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Election Day 2020 should have mimicked 1932 What went wrong?
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Our History – NRB
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After talk-show legend Larry King’s death last month at age 87 from Covid complications, tributes poured in from all over the world.
Most of the memories centered around his 25 years spent on CNN’s airwaves where, from 1985 to 2010, his primetime show during which he interviewed some 6,000 guests was often among cable television’s most popular.
So it’s understandable why, when most folks think of King, they immediately think of his CNN show.
But not me.
No, I’m among the lucky Miamians and diehard sports fans of the 1960s and ‘70s who got to enjoy King’s immense radio talent and one-of-a-kind personality long before he became world-famous.
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These days, it’s hard to imagine a time when a plurality of the population agreed on anything, especially media consumption.
Strange as it sounds to say, for 25 glorious years, Larry King was the glue that helped hold a grateful nation together. From 1985 to 2010, when King commandeered the 8 p.m. hour of CNN as the host of
Larry King Live, basic cable subscribers of every ideological stripe or none at all could gather to spend time in the company of an essentially neutral arbiter of the day’s news, gossip, or scandals. Following a decade in exile from mainstream cable news, King died on Jan. 23 at the age of 87.
Farewell to the King - Opinion - Monroe News - Monroe, Michigan
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