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Posted: Wednesday, 19 August 2009 12:20PM
"60 Minutes" Creator Don Hewitt Dies
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NEW YORK (WCBS 880 / AP) -- Don Hewitt, creator of the CBS News television program "60 Minutes," has died. He was 86.
READ: More Deaths in the News 
He died of pancreatic cancer Wednesday at his home in Bridgehampton, N.Y., said CBS.
Hewitt joined CBS News in television's infancy in 1948, and produced the first televised presidential debate between John F. Kennedy and Richard Nixon in 1960.
He made his mark in the late 1960s when CBS agreed to try his idea of a one-hour broadcast that mixed hard news and feature stories. The television newsmagazine was born on Sept. 24, 1968, when the ``60 Minutes'' stopwatch began ticking.
He dreamed of a television version of Life, the dominant magazine of the mid-20th century, where interviews with entertainers could coexist with investigations that exposed corporate malfeasance.
``The formula is simple,'' he wrote in a memoir in 2001, ``and it's reduced to four words every kid in the world knows: Tell me a story. It's that easy.''
Hard-driven reporter Mike Wallace, Hewitt's first hire, became the journalist those in power least liked on their doorstep. Harry Reasoner, Morley Safer, Ed Bradley and Diane Sawyer also reported for the show.
``60 Minutes'' won 73 Emmy Awards, 13 DuPont/Columbia University Awards and nine Peabody Awards during Hewitt's stewardship, which ended in 2004.
Fellow CBS legend Walter Cronkite died less than five weeks ago, on July 17. Reacting to his passing, Hewitt had said, ``How many news organizations get the chance to bask in the sunshine of a half-century of Edward R. Murrow followed by a half-century of Walter Cronkite?''
He was protrayed by Grant Heslov in the George Clooney film "Good Night and Good Luck."
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