1968 King Assassination Report (CBS News)

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  • Опубліковано 2 кві 2008
  • Walter Cronkite had almost finished broadcasting the "CBS Evening News" when he received word of Martin Luther King's assassination. His report detailed the shooting and the nation's reaction to the tragedy. (CBSNews.com)

КОМЕНТАРІ • 2 тис.

  • @sketchbook8706
    @sketchbook8706 9 років тому +1682

    Walter spent the sixties announcing the deaths of good men.

    • @kylegoppy6072
      @kylegoppy6072 6 років тому +15

      sketchbook so true

    • @travisthecancerpill3403
      @travisthecancerpill3403 6 років тому +34

      Not his fault

    • @michaeljdonoughjr9558
      @michaeljdonoughjr9558 6 років тому +4

      I agree with you

    • @vernpascal1531
      @vernpascal1531 6 років тому +15

      Yes and he thought Lee Harvey Oswald and James Earl Ray acted alone. Not much of a profile in courage, more like a profile in cowardice.

    • @Mikecoatl
      @Mikecoatl 6 років тому +19

      And now David Muir reports on the antics of charlatans.

  • @ginnymiller2448
    @ginnymiller2448 2 роки тому +166

    “Darkness cannot drive out darkness, only light can do that. Hate cannot drive out hate, only love can do that.” ~ Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr.

    • @thomashallman5436
      @thomashallman5436 Рік тому +1

      agreed ginny there ain t no room in this country we call the u.s. of a states for any form of hate when will it ever end ginny

  • @ineffablebeing4276
    @ineffablebeing4276 7 років тому +542

    Why is it that men of peace tend to meet violent ends? One of the cruel ironies of life I suppose.

    • @GhoulishGrinMedia
      @GhoulishGrinMedia 7 років тому +66

      Mordecai Goldblatt They're the ones brave enough to call for change for future generations and risk their lives to do so.

    • @kingicicle
      @kingicicle 7 років тому +9

      Mordecai Goldblatt Please remove your profile picture and change your username. I think Dr. King would appreciate that.

    • @stevencoardvenice
      @stevencoardvenice 7 років тому +34

      America is a violent angry racist armed society

    • @yoloswaggins1579
      @yoloswaggins1579 7 років тому +23

      Because peace opposes violence, and so the violent will oppose it.

    • @2000Betelgeuse
      @2000Betelgeuse 6 років тому +4

      He was a hipocrite, having multiple affairs while being a preacher, he was fucking one gal at this very hotel the day of the shooting

  • @BigKev0019
    @BigKev0019 7 років тому +999

    is it me or was america alot more serious back then

    • @FreshPrincex4
      @FreshPrincex4 7 років тому +113

      yes..now it's a joke & I'm only 17

    • @Mryrhodesian
      @Mryrhodesian 7 років тому +37

      Absolutely.

    • @Ryguy-lg2xz
      @Ryguy-lg2xz 7 років тому +75

      Different generarion

    • @Zerta788
      @Zerta788 7 років тому +18

      Or they just didnt care about his death.

    • @lakers8054
      @lakers8054 7 років тому +22

      Yes it was, it's sad what the world has come to and it's only getting worse

  • @socalpimp1974
    @socalpimp1974 9 років тому +291

    They read the news as if the medium was radio, interesting how now the visual is more important than the news itself

    • @selfexplanitory
      @selfexplanitory 8 років тому +7

      +John Walsh True and the news back then was more accurate than it is today with all this technology

    • @joshuarodriguez6795
      @joshuarodriguez6795 8 років тому

      +selfexplanitory how?

    • @Eazz34
      @Eazz34 8 років тому +18

      +Joshua Rodriguez Because everything on tv is dumbed down today and in society in general. The tv is not and never was a source for education.

    • @selfexplanitory
      @selfexplanitory 8 років тому +3

      Thank you Frank

    • @kevinzhang3313
      @kevinzhang3313 6 років тому

      It was always heading this way, that's only cuz it was in its infancy

  • @christopherparrisjr.3146
    @christopherparrisjr.3146 7 років тому +199

    Poor Cronkite. He had to tell America about all of these killings, riots, and the war in Virtnam.

    • @elifoust7664
      @elifoust7664 6 років тому +2

      Christopher Parris, Jr. Vietnam too

    • @Art--Deco
      @Art--Deco 2 роки тому +3

      Ya, almost as poor as the people who actually got shot.....

    • @tron.44
      @tron.44 Рік тому

      No wonder he had a coke habit

    • @user-vc1oz9rv6v
      @user-vc1oz9rv6v 5 місяців тому +1

      ​@@tron.44Wait, Cronk had a COKE habit??? Seriously? No wonder he was high as a KITE during his live announcements.

    • @lisascorp
      @lisascorp 4 місяці тому

      ​@tron.44 Really? I've never heard that. I vaguely remember him I was pretty young when he was on. But they say he was the most trusted man in America. I can't see him. Now Dan Rather ...I could see that possibility.

  • @cultured33
    @cultured33 8 років тому +181

    I remember that report like yesterday...5 years of age.

    • @RJ-uu3ph
      @RJ-uu3ph 8 років тому +10

      i remember as well. i was 32

    • @Endsomniac
      @Endsomniac 8 років тому +4

      So you're 80 years old Raymond J?

    • @RJ-uu3ph
      @RJ-uu3ph 8 років тому +11

      yes that is correct

    • @FreshPrincex4
      @FreshPrincex4 7 років тому +26

      damn..god bless you for being able to use technology sir

    • @anonUK
      @anonUK 7 років тому

      Qosomo
      Between them, the SJWs, BLM, Trump and the "alt-right" have coaxed some really nasty POS out of the woodwork recently. It's one thing to fear Islam or see yourself as part of a white community, but there are some people out there saying stuff that shouldn't even be whispered on the fringes.

  • @allen-7335
    @allen-7335 7 років тому +565

    Rest in peace Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr.

    • @tim19962
      @tim19962 7 років тому +1

      Purpl3 h4ze a great one

    • @allen-7335
      @allen-7335 7 років тому +1

      AnthonyNicGaming RBLX ?

    • @Gocubs2345
      @Gocubs2345 3 роки тому

      @@allen-7335 O Wow

    • @Gocubs2345
      @Gocubs2345 3 роки тому

      @@tim19962 o wow

    • @annettewilcox5413
      @annettewilcox5413 3 роки тому +2

      MLK said “I may not get there with you”. He knew they were out to get him.

  • @queenluci6664
    @queenluci6664 5 років тому +49

    such a beautiful, charismatic, powerful voice. He is still missed to this day.

  • @bronxbreed27
    @bronxbreed27 7 років тому +223

    MLK knew his time was coming and he was not scared he knew his soul was going to god. Same for Malcolm X. That brotha smiled at his assassins. God's children never fear death.

    • @marykershner8726
      @marykershner8726 7 років тому +8

      bronxbreed27 MLK was a man of peace.R.I.P. Malcom x turned muslim. And, they killed him.

    • @kevinzhang3313
      @kevinzhang3313 6 років тому +5

      Malcolm X was murdered by his own people who thought he got too peaceful lmao

    • @mrjones29
      @mrjones29 5 років тому +2

      I like this what you say. Very true.

    • @orlandoblooom
      @orlandoblooom 3 роки тому +4

      Kevin Zhang what? Get outta here

    • @gentlemangaz3651
      @gentlemangaz3651 2 роки тому

      @@orlandoblooom he was killed by his own people

  • @fuzzywzhe
    @fuzzywzhe 10 років тому +278

    Ah, back in the day you could actually get news on the television.

    • @isiahsloan8747
      @isiahsloan8747 9 років тому +40

      Nowadays its news when a celebrity gets a puppy

    • @CesarGA12
      @CesarGA12 8 років тому +4

      Because people aren't getting assinated?

    • @fuzzywzhe
      @fuzzywzhe 8 років тому +1

      Cesar Galvez *"Because people aren't getting assinated?"*
      Because when people are assassinated, it isn't reported as an assassination.
      For example, Gary Webb.
      You know, the guy that demonstrated a link between the CIA and inner city drug trafficking, who was fired from his job at the San Jose Mercury News, sued them for an undisclosed amount, won the lawsuit, was blacklisted from the industry and "committed suicide" by shooting himself in the head.
      Twice.
      Ever hear about that? No?
      What passes for "media" today, is nothing more than government propaganda. Find those weapons of mass destruction in Iraq yet?
      No?
      Well, I expect at least who was responsible for that "mistake" was rooted out of government and removed from power due to their sheer incompetence.
      No?
      Gee, I wonder why...

    • @isiahsloan8747
      @isiahsloan8747 8 років тому +3

      fuzzywzhe I'm normally one to reject conspiracy theories but after doing a bit of research on Gary Webb. It's hard to deny there's more to the story.
      Thank you.

    • @fuzzywzhe
      @fuzzywzhe 7 років тому +4

      Isiah Sloan *"I'm normally one to reject conspiracy theories"*
      First, anything that isn't Official Policy of your government (TM) is a "conspiracy theory".
      But there's plenty of false conspiracy theories.
      For example: Pizzagate: That's obviously false. You know how that can be spotted? In the emails leaked to wikileaks everybody in them talks OPENLY about criminal acts. Selling Ambassadorships to the highest bidder, colluding with the corporate media,, getting debate questions in advance, stiffing the vote for Sanders - but then it's all supposedly this weird keywords for child abuse.
      But here's a "conspiracy theory", Operation Ajax, Operation PBSuccess, Operation MKUltra. All these were "Conspiracy theories" when I was a kid. But all of them happened.
      Gary Webb maybe DID shoot himself twice in the head. It's *possible*. Don't draw conclusion either way. Doesn't really matter if he killed himself or not, the question that matters is - is the CIA running drugs? The answer is YES. Iran Contra proved that. You can see also by the massive increase in Opium production in Afghanistan since 2000. It was almost NOTHING back in 2000, now it's 80%+ of the world's supply.
      Taleban was certainly a terrible government, but they actually were anti opium, and they shut it down nearly completely.

  • @newchapters5831
    @newchapters5831 8 років тому +108

    I'm not gonna lie I literally just graduated out of HS and every time this is brought up I'm very emotional. God bless him for his courage for our country no matter if your white, black, arabic, Chinese anything we may be different in race but we are one united and together. Rest in Peace, not to forget Happy Birthday.

    • @thomashallman5436
      @thomashallman5436 Рік тому

      agreed i wish these racist bastards saw it our way man i truly apologize for my profanity but not for my extreme anger towards hateful jerks

  • @CaptainDesiderio
    @CaptainDesiderio 15 років тому +38

    Rest In Peace Walter. I feel a true sense of loss.

  • @michaeljdonoughjr9558
    @michaeljdonoughjr9558 6 років тому +35

    R.i.p Martin Luther King Jr. 1929-1968

  • @rickjames8916
    @rickjames8916 7 років тому +138

    Thank you for everything you did for Americans and the world Dr. Martin Luther King jr. Rest In Peace.

    • @musicilya6674
      @musicilya6674 2 роки тому

      Kennedy + Lincoln and others too bro

    • @wpsnick
      @wpsnick 2 роки тому

      @@musicilya6674 shut up dh. This video is about MLK. Not Kennedy or Lincoln. Be gone !

  • @Sheri451
    @Sheri451 9 років тому +131

    Dr King was a peace maker. It was a shame what happened to him. That happened forty-seven years ago today.

    • @markpedroza7294
      @markpedroza7294 6 років тому +1

      Sheri451 I'm watching this and it's been 50 years ago..

    • @gregorywheeler1980
      @gregorywheeler1980 4 роки тому

      Too bad he really wasn't a peace maker he was talker and the dream failed

    • @thelonestarpelican9343
      @thelonestarpelican9343 4 роки тому +1

      @@gregorywheeler1980 Wasn't entirely in vain. My generation (6 mths old during his assassination) grew up knowing in principle it's wrong do diss people because of skin color. It DID take hold. Even by the mid 70s (early elem sch yrs) I knew right well that you couldn't call for "Segregation now! Segregation Forever" without getting your ass handed back to you. Driving racism into the corners is far from ideal, true. But it was a HUGE boost. Unfortunately, this stuff takes at minimum a generation to totally marginalize. It'll probably be my lifetime before race is an irrelevancy (if it ever does become it) - and probably past my lifetime more likely if late 2010s events are a harbinger of things to come over the next 20 or 30 years. It's just time for every currently living generation to gear up and fight this resurgence - lead by example and call out racism when you see it.

  • @floydpattersonii4996
    @floydpattersonii4996 2 роки тому +24

    Walter Cronkite took us thru some of the most violent and shocking events throughout his career. The Most Trusted Man in America

  • @bbenjoe
    @bbenjoe 8 років тому +16

    He truly made a difference, not just in North-America, but also in Europe by bravely speaking out.

  • @holtridge7337
    @holtridge7337 2 місяці тому +2

    Tomorrow it will have been 56 years. RIP Doctor King. You are never forgotten.

  • @EricEbac22
    @EricEbac22 8 років тому +32

    James Earl Ray died in January of 1998 while serving a life sentence.

  • @gugga56
    @gugga56 15 років тому +8

    Walter Cronkite will always be "my" news broadcaster. No one since has come close to his ability, tact, and compassion. A truly wonderful man whose death saddens me very deeply. I grew up with him giving the news every evening. He was like part of our family.

  • @poughkeepsiejohn1
    @poughkeepsiejohn1 13 років тому +34

    My God, I miss Walter Cronkite. He had such a great presence and a clear understanding of stories that affected all of us. Why can't reporters be like this today?

  • @PaoloJeromeFernandez100899
    @PaoloJeromeFernandez100899 6 років тому +9

    50 years later, the event still exists. And a legend is still alive.

    • @stevemandl5140
      @stevemandl5140 6 років тому +1

      walter Cronkite is dead dude,where hav you been

  • @AndrewSmith-ek4nc
    @AndrewSmith-ek4nc 9 років тому +230

    I think that Martin Luther King was a wonderful man

    • @neumannben17
      @neumannben17 5 років тому +21

      anybody in their right mind would agree

    • @TS-qq7vr
      @TS-qq7vr 5 років тому +12

      No frigging shit.

    • @ItzSonic69
      @ItzSonic69 4 роки тому +12

      Think? He WAS a wonderful man.

    • @mikeanderson5772
      @mikeanderson5772 4 роки тому +7

      I think nice people are nice.

    • @eazyj2888
      @eazyj2888 4 роки тому +3

      Andrew Smith You Think?

  • @mmarie294
    @mmarie294 6 років тому +5

    I so remember watching the one TV we had at home, mom started crying...there was an overwhelming silence and we knew not to talk. Dad just shook his head and I knew something real big had happened. April 4, 1968 RIP Dr. King

    • @stevemandl5140
      @stevemandl5140 6 років тому

      why would anyone cry over this? if people knew the real truth about MLK no one would care.MLK cheated on his wife,typical black man behavior.he plagiarized one of his speeches.theres probably other things too we don't know about MLK that aren't good.

    • @agob4924
      @agob4924 Рік тому

      @@stevemandl5140 was not expecting to find an unionic fucking racist in this comment section. God damn

  • @RockSmithStudio
    @RockSmithStudio 14 років тому +14

    one of the greatest man who ever lived. His death inspired/ still inspires millions.

  • @vastshade4548
    @vastshade4548 10 років тому +16

    Holy crap it has beast quality for that time

    • @koolsteins
      @koolsteins 7 років тому +1

      Thank magnetic tape for that. :)

    • @ceilingsandfloors
      @ceilingsandfloors 6 років тому +2

      The colour reproduction is good but TV cameras and professional videotape were never that good even in the 1960s (still better than VHS though) compared to film, it was just a much cheaper alternative when it came to editing and archiving in Television. I urge you to watch some of the restored clips of the Beatles on youtube. Or scenes from the blueray release of "The Prisoner". Or any blueray release of a sixties movie. Film was always great quality, just most of it was never preserved properly over the years and most people never payed attention to how high definition it was until HD video and LCD screens came in.

  • @dewlove
    @dewlove 10 років тому +17

    Hey CBS....how can you think it is anywhere near appropriate to embed a link to "watch your favorite CSI episode" in this video!?!??!

  • @Delaware84
    @Delaware84 13 років тому +6

    I can't imagine what my grandmother could have thought or felt when this happened....every time I think about it it makes me want to cry

  • @maxr5799
    @maxr5799 3 роки тому +3

    Walter Cronkite was literally and figuratively an anchor. Every weeknight you saw him and heard him no matter what happened during the day. He was a constant in the lives of millions of Americans from 1962 to 1981.

  • @jonbhoffman
    @jonbhoffman 10 років тому +19

    Really? You put an ad for CSI over this video? Shame CBS

  • @TheRenard10
    @TheRenard10 6 років тому +217

    50 years yet, his dream still dreams on. 🛌💤💤

    • @vh7637
      @vh7637 6 років тому +2

      Tom Harvy sad

    • @Aviation380
      @Aviation380 6 років тому +5

      Tom Harvy who hurt you?

    • @giantqtipz8117
      @giantqtipz8117 6 років тому +5

      Tom Harvy lol you feel victimized dont you? maybe you need to be breastfed some more. blaming others for your own goddamn problems like a big baby.

    • @markhelton6128
      @markhelton6128 6 років тому +1

      He was a racist, communist, womanizer who got what he deserved.

    • @weefishy9129
      @weefishy9129 6 років тому +1

      His dreams of socialism and reparations? Yes, they do.

  • @RealTime88
    @RealTime88 15 років тому +7

    A good man. A great news anchor. Never missed a beat and always told it the weay it was. I will never forget him. Thank you Uncle Walter. RIP!!!

  • @bryanjensen2614
    @bryanjensen2614 7 років тому +68

    One only wonders what great things he could have accomplished had he lived for 30-40 more years.

    • @npatil85
      @npatil85 4 роки тому

      And jfk and jim morrison

  • @DiscipleOfHeavyMeta1
    @DiscipleOfHeavyMeta1 7 років тому +18

    I love Cronkite's tone. His voice is so soothing.

  • @52298Beebop2
    @52298Beebop2 12 років тому +15

    I remember that day, I was in school and my teacher was in the hall-way talking to the principal of what has happened. My teacher said, "Class Dr. Martin Luther King Died".
    I was dismissed from school and everyone was in the streets running and crying mostly looting and Rioting. I was only eight at the time so I really didn't know why people were going crazy.

    • @greg.pridgen85
      @greg.pridgen85 2 роки тому +1

      I can only imagine what your thoughts and feelings were as a kid growing up in the 60s, not understanding truly what was going on.

    • @vernonpayne8869
      @vernonpayne8869 Рік тому

      Was that the same day it happened or the next day?

  • @clippedbykenny5309
    @clippedbykenny5309 5 років тому +11

    Rest easy Mr Dr Martin Luther King ❤❤😢😢

  • @yourboycam2698
    @yourboycam2698 7 років тому +29

    May his legacy live on forever

  • @strafrag1
    @strafrag1 12 років тому +15

    RIP Dr.King. You did so much for everyone. Thank you.

    • @user-vc1oz9rv6v
      @user-vc1oz9rv6v 5 місяців тому

      Funny calling someone a doctor when they never earned a PhD or MD.

  • @stonedkhalifa5940
    @stonedkhalifa5940 7 років тому +11

    Who remembers our friend martin?

  • @kascnef
    @kascnef 6 років тому +3

    50 years later we still remember what happened and we were saddened. He was only 39 when the unthinkable happened. It inspired u2 to write what happened in their hit song pride in the name of love.

  • @LadyArgento
    @LadyArgento 15 років тому +3

    RIP Mr. Cronkite. RIP Dr. King. The world is a better place because we had such men in it.

  • @brianchristopher3816
    @brianchristopher3816 3 роки тому +3

    I love how he pulled out his earpiece. I wonder if at some point he was going to go off script. I hope so.

  • @Barnstormer1969
    @Barnstormer1969 12 років тому +2

    It's really cool to see vintage programming like this one. Not only does it shows what television programming is like in those days, but what life was like.

  • @10TVMan
    @10TVMan 15 років тому +14

    For those who never were fortunate enough to get their news from Walter Cronkite, you missed an era of television news and news gathering in general that we will likely never see again. It was pure, honest, meaningful. Unlike the so-called newscasts of today, if you missed Cronkite's newscast, you really did miss the news of the day.

    • @raymondhopwood9393
      @raymondhopwood9393 Рік тому +1

      He wasn't called "the Most Trusted Man in America" for nothing. RIP Walter.

    • @pauldavis7310
      @pauldavis7310 4 місяці тому

      Since I grew up in a town that was an NBC affiliate we always watched NBC News.

  • @TheDJMessenger
    @TheDJMessenger 13 років тому +3

    A beautiful, precious spirit; a triumphant, yet humble, leader of change. Never Forget!

  • @barnesbarnes994
    @barnesbarnes994 7 років тому +13

    This was a Great Man with an awesome message.. Peace... who really wants this anymore? I Do.

  • @Toral3533
    @Toral3533 9 років тому +48

    Cronkite was the best. He was always first and foremost, a reporter. He has a bias, and never tried to hide it - -- he was liberal. But, he said, he always tried to be fair. Late in life, he had a short-lived column where he acknowledged the MSM's liberal bias, offered some explanations for it (e.g., reporters often start out covering horrible situations where big government seems to be the only answer), and suggested that the bias wasn't so important with the multiplicity of news sources we now have. He never tried to deny, as dolts like Rather did, that the MSM was liberal.

  • @curtisjones400
    @curtisjones400 12 років тому +3

    "Somewhere I Read" -We lost a great man

  • @Airsoftcleaner
    @Airsoftcleaner 15 років тому +9

    RIP Walter Cronkite,You will be greatly missed.

    • @BianicEpicVideos
      @BianicEpicVideos Рік тому +1

      Not MLK huh?

    • @DubieDuwop-tk8mm
      @DubieDuwop-tk8mm 11 місяців тому

      ​@@BianicEpicVideosthat's what I'm saying like that's all you got from this

  • @DC-ho8oe
    @DC-ho8oe 5 років тому +1

    When the news was reported on and not speculated about and with no hyperbole. I miss those days.

  • @Mat7920H
    @Mat7920H 6 років тому +7

    Who's watching on 4 April 2018?

  • @djmixwell
    @djmixwell 12 років тому +3

    From JFK - MLK , Cronkite has reported the worst tragedies America has ever seen

  • @omegusalpha7233
    @omegusalpha7233 7 років тому +5

    Rest in Peace Dr. King

  • @jessegibson7734
    @jessegibson7734 2 роки тому +1

    Every time I see those sound byte clips of the previous night I tear up for what could have been and shake my head 😭🤧

  • @harleylawdude
    @harleylawdude Рік тому

    After this assassination my father was seen crying - the only time in his adult life he was ever known to cry.

  • @doslion
    @doslion 6 років тому +5

    50 yrs ago today.

  • @TheTerryE
    @TheTerryE 10 років тому +4

    This was the BEGINNING of the news report, not near the end ...

  • @jerryross6898
    @jerryross6898 5 місяців тому

    Here today, 2024. Just thinking how much we need you here now I’m lost for words

  • @StephenLuke
    @StephenLuke Рік тому +2

    RIP
    Martin Luther King Jr.
    (1929-1968)

  • @manhbx96
    @manhbx96 13 років тому +6

    43 years ago its still ringing in our heads lets honor Martin Luther King and Walter Cronkite for their contributions to American society

  • @BenNCM
    @BenNCM 11 років тому +4

    What an amazing human being Dr King was. RIP

  • @PC-lu3zf
    @PC-lu3zf 3 роки тому +2

    Classic these were the days of great journalism.

  • @Trund27
    @Trund27 11 років тому

    Absolutely. Well said

  • @jjft2d
    @jjft2d 13 років тому +3

    May God bless you and fill your heart and spirit with love and kindness for your fellow man. Being in law enforcement, I am truly sick of seeing the attrocities we do to each other.

  • @simonecostasp
    @simonecostasp 15 років тому +3

    Descanse em paz Walter. Você assistiu a História de camarote e a transmitiu com excelência.

  • @morisadatumoridiva5394
    @morisadatumoridiva5394 4 роки тому +1

    RIP MARTIN LUTHER KING. THANK YOU FOR ALL YOU ADVICE.

  • @StevenDFenrich
    @StevenDFenrich 12 років тому

    Thanks Tiffany for posting this, but you made the final cut at a very bad time ("Maybe he was trying to prove something") Completing Cronkite's sentence were the resolute words "Well maybe he DID"...

  • @NinerCupcakes
    @NinerCupcakes 9 років тому +15

    God bless MLK.

  • @EntertaningAmerica
    @EntertaningAmerica 9 років тому +47

    I have always felt that Hoover and his FBI had something to do with the assassination.

    • @hoss73ford
      @hoss73ford 8 років тому +3

      +Entertaining America I wouldn't put it past him. Hoover was evil to say the least.

    • @damonrichardson3607
      @damonrichardson3607 6 років тому +4

      Well investigations concluded that the Govt had him killed

    • @madmanbob6744
      @madmanbob6744 6 років тому

      JustTrynaGraduate maybe

    • @TS-qq7vr
      @TS-qq7vr 5 років тому

      Your feelings should be registered into the police evidence locker.

    • @TS-qq7vr
      @TS-qq7vr 5 років тому

      James Pickle Puffer Way to talk about being hateful...

  • @multifandomvideos3275
    @multifandomvideos3275 6 років тому +1

    Cant believe this was 50 years ago

  • @capriass227
    @capriass227 5 років тому

    it's still sad to this day

  • @Tuxicat62
    @Tuxicat62 7 років тому +3

    I remember when this happened. I was in my room listening to the radio, when AM was king, and the report came on. I remember watching "Uncle Walter" (as we called Walter Cronkite) reporting and then LBJ talking. RIP Martin Luther King, Jr.

  • @chrissystewart6268
    @chrissystewart6268 2 роки тому +3

    April 4th 2022 the 54th Anniversary of MLK's Assassination. I thank MLK for what He did for America. If MLK was still living I would say Dr. King you're one of my heroes in History I thank you for what you did .

  • @TheGladmueth
    @TheGladmueth 12 років тому

    Nice to see a true news journalist giving... THE NEWS... not coloring it with his own viewpoints/ opinions.

  • @duranddavis7710
    @duranddavis7710 4 роки тому

    First the sound is excellent, second no teleprompters.

  • @Chrisiant
    @Chrisiant 12 років тому +4

    God bless Dr.King, may his memory be eternal. And may the memory of what he did, the dignity and integrity of a Christian man who did as he believed still resonate on this earth, and inspire others.

  • @tonyajohnson1059
    @tonyajohnson1059 6 років тому +3

    I remember the news report..I was 6. It really frightened me..He was a good man..He only wanted equal rights for all..He was a brave man..

  • @staggmovie
    @staggmovie 3 роки тому

    What time was his news broadcast on this day, as the time recorded that he was shot at 6:01 and then dead at St, Joseph's Hospital at 7:05.

  • @nashshaffer6235
    @nashshaffer6235 4 місяці тому +1

    “The Bullet exploded in his face”….Jesus 😢
    Lord Have Mercy

  • @jalonglover5913
    @jalonglover5913 7 років тому +5

    Thank you MLK Jr.

  • @Kemaca1979
    @Kemaca1979 9 років тому +60

    Im white but I like martin Luther King Jr

  • @reilgs
    @reilgs 10 років тому

    Dear Steve: The greatest thing he did for me was to make me realize that all of this worlds truly great minds and souls have all express that peace and brotherhood are the way to live one's life .Thank you my friend

  • @dorothylewis4185
    @dorothylewis4185 2 роки тому

    They donot make reporters like this anymore always love watching WALTER.

  • @stonedkhalifa5940
    @stonedkhalifa5940 7 років тому +6

    Why are white peoples ears so big? 👂🏻

    • @rickjames8916
      @rickjames8916 7 років тому +4

      Stoned Khalifa When you figure that one out let us know.

    • @maximalia44
      @maximalia44 6 років тому +4

      Black people's nose though

    • @kylegoppy6072
      @kylegoppy6072 6 років тому

      Thomzd true

    • @zavex4512
      @zavex4512 6 років тому

      Your ears and nose never stop growing, so in theory when you're old you'd have big-ass ears

    • @WombatLoveAffair
      @WombatLoveAffair 6 років тому +1

      Why are black people lips so huge?

  • @okrkyokrky
    @okrkyokrky Рік тому

    The Greatest News Anchor/Journalist of all time.

  • @timothywalters2614
    @timothywalters2614 6 років тому

    I was 10 , I remember like it was an hour ago . Awful ! R.I.P. Dr. King .

  • @brycelandon6387
    @brycelandon6387 6 років тому

    Dang, the footage of Walter Cronkite is so crisp and clear that it looks like it could have been aired yesterday!

  • @jessyleppert2
    @jessyleppert2 3 роки тому +1

    52 years later on April 4th, 2020 my dad died

  • @alphonso0077
    @alphonso0077 3 роки тому

    Everybody watching this on live TV in that era was hearing about this for the first time.

  • @aubreemiokiyolinn
    @aubreemiokiyolinn 6 років тому +2

    I never got a chance to thank him for all he has done 😩😍 live on baby

  • @tisaacs4487
    @tisaacs4487 7 років тому

    Out of the mountain of despair...

  • @64bitmad42
    @64bitmad42 6 років тому

    Straight to the point.

  • @CPTR111
    @CPTR111 12 років тому +1

    44 years ago to the day. RIP Dr. King

  • @teddibearsworld
    @teddibearsworld 12 років тому

    Why do we have to see an ad for the making of CSI blocking something like THIS? Unbelievable.

  • @imal25
    @imal25 6 років тому +2

    April 4,1968 50 Years ago Today!

  • @jazsm5385
    @jazsm5385 3 роки тому

    The spark that ignited the fire.....

  • @jackwilson9280
    @jackwilson9280 6 років тому

    You can just feel the anger in his voice

  • @plasteredbastard
    @plasteredbastard 2 роки тому +2

    "But it really doesn’t matter with me now, because I’ve been to the mountaintop … I’ve seen the Promised Land. I may not get there with you. But I want you to know tonight, that we, as a people, will get to the Promised Land" MLK Jr's final speech

  • @CaptainDesiderio
    @CaptainDesiderio 11 років тому

    I remember really wanting to meet Walter Cronkite. Unfortunately, I never had the chance. R.I.P, Mr. Cronkite. And Dr. King.