"With the exception of the nightly network news shows, no one on television devoted more airtime to Watergate than talk show host Cavett. From 1972 to 1974, America watched the Watergate scandal unfold on The Dick Cavett Show as Cavett interviewed nearly every major Watergate figure — on both sides of the crisis — including John Ehrlichman, Alexander Haig, G. Gordon Liddy, Jeb Magruder and members of the Senate Watergate Committee: Senators Howard Baker, Daniel Inouye, Herman Talmadge, Lowell Weicker, and more."-- from the PBS preview materials for Dick Cavett's Watergate,which airs tomorrow night, "40 years to the hour since PresidentNixon appeared on television to announce his resignation"
by KenTalk about a big deal -- we're talking tonight about tomorrow night's 40th anniversary of the cuckoo-fied Richard Nixon's announcement of our still-one-and-only presidential resignation. (It certainly couldn't have happened to a more deserving slimebag, although we've subsequently had at least one equally deserving candidate.) And the Cavett telecast sounds like a lollapalooza, with all that archival material plus the present-day contributions of not just Cavett but Carl Bernstein, Bob Woodward, and John Dean. I mean, if the subject is Watergate, do names get much more resonant than Bernstein, Woodward, and Dean?The people responsible for the show have put out such a good, even tingle-inducing preview for the show that I can't do better than to present it in full.On Aug. 1, 1973, we see Dick Cavett in the Senate Watergate Committee hearing room for an on-location broadcast. Committee Vice Chair Sen. Howard Baker (R-TN) is at Dick's right; to his left are Sens. Lowell Weicker (R-CT), Daniel Inouye (D-HI), and -- cropped out of the photo by me for fit -- Herman Talmadge (D-GA).
The documentary, featuring interviews from “The Dick Cavett Show” library — many not seen since the 70s — and new interviews with Carl Bernstein (Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist), John Dean (former White House counsel), Timothy Naftali (Watergate historian) and Bob Woodward (Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist), premieres Friday, August 8, 2014, 9:00-10:00 p.m. ET (check local listings) on PBS — exactly 40 years to the hour since President Nixon appeared on television to announce his resignation, which would officially take effect the next day, August 9, 1974.With the exception of the nightly network news shows, no one on television devoted more airtime to Watergate than talk show host Cavett. From 1972 to 1974, America watched the Watergate scandal unfold on “The Dick Cavett Show” as Cavett interviewed nearly every major Watergate figure — on both sides of the crisis — including John Ehrlichman, Alexander Haig, G. Gordon Liddy, Jeb Magruder and members of the Senate Watergate Committee: Senators Howard Baker, Daniel Inouye, Herman Talmadge, Lowell Weicker, and more.Unfolding through interviews with people who were directly involved, DICK CAVETT’S WATERGATE documents the critical Watergate milestones with new insight and perspective. New interviews with Cavett offer personal insights into the key Watergate personalities and provide historical context for the featured clips. On a more intimate note, Cavett reveals his reaction on discovering he was mentioned in the White House tapes — not once, but 26 times.The program features archival news footage and highlights from the Congressional hearings (appointment viewing in its day) to recount the behind-the-scenes battle between the White House and “The Dick Cavett Show.” In addition, viewers will see rare photos and memorabilia from Cavett’s personal collection and hear never-before-broadcast audio from the White House tapes.DICK CAVETT’S WATERGATE begins with the first critical Watergate milestone: the arrest of five men for breaking and entering into the Democratic National Committee (DNC) headquarters at the Watergate complex in Washington, DC, on June 17, 1972.Cavett reflects on the moment he first heard about the break-in and became “a Watergate junkie.” He recalls the first mention of the scandal on his show — a mere two days after the burglary — when his guest was Senator Edward Kennedy.New interviews with Bernstein, Dean, Naftali and Woodward explain why Watergate had no effect on Nixon’s re-election on November 7, 1972, one of the largest landslides in American political history.A discussion with Dean about the showdown over the White House tapes sheds new light on the July 13, 1973, disclosure by Alexander Butterfield, former presidential appointments secretary, regarding conversations and telephone calls taped at the White house.The final critical milestone the program explores is the subsequent pardon by President Gerald R. Ford on September 8, 1974. In an interview from 1979 with President Ford, Cavett pressed the president for his opinion of Nixon’s guilt or innocence. President Ford’s response, 35 years later, is still surprising.
AND ON A BIG NIGHT IN GHOST-OF-NIXON LAND --Rice University's Douglas Brinkley with Charlie RoseAs a sort of curtain-raiser for the above, many public television stations will be showing a Charlie Rose: The Week show featuring historian Douglas Brinkley talking about that mass of sociopathic self-incrimination, Nixon's Watergate tapes.#