Connecticut Post

Charles Osgood, CBS TV and radio host, dies at 91

- By Mark Kennedy

equal facility, and signed off by telling listeners: “I'll see you on the radio.”

“To say there's no one like Charles Osgood is an understate­ment,” Rand Morrison, executive producer of “Sunday Morning,” said in a statement. “He embodied the heart and soul of ‘Sunday Morning.' ... At the piano, Charlie put our lives to music. Truly, he was one of a kind — in every sense.”

“CBS News Sunday Morning” will honor Osgood with a special broadcast on Sunday.

Osgood took over “Sunday Morning” after the beloved Charles Kuralt retired in 1994. Osgood seemingly had an impossible act to follow, but with his folksy erudition and his slightly bookish, bowtied style, he immediatel­y clicked with viewers who continued to embrace the program as an unhurried TV magazine.

Osgood, who graduated from Fordham University in 1954, started as a classic music DJ in Washington, D.C., served in the Army and returned to help start WHCT in Hartford, Connecticu­t. In 1963, he got an on-air position at ABC Radio in New York.

In 1967, he took a job as reporter on the CBSowned New York news radio station NewsRadio 88. Then, one fateful weekend, he was summoned to fill in at the anchor desk for the TV network's Saturday newscast. In 1971, he joined the CBS network and launched what would be known as “The Osgood File.”

In 1990, he was inducted into the radio division of the National Associatio­n of Broadcaste­r's Hall of Fame. In 2008, he was awarded the National Associatio­n of Broadcaste­rs Distinguis­hed Service Award. He won four Emmy Awards, and earned a fifth lifetime achievemen­t honor in 2017.

Jane Pauley succeeded

Osgood as host of “Sunday Morning,” becoming only the third host of the program.

When he retired in 2016 after 45 years of journalism, Osgood did so in a very Osgood fashion.

“For years now, people — even friends and family — have been asking me why I continue doing this, considerin­g my age,” the then-83-yearold Osgood said in brief concluding remarks. “It's just that it's been such a joy doing it! It's been a great run, but after nearly 50 years at CBS ... the time has come.”

And then he sang a few wistful bars from a favorite folk song: “So long, it's been good to know you. I've got to be driftin' along, to be driftin' along.”

 ?? ?? Charles Osgood, anchor of CBS’s “Sunday Morning,” poses for a portrait on the set in New York on March 28, 1999.
Charles Osgood, anchor of CBS’s “Sunday Morning,” poses for a portrait on the set in New York on March 28, 1999.

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