1964)

A little more than two months before his assassination, Malcolm X held court at Oxford University for a robust debate on the state of the black man in America. Malcolm, unafraid, unwilling (and maybe unable) to hold his tongue, spoke on the blaring hypocrisy that plagues black Americans. In front of a packed crowd, Malcolms baritone echoed throughout the grand room as he spoke of his desire to see his people live a better life. But what is oftentimes overlooked by history books was Malcolms humanity. Although brief, Malcolms charm slipped through along with his smile as he used his intellectlike hes done many times beforeto outwit those attempting to trip him up with his words.

As long as a white man does it, its alright. A black man is suppose to have no feelings. But when a black man strikes back, hes an extremist. Hes suppose to sit back passively and have no feelings, be non violent and love his enemy no matter what kind of attackalbeit verbal or otherwisehes suppose to take it. But if he stands up in anyway, and tries to defend himself, then hes an extremist.

READ Malcolm Xs Daughter Applauds Beyoncs Beautiful Super Bowl Performance

By Any Means Necessary (Harlem, 1964)

Almost as reductive as Dr. Kings I Have A Dream, Malcolm Xs most famous four words by any means necessary have become a brand statement of sorts to describe his zeal and willingness to see black people rise and treated as equals and not second-class citizens in America. Sporting a thick beard, Malcolmas hes done beforemade his petition known that whatever it took to gain the rights, respect and liberties for African-Americans, he would do.

To bring about the complete independence of people of African descent here in the Western Hemisphere, and first here in the United States, and bring about the freedom of these people by any means necessary.

Source: http://www.vibe.com/2016/05/malcolm-x-birthday/

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Tyga & Kylie Jenner s*x Tape Was Reportedly Posted On Tyga"s Website


KYLIE JENNER"S SEX TAPE?! (WTF News)

A s*x tape starring Tyga and Kylie Jenner was posted to Tyga"s official website Tygasworld.com for approximately 30 minutes before being taken down, the Daily Mail reports.

"Tyga will not sign off on releasing it to the masses, but Kylie is scared that a s*x tape could get in the wrong person"s hands with one of his buddies and they could put it online to embarrass her," a source told the Mail.

Jenner and Tyga broke off their 20-month relationship last week. One Twitter user indicated that they had downloaded the illicit video before it was taken down.

Earlier this month, Tyga"s s*x tape with Blac Chyna was reportedly distributed to p**n companiesby a third party. If Tyga was instrumental in the posting of his s*x tape with Jenner to his official website, he will fall at the mercy of California"s new revenge p**n laws.

Source: http://www.hotnewhiphop.com/tyga-and-kylie-jenner-s*x-tape-was-reportedly-posted-on-tygas-website-news.21719.html

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Evan Daniels talks Marques Bolden, Cal vs K rivalry, 2017 recruiting and more


Marques Bolden Drops 36 In Opening Round of Whataburger Tournament

Where in the world will Marques Bolden go, and what do the Kentucky Wildcats do if they don"t land the five-star center?

At this point, all indications are that the Cats are going all-or-nothing in terms of Bolden to finish off the 2016 class. He"s the only guy they view as someone worth adding to an already-loaded "16 class that has five-star forwards Bam Adebayo, Wenyen Gabriel and Sacha Killeya-Jones in the frontcourt.

But Bolden is the kind of true banger at the 5 spot that UK badly missed last season, making him even more important to a team looking to contender for a title next season.

Ahead of Bolden"s Thursday decision, Scout.com recruiting director Evan Daniels talked with the cn2 gang about the big man"s recruitment and what to know prior to Thursday"s decision. Daniels also talked about John Calipari"s latest recruiting manifesto and his rivalry with Duke head coach MikeKrzyzewski.

Daniels also talks about some of the top 2017 prospects on the rise, including UK targets P.J. Washington, Gary Trent Jr. and Trae Young.

Source: http://www.aseaofblue.com/2016/5/17/11695698/evan-daniels-marques-bolden-cal-vs-k-rivalry-2017-recruiting

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Oklahoma lawmakers OK bill criminalizing performing abortion


OKC Thunder vs Golden State Warriors - Game 1 - 1st Half Highlights - May 16, 2016 - 2016 NBA Finals

Oklahoma lawmakers have moved to effectively ban abortion in their state by making it a felony for doctors to perform the procedure, an effort the bill"s sponsor said Thursday is aimed at ultimately overturning the U.S. Supreme Court"s 1973 decision that legalized abortion nationwide. The bill , which abortion rights group Center for Reproductive Rights says is the first of its kind in the nation, also would restrict any physician who performs an abortion from obtaining or renewing a license to practice medicine in Oklahoma. It passed 33-12 Thursday with no discussion or debate; a handful of Republicans joined with Democrats in voting against the bill sponsored by Republican Sen. Nathan Dahm. Oklahoma Gov. Mary Fallin, an anti-abortion Republican, has until Wednesday to sign the bill into law or veto it. Spokesman Michael McNutt said she also could also allow the bill to become law "without approval" after the five-day period has elapsed. He also said she will withhold comment until her staff has time to review it. Dahm made it clear that he hopes his bill could lead to overturning Roe v. Wade. "Since I believe life begins at conception, it should be protected, and I believe it"s a core function of state government to defend that life from the beginning of conception," said Dahm, R-Broken Arrow. But abortion rights supporters - and the state"s medical association - have said the bill is unconstitutional. Sen. Ervin Yen, an Oklahoma City Republican and the only physician in the Senate, described the measure as "insane" and voted against it. "Oklahoma politicians have made it their mission year after year to restrict women"s access vital health care services, yet this total ban on abortion is a new low," Amanda Allen, an attorney for the New-York based center said in a statement. "The Center for Reproductive Rights is closely watching this bill and we strongly urge Governor Fallin to reject this cruel and unconstitutional ban." Thursday"s vote in the Senate comes as the Oklahoma Legislature nears a May 27 deadline for adjournment and is still grappling with a $1.3 billion budget hole that could lead to deep cuts to public schools, health care and the state"s overcrowded prison system. "Republicans don"t have an answer for their failed education policies, failing health care policies and failing fiscal policies, so what do you do in that situation?" said Senate Democratic leader Sen. John Sparks. "You come up with an emotional distraction. That"s what this bill is." Nearly every year, Oklahoma lawmakers have passed bills imposing new restrictions on abortions, but many of those laws have never taken effect. In all, eight of the state"s separate anti-abortion measures have been challenged in court as unconstitutional in the last five years. In 2013, the U.S. Supreme Court declined to hear a case over an overturned Oklahoma law that would have required women to view of an ultrasound of her fetus before an abortion is performed. That same year, the Oklahoma Supreme Court struck down a law that would have effectively banned all drug-induced abortions in the state. In 2014, the state Legislature approved a law requiring abortion doctors to have admitting privileges at nearby hospitals, but a challenge is pending before the Oklahoma Supreme Court. Also Thursday, the Oklahoma House approved a bill that requires the state Department of Health to develop informational material "for the purpose of achieving an abortion-free society," but lawmakers didn"t approve any funding for it. The measure, which now goes to the Senate, requires the health department to produce information about alternatives to abortion and the developmental stages of a fetus, but the bill"s sponsor says it cannot be implemented without any funding.

Source: http://www.koco.com/news/oklahoma-senate-passes-bill-to-suspend-licenses-of-doctors-who-perform-abortions/39627260

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Morley Safer Dead at 84 | 60 Minutes Reporter Passes Away

NEW YORK (WJZ) CBS News is reporting that legendary 60 Minutes correspondent Morley Safer has died at the age of 84.

After working with 60 Minutes for 46 seasons Safer rertied just last week.

Safers first season as a regular 60 Minutes correspondent began in 1970 with a story about the training of U.S. Sky Marshals.

According to CBS News, his last 60 Minutes report number 919 a profile of Danish architect Bjarke Ingels, was broadcast in March.

After more than 50 years of broadcasting on CBSNews and 60 Minutes I have decided to retire. Its been a wonderful run, but the time has come to say goodbye to all of my friends at CBS and the dozens of people who kept me on the air, said Safer in a special broadcast on Sunday, May, 15. But most of all I thank the millions of people who have been loyal to our broadcast.

RELATED:60 Minutes Morley Safer retires after 46 seasons

The cause of death Safers is unknown at this time.

This story will be updated.

Source: http://baltimore.cbslocal.com/2016/05/19/60-minutes-correspondent-morley-safer-dead-at-84/

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