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Poynter on the Record

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Candace Clarke
Poynter faculty quoted in print, broadcast, or online and stories about The Poynter Institute



Legendary newsman made '60 Minutes' tick
By Mekeisha Madden Toby
The Detroit News
Published: 11/10/2006

Excerpt:

It's impossible to think of Ed Bradley without picturing his eyes peering over his glasses and his thumb and index finger cradling his face.

The maverick journalist's facial gestures and compassionate interviewing skills put some sources at ease and others in their place. His 40-year career came to an end Thursday with his death from leukemia. Bradley was 65. He is survived by his wife, Patricia Blanchet.

"He was one of the first African-American broadcast journalists to rise to the ranks that he did," said Al Tompkins, broadcast group leader and teacher at The Poynter Institute, a journalism school and think-tank in St. Petersburg, Fla.

"(Bradley) never allowed the industry to put him in a box, interviewing everyone from Michael Jackson to Timothy McVeigh (his only television interview). That says a lot about the gravity of his work and reputation.

"People trusted him, and he spoke for the misunderstood and the downtrodden."
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Posted by Candace Clarke 5:27 PM
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