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    Home » Bernard Shaw, CNN’s 1st chief anchor, dies at 82

    Bernard Shaw, CNN’s 1st chief anchor, dies at 82

    By SHOOTThursday, September 8, 2022Updated:Tuesday, May 14, 2024No Comments1102 Views
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    CNN anchorman Bernard Shaw appears on set at the network's Atlanta headquarters on Friday, Nov. 10, 2000. Shaw, who was CNN's original chief anchor when the network started in 1980, died of pneumonia in Washington on Wednesday, Sept. 7, 2022, according to Tom Johnson, the network's former chief executive, died of pneumonia in Washington on Wednesday, Sept. 7, 2022, according to Tom Johnson, the network's former chief executive. Shaw was 82. (AP Photo/Erik S. Lesser, File)

    By David Bauder, Media Writer

    NEW YORK (AP) --

    Bernard Shaw, CNN's chief anchor for two decades and a pioneering Black broadcast journalist best remembered for calmly reporting the beginning of the Gulf War in 1991 as missiles flew around him in Baghdad, has died. He was 82.

    He died of pneumonia on Wednesday at a hospital in Washington, according to Tom Johnson, CNN's former chief executive.

    Shaw was at CNN for 20 years and was known for remaining cool under pressure. That was a hallmark of his Baghdad coverage when the U.S. led its invasion of Iraq in 1991 to liberate Kuwait, with CNN airing stunning footage of airstrikes and anti-aircraft fire in the capital city.

    "In all of the years of preparing to being anchor, one of the things I strove for was to be able to control my emotions in the midst of hell breaking out," Shaw said in a 2014 interview with NPR. "And I personally feel that I passed my stringent test for that in Baghdad."

    Shaw was a former U.S. Marine who worked as a reporter at CBS and ABC News before taking on the chief anchor role at CNN when the network began in 1980.

    He moderated a presidential debate in 1988 between George W. Bush and Michael Dukakis. His first question to the Democrat Dukakis, an opponent of the death penalty, was whether he would want that sentence applied to someone who raped and murdered the candidate's wife.

    His striking on-the-scene work in Baghdad, with correspondents Peter Arnett and John Holliman, was crucial in establishing CNN when it was the only cable news network and broadcast outlets at ABC, CBS and NBC dominated television news.

    "He put CNN on the map," said Frank Sesno, a former CNN Washington bureau chief and now a professor at George Washington University.

    On Twitter, CNN's John King paid tribute to Shaw's "soft-spoken yet booming voice" and said he was a mentor and role model to many.

    "Bernard Shaw exemplified excellence in his life," Johnson said. "He will be remembered as a fierce advocate of responsible journalism."

    Johnson said Shaw always forcefully resisted any compromise of news coverage or lowering of ethical standards.

    CNN's current chief executive, Chris Licht, paid tribute to Shaw as a CNN original who made appearances on the network as recently as last year to provide commentary.

    Shaw left the business at age 61. He told NPR that despite everything he did in journalism, because of all of the things he missed with his family while working, "I don't think it was worth it."

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    Tags:Bernard ShawCNN



    Before his return to the Oscars, Yorgos Lanthimos finds a still moment in Athens

    Friday, March 6, 2026
    A visitor takes a picture of a portrait of actress Emma Stone at an exhibition of images by Oscar nominated director Yorgos Lanthimos at Onassis Stegi in Athens, Greece, on Friday, March 6, 2026. (AP Photo/Thanassis Stavrakis)

    Oscar-nominated filmmaker Yorgos Lanthimos paused his filmmaking and promotion schedule this week to celebrate a quieter creative pursuit: photography.

    The 52-year-old Greek director on Friday inaugurated an exhibition of his photographs in his hometown of Athens, presenting images he has taken over the past five years — many captured while making his films, wandering through movie sets and nearby neighborhoods, or on trips back to Greece.

    The exhibition gathers 182 still photographs, in color and in black and white, from the filmmaker known for his distinctive — and often disturbing — cinematic style. It opens days before Lanthimos returns to Hollywood for the March 15 Academy Awards ceremony. In his latest film, "Bugonia," a pair of conspiracy‑obsessed men kidnap a powerful female executive they accuse of being an alien.

    The movie received four Oscar nominations, including best picture and best actress for Emma Stone, along with nods for adapted screenplay and original score. The photos, all shot with a film camera, features several portraits of Stone, a frequent star in his films.

    Lanthimos on Friday said he was happy to dive into something different. Photography, he said, began for him as a technical foundation for filmmaking but gradually became something more personal.

    "In film school you learn that cinema is basically 24 photographs per second," he said. "So photography is where it all begins."

    Over time, working with still images opened a creative outlet separate from the complex machinery of movie production, he added.

    "You can be alone with a camera, walking without having something specific in mind," Lanthimos said. "A photograph can have value on its own, but many photographs together can create... Read More

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