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Roger Mudd, Veteran CBS and NBC News Correspondent, Dies at 93


Roger Mudd, Veteran CBS and NBC News Correspondent, Dies at 93
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Roger Harrison Mudd, a longtime CBS News political correspondent and Peabody Award-winning journalist who was once seen as a potential heir to Walter Cronkite’s chair at “CBS Evening News,” died at his home in McLean, Va., on Tuesday. He was 93.
His son, Jonathan Mudd, told the Washington Post the cause of death was complications from kidney failure. CBS News President Susan Zirinsky said Mudd was viewed as a “hero” in the CBS News Washington bureau.
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“He was a journalist of enormous integrity and character,” Zirinsky said in a statement. “He would not budge if he believed he was right and would not compromise his ethical standards. He was an inspiration to all of us in the bureau.  On a personal note – I sat directly across from him in the D.C. newsroom – Roger was big, not just in his physical presence but he was larger than life.”

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NBC News Plans Year of Special Reports Too Big For Just One Show


NBC News Plans Year of Special Reports Too Big For Just One Show
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Savannah Guthrie’s next one-hour special won’t appear on any of NBC News’ best known properties, which include “Today” and “NBC Nightly News.”  And yet, it may be of more critical importance to the NBCUniversal-owned news organization than any in-depth report she’s presented in recent months.
Guthrie will today kick off a week-long focus by NBC News on the mental health of young people during the pandemic, the first of what NBC News President Noah Oppenheim says will be a year-long effort to provide deep reports — one a week — around specific topics across NBC News media properties.

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