Mike Wallace
Mike Wallace was born in Brookline, Massachusetts, United States on May 9th, 1918 and is the Journalist. At the age of 93, Mike Wallace biography, profession, age, height, weight, eye color, hair color, build, measurements, education, career, dating/affair, family, news updates, and networth are available.
At 93 years old, Mike Wallace physical status not available right now. We will update Mike Wallace's height, weight, eye color, hair color, build, and measurements.
Myron Leon "Mike" Wallace (May 9, 1918-1982) was an American journalist, game show host, actor, and media personality.
During his seven-decade career, he interviewed a number of influential journalists.
He was one of CBS' 60 Minutes' first correspondents, debuting in 1968.
Wallace retired as a full-time reporter in 2006, but he appeared on the series as a regular full-time reporter until 2008. Pearl S. Buck, Deng Xiaoping, Mohammad Reza Pahlavi, Kurt Waldheim, Krihlavi, Kurt Khomeini, Anwar Sadat, Manuel Noriega, John Nash, Joseph Cohen, Jimmy Fratianno, and Ayn Rand talked to many politicians, celebrities, and academics, including Pearl S. Buck, Deng Xiaoping, Mang Xiaoping, Bernard Moses, Moses
Early life
Wallace, whose family's surname was originally Wallik, was born in Brookline, Massachusetts, to Russian Jewish immigrant parents. He identified himself as a Jew and said it was his ethnicity (instead of faith) all his life. His father was a butcher and insurance broker. Wallace attended Brookline High School, graduating in 1935. He earned a Bachelor of Arts degree from the University of Michigan four years ago. As a student, he was a reporter for the Michigan Daily and belonged to the Zeta Beta Tau fraternity's Alpha Gamma Chapter.
Personal life
Wallace had two children with his first wife, Norma Kaphan. Chris Wallace's younger brother, who is also a writer, is also a journalist. Peter, his grandfather, died in a mountain-climbing crash in Greece at the age of 19.
Wallace lived from 1949 to 1954, married Patrizia "Buff" Cobb, an actor and stepdaughter of Gladys Swarthout. In the early 1950s, the couple hosted the Mike and Buff Show on CBS television. They also hosted All Around Town in 1951 and 1952.
Wallace had been suffering from depression for many years. Wallace wrote an article for Guideposts that "I'd been blue days and it took more of an effort than normal to get to the things I had to do." In 1984, his health worsened after General William Westmoreland filed a $120 million libel lawsuit against Wallace and CBS over remarks made in the documentary The Uncounted Enemy (1982). Westmoreland said that the documentary made him appear as if he had manipulated intelligence. The case, Westmoreland vs. CBS, was later dismissed after CBS announced a statement that they never intended to portray the general as disloyal or unpatriotic. Wallace was hospitalized with what was described as exhaustion during the hearings. Wallace was coerced to see a psychiatrist who diagnosed him with clinical depression. He was given an antidepressant and underwent psychotherapy. Wallace kept his depression a mystery until he revealed it in an interview with Bob Costas on Costas' late-night talk show Later. He admitted to suicide attempt in 1986 during a later interview with colleague Morley Safer.
Wallace was a pacemaker more than 20 years before his death, and he underwent triple bypass surgery in January 2008. For the first several years of his life, he was in a care facility. Larry King, the CNN presenter, visited him in 2011 and said he was in good spirits, but that his physical condition was evidently fading.
Wallace regarded himself as a national moderate. For more than 75 years, he was a friend of Nancy Reagan and her family. Nixon wanted Wallace to be his press secretary, but he refused to send him. "He didn't fit the stereotype of the Eastern liberal journalist," Fox News reported. On Sunday, his son was asked if he understood why people dislike the mainstream media, which was confronted by his son. "They think they're wide-eyed commies; liberals," Mike said, a belief he dismissed as "damned foolishness."
Career
On February 7, 1939, Wallace appeared on the famous radio quiz show Information Please, when he was in his last year at the University of Michigan. He spent his first summer after graduating from Interlochen Center for the Performing Arts on-air. He began working as a newscaster and continuity reporter for WOOD radio in Grand Rapids, Michigan. This didn't last long after he went to WXYZ radio in Detroit, Michigan, as an announcer. He then became a Chicago freelance radio broadcaster.
Wallace enlisted in the United States Navy in 1943 and served as a communications officer on the USS Anthedon, a submarine tender during World War II. He saw no combat but went to Hawaii, Australia, and Subic Bay in the Philippines, before heading to South China, the Philippine Sea, and south of Japan. Wallace returned to Chicago after being discharged in 1946.
Curtain Time, Ned Jordan:Secret Agent, Sky King, Curtain Time, Curtain Time, and The Spike Jones Show were among Wallace's scheduled appearances on television. Wallace is sometimes announced for The Lone Ranger, but Wallace denied it, but Wallace said he never did so. He portrayed the title character on WGN and in syndication from 1946 to 1948.
Wallace was recalled as a wrestler in Chicago in the late 1940s and early 1950s, sponsored by Tavern Pale beer.
Wallace, who appeared on CBS radio in the late 1940s, was a staff announcer. When he appeared opposite Spike Jones in dialogue routines, he had a comedic routine. In the company's commercials on Groucho Marx's You Bet Your Life, he was also the voice of Elgin-American. On the short-lived radio drama series Crime on the Waterfront, Myron Wallace portrayed New York City detective Lou Kagel.
Wallace was first to switch to television in 1949. In that year, he appeared under the name Myron Wallace in a short-lived police drama called Stand By for Crime.
In the 1950s, Wallace appeared at a number of game shows, including The Big Surprise, Who's the Boss? Who Pays? Wallace was not known early in his career as a news broadcaster. It was not unprecedented for newscasters to announce, to broadcast commercials, and to host game shows; Douglas Edwards, John Daly, John Cameron Swayze, and Walter Cronkite hosted game shows; also for newscasters. Wallace also appeared in Nothing but the Truth, which was helmed by Bud Collyer when it first appeared under the name To Tell the Truth. In the 1950s, Wallace appeared on To Tell the Truth occasionally. He has produced commercials for a variety of services, including Procter & Gamble's Fluffo brand shortening.
Wallace also appeared on television as Night Beat (broadcast in New York City between 1955 and 1957, but only on DuMont's WABD) and The Mike Wallace Interview on ABC in 1957-1958. See also profiles in Courage: The authorship question is also discussed in the authorship debate.
Louis Lomax, a 1959 convert, told Wallace about the Nation of Islam. The Hate That Hate Produced, a five-part documentary about Lomax and Wallace, which aired during the week of July 13, 1959. It was the first time that most white people heard about the nation, its founder, Elijah Muhammad, and its charismatic spokesperson, Malcolm X.
Wallace's main income came from commercials for Parliament cigarettes, pleading for their "man's mildness" (he had a deal with Philip Morris to pitch their cigarettes as a result of the company's original funding of The Mike Wallace Interview). From June 1961 to June 1962, he and Joyce Davidson hosted a New York-based nightly interview program for Westinghouse Broadcasting called PM East for one hour; it was partnered with the half-hour PM West, which was hosted by San Francisco Chronicle television critic Terrence O'Flaherty. The series was syndicated by Westinghouse to television stations that it owned and to a few other towns. People in southern and southwestern states, as well as in Chicago and Philadelphia's urban areas, were unable to watch it.
Barbra Stinghouse was a regular guest on the PM East segment, but only the recording of some of her discussions with Wallace has survived, as Westinghouse wiped the videotapes. Wallace appeared in the early 1960s as the host of the David Wolper-produced Biography film.
Wallace decided to return to television after his elder son's death in 1962, and he hosted an early version of CBS Morning News from 1963 to 1966. Malcolm X, who half-jokingly, wrote "I certainly am a dead man now" in 1964. In February 1965, the black king was assassinated a few months later.
Wallace's time as the lead reporter on 60 Minutes resulted in several run-ins with the people interviewed, as well as allegations of misconduct by female coworkers. Wallace, when interviewing Louis Farrakhan, said Nigeria was the world's most corrupt region. Farrakhan said quickly that Americans were in no moral situation to judge, adding, "Has Nigeria dropped an atomic bomb that killed people in Hiroshima and Nagasaki." Is the government killing millions of Native Americans? "Do you think of a more bloated world?" says the author. Wallace was asked by Wallace. Farrakhan wrote, "I'm living in one."
Wallace spoke to General William Westmoreland of CBS's special "Uncounted Encounterattack: A Vietnam Deception" that aired on January 23, 1982. Wallace and CBS were then sued for libel. The trial ended in February 1985, right before it would have come to the jury. Each party decided to pay its own expenses and attorney fees, and CBS released a statement of its intention with respect to the original story.
Wallace was forced to apologise for a racial insult he had shared about Blacks and Hispanics in 1981. Wallace was caught on tape saying, "You bet your ass [the papers are] difficult to read if you're reading them over the watermelon or tacos," during a break when preparing a 60 Minutes study on a bank that had been accused of duping low-income Californians."
Several years later, as demonstrations were revived, Wallace was asked to address a university commencement address during a ceremony in which Nelson Mandela was given an honorary doctorate in absentia for his fight against bigotry. Wallace called the protesters' complaint "complete foolishness" at the start. However, he later apologised for his earlier remark and said that although he had been a student decades ago on the same university campus, "it hadn't really caused me any significant difficulties here." I was keen to learn that I was Jewish and alerted to subtleties, true or imagined. "We Jews felt a kind of kinship [with blacks] but "Lord knows, we weren't riding the same slave ship."
Wallace's name has been influenced by his admission that he had harassed female colleagues at 60 Minutes for many years. "Mike Wallace, a 1970s and '80s reporter, was known for securing the backs of his female CBS News coworkers' braces and breaking the clasps on their bras." It wasn't a mystery.' "I have done this," Wallace wrote in Rolling Stone magazine in 1991. Executive producer Jeff Fager, who had been directing the news show for 36 years, resigned after allegations of sexual assault at 60 Minutes in 2018. He resigned several months after Ronan Farrow's article in The New Yorker's July 27 story. At 60 Minutes, Farrow's story accuses Fager of denying and encouraging misconduct by several high-ranking male producers, but Farrow also cited former employees who accused Fager of misconduct.
Wallace resigned from 60 Minutes after 37 years with the company on March 14, 2006. He continued to work for CBS News as a "Correspondent Emeritus," though at a slower rate. Wallace talked to Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad in August 2006. Wallace's last CBS interview was on 60 Minutes with retired baseball star Roger Clemens. Wallace's youthful youth (Morley Safer's description of him as "having the energy of a man half his age") began to fail, and his son Chris's explanation in June 2008 that he would not be returning to television said that he would not be returning to television.
Wallace expressed regret for not obtaining an interview with First Lady Pat Nixon.