Reality TV is sleazy, it is manipulative. It is as momentary as anything in popular culture.
Morley Safer
I believe in playing petanque with a certain kind of panache - even if you're winning, you take a risk.
You can never have enough garlic. With enough garlic, you can eat The New York Times.
Some people, you have to grit your teeth in order to stay in the same room as them, but you get on and ask the questions you assume most of the people watching want to ask.
No great pastry chef has sweet teeth.
Pilgrims who are looking for a cure are soon looking for a curio.
So much crap passes as information that not only does the audience sometimes miss the distinction between news and crap, the editors sometimes miss the distinction.
Who knows who will be on board? A couple of spies, for sure. At least one grand duke; a few beautiful woman, no doubt very rich and very troubled. Anything can happen and usually does on the Orient Express.
What does it say about us that people who are considered defective are instinctively caring and compassionate?
The helicopter is a fine way to travel, but it induces a view of the world that only God and CEOs share on a regular basis.
For the most part, I think American armies are awfully good in the business of protecting civilians, of not going over the line.
I would trust citizen journalism as much as I would trust citizen surgery.
Whenever it's suggested that our sponsors have some kind of influence or control of what we cover in some kind of censorship through financial pressure, it's rubbish. That's never happened.
When I did that interview with Hepburn, the only ground rule was, you did not discuss Spencer Tracy. Spencer Tracy's widow is still alive, and she respected that.
I have no desire to put my feet up. Why would I?
Don may yawn at the idea, which he often does, but the great thing about Don, he has confidence in me and Mike and Ed and Leslie and Steve, that we're not going go out and do stories that will put people to sleep.
Killing is the payoff of war.
In many ways when Jerry Ford pardoned Nixon, in a certain way, he did speak for the country.
We don't want anything from the government but that furtive little fellow called the truth - which, by the way, they'll never give you - which you have to go out and find by talking to people.
Kids' views are often just as valid as the teachers'. The best teachers are the ones that know that.
You can be a great president and be ridden with flaws. Of course we know that.
I think it has sullied his presidency. As brilliant a politician as Bill Clinton is, as magnetic a personality as he can be, there is one little screw loose somewhere.
If you want to look at a cheap shot, look at Mr. Koons's or Mr. Gober's art. By no definition is it art.
The Bush Cabinet is quite interesting, there are no flashy people in there. No stars. They all seem quite focused and serious and knowledgeable about the areas to which they have been appointed.
After more than 50 years of broadcasting on 'CBS News' and '60 Minutes,' I have decided to retire. It's been a wonderful run, but the time has come to say goodbye to all of my friends at CBS and the dozens of people who kept me on the air.
I did three tours in Vietnam. I guess a total of about almost two years.
A lot of sponsors over the years have left us. They've all come back. But they chose to leave us for a while because of stories we have done about them or their products or their friend's products or whatever.
After four or five different wars, I grew weary of that work, partly because in an open war, open to coverage, as Vietnam was, it's not that difficult, really.
Clinton's pardoning of Marc Rich was off-the-wall.
I am not in this business as a calling. I don't do what I do to right any wrongs.
I really don't care what movie stars have to say about life.
It is always disarming to treat with the enemy, so to speak.
Parents like the idea of kids, they just don't like their kids.
The Republicans learned well from Bill Clinton.
We are on Sunday night because that is where they put us 30-odd years ago. I think we became a habit.
What has reality shows got to do with reality? It is beyond unreality; there is nothing real about it.
I don't see myself as a Luddite.
McNamara's plea was that he had no idea that Vietnam had a history of longing for self-determination, a history of resisting foreign invasion.
I really don't like being on television. It makes me uneasy. It is not natural to be talking to a piece of machinery. But the money is very good.
I really feel stateless, which is not bad, because I always felt a man without a country was not encumbered by narrow loyalties.
When I grow up, I want to have an exhibit called 'American Motel.'