Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Charles Osgood, poet of CBS, dies

- STEPHEN BATTAGLIO

Charles Osgood, the bowtie-wearing former host of “CBS Sunday Morning” and a fixture for decades on network radio, died Tuesday at his home in New Jersey, CBS News reported. He was 91.

Osgood had been suffering from dementia, according to a CBS News representa­tive.

Osgood was a weekend companion for millions of viewers during his 22-year run as host of “CBS Sunday Morning,” the admired news program known for its elegantly written indepth stories and occasional high-minded subject matter.

Osgood took over the job from Charles Kuralt in 1994 and remained its host until October 2016, when he was well into his 80s. He was succeeded by Jane Pauley. The stature and popularity of “Sunday Morning” grew under Osgood.

Osgood was long the signature voice of the CBS Radio Network. His morning newscasts and regular commentary feature called “The Osgood File” were carried on stations across the country from 1971 to 2017. He also wrote and hosted a weekend series called “Newsmark.”

Though Osgood became a TV star on “CBS Sunday Morning,” he never left radio and always expressed his preference for it. His television sign-off was, “See you on the radio,” which also was the title of one his books.

“Television is wonderful and I don’t mean to take anything away from it, but the fact is that a TV picture is very literally “what you see is what you get,” Osgood said in a 1991 interview. “You bring your own experience and emotions to radio that you don’t to television. I do think that radio is more visual. It’s a paradox but it’s true.”

Osgood’s warm, avuncular delivery was so distinctiv­e, and in demand from radio advertiser­s, that the network allowed him to read commercial copy, exempting him from a company policy that prohibited such a practice for journalist­s. Occasional­ly, he delivered commentari­es written in whimsical verse and became known as CBS’ poet in residence.

Osgood’s popularity on the radio side led to TV assignment­s in the 1980s. He was anchor of the “CBS Morning News” and the Sunday edition of the “CBS Evening News,” before taking over for Kuralt on “CBS Sunday Morning.”

Born Charles Osgood Wood III on Jan. 8, 1933, in the Bronx, New York, he grew up in Baltimore. His radio career began when he attended Fordham University, where he worked at the school’s radio station.

In early 1963, Osgood moved to Hartford, Conn., where he became general manager of WHCT-TV, an early subscripti­on television channel owned by RKO General.

Later that year, he joined ABC News as a writer for a radio news series called “Flair Reports,” and covered live events for the network. He began going by Charles Osgood on the air because ABC already employed an announcer named Charles Woods.

In 1967, Osgood joined CBS Radio in New York, where he was part of the launch of the division’s all-news station, WCBS, better known as Newsradio 880. He joined the network four years later.

Osgood is survived by his wife, Jean Crafton, whom he married in 1973, and five children: Kathleen, Winston, Anne Elizabeth, Emily Jean and Jamie.

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