2026年5月22日 / 美国东部时间凌晨5:00 / CBS新闻
作者:阿莉扎·查桑 数字内容制作人
阿莉扎·查桑是《60分钟》和CBS新闻官网的数字内容制作人。她曾为PIX11新闻、《纽约每日新闻》、《内幕版》和DNAinfo等媒体撰稿。阿莉扎负责报道热点新闻,常聚焦犯罪与政治领域。
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为全美约700家电台提供新闻节目的CBS新闻广播电台,将在运营近一个世纪后,于周五晚间停播。
这家声名远扬的电台服务于1927年9月上线,在其数十年的运营历程中,曾是爱德华·R·默罗、罗伯特·特劳特、道格拉斯·爱德华兹、查尔斯·奥斯古德、丹·拉瑟等众多家喻户晓且值得信赖的广播传奇人物的主场。
“它已经存在了很长时间。我们正在失去的,其实是一家美国标志性机构,”CBS《世界新闻综述》的长期主播史蒂夫·卡森说道。
“CBS广播电台理应被铭记,它成为了全国性的标志性机构,对报纸之外的新闻行业发展至关重要,”拉瑟近日在接受《CBS周日早晨》采访时表示,“多年来,它一直是维系这个国家的重要组成部分,我认为这绝非微不足道的一部分。”
关停这家广播新闻服务的决定于今年3月公布,公司将其归因于“充满挑战的经济现实”。
时任CBS新闻总裁汤姆·西布罗斯基和主编巴里·韦斯在当时的一份声明中,致敬了CBS新闻广播电台自广播时代开启以来,在报道全球重大事件中发挥的历史性作用。
“近百年来,CBS新闻广播电台为全美带来原创报道——从爱德华·R·默罗在伦敦发回的二战报道,到如今每日的白宫动态更新,”他们说道,“我们的招牌节目《世界新闻综述》仍是全美播出时间最长的新闻广播。CBS新闻广播电台是我们自1927年以来所有发展的根基。”
CBS新闻广播电台开播之时,距离被广泛认可的首次商业广播仅过去了七年。
1938年,CBS新闻广播电台首次转播了棒球世界大赛,1939年又播出了对贝比·鲁斯的采访。
CBS新闻广播电台为数百万美国人带来了诸多重大事件的报道,包括珍珠港遇袭、诺曼底登陆、伊丽莎白二世女王的加冕典礼、1962年古巴导弹危机、1977年纽约大停电、海湾战争、9·11恐怖袭击以及2003年哥伦比亚号航天飞机失事事件。
默罗的声音首次出现在广播中是在1938年。据《CBS周日早晨》近日回顾,当时他正在欧洲为电台招募主播,但在目睹希特勒的危险性后,他发回了一则报道。
“我是爱德华·默罗,从维也纳发回报道。现在差不多是凌晨2点30分,希特勒先生尚未抵达。似乎没人知道他具体何时会到,但大多数人预计他会在明天上午10点之后的某个时间到场,”默罗在那篇报道中说道。
此后,他在闪电战期间从伦敦屋顶发回报道,还在德军撤离后从布痕瓦尔德集中营发回现场消息。
“我不是在寻找形容词来让报道听起来富有戏剧性,”他在一则战时报道中说道,“我只是在讲述我亲眼所见的一切。”
这位传奇播音员于1988年入选广播名人堂。
CBS节目主持人兼记者艾莉森·凯斯曾在9·11事件期间从曼哈顿下城报道新闻。
“人们需要知道当天发生了什么,”凯斯说道,“实时、无滤镜、不带政治偏见地告诉大家,这里正在发生什么。”
在CBS新闻广播电台停播的最后几日里,她和同事们回顾了电台的遗产。
“它在新闻领域留下了巨大的空白,”凯斯说道,“我想让听众们知道,能为这个了不起的地方工作,能和这些了不起的同事共事,我是多么自豪和荣幸。”
CBS News Radio signs off Friday night after nearly 100 years of broadcasting: “An American institution”
May 22, 2026 / 5:00 AM EDT / CBS News
By Aliza Chasan Digital Content Producer
Aliza Chasan is a Digital Content Producer for “60 Minutes” and CBSNews.com. She has previously written for outlets including PIX11 News, The New York Daily News, Inside Edition and DNAinfo. Aliza covers trending news, often focusing on crime and politics.
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CBS News Radio, which provides news programming to an estimated 700 stations spanning the United States, will sign off the air Friday night after nearly a century of broadcasting.
The storied service, launched in September 1927, was home to broadcast legends Edward R. Murrow, Robert Trout, Douglas Edwards, Charles Osgood, Dan Rather and many other familiar and trusted voices over its decades in operation.
“It’s been around for a long time. Really, an American institution is what we’re losing here,” said Steve Kathan, the longtime anchor of the CBS World News Roundup.
“CBS Radio should be remembered for becoming a national institution very important to the development of news other than newspapers,” Rather recently told “CBS Sunday Morning.” “It, for many, many years, was a part, and I would argue not a small part, of what held the country together.”
The decision to shutter the radio news service was announced in March, with the company citing “challenging economic realities.”
In a statement at the time, CBS News President Tom Cibrowski and Editor-in-Chief Bari Weiss paid tribute to the historic role of CBS News Radio in covering major events worldwide since the dawn of the broadcasting era.
“For nearly 100 years, CBS News Radio has delivered original reporting to the nation — from Edward R. Murrow’s World War II reports in London to today’s daily White House updates,” they said. “Our signature broadcast, ‘World News Roundup,’ remains the longest-running newscast in the country. CBS News Radio served as the foundation for everything we have built since 1927.”
CBS News Radio first hit the airwaves just seven years after what’s been widely recognized as the first commercial radio broadcast.
The first broadcast of baseball’s World Series could be heard on CBS News Radio in 1938, and in 1939 it aired an interview with Babe Ruth.
CBS News Radio brought millions of Americans coverage of major events including the attack on Pearl Harbor and the D-Day invasion, Queen Elizabeth II’s coronation, the 1962 Cuban missile crisis, the New York City blackout of 1977, the Gulf War, the 9/11 terrorist attacks, and the 2003 Space Shuttle Columbia disaster.
Murrow’s voice was first heard on air in 1938. As “CBS Sunday Morning” recently recounted, he was in Europe to recruit voices for radio, but after observing how dangerous Hitler was, he sent back a broadcast.
“This is Edward Murrow speaking from Vienna. It’s now nearly 2:30 in the morning, and Herr Hitler has not yet arrived. No one seems to know just when he will get here. But most people expect him sometime after 10 o’clock tomorrow morning,” Murrow said in that report.
He later provided rooftop reports in London during the Blitz and from the Buchenwald concentration camp after the Germans had fled.
“I’m not searching for adjectives to make this sound dramatic,” he said in one wartime report. “I’m just telling you what I’ve seen.”
The legendary broadcaster was inducted into the Radio Hall of Fame in 1988.
CBS program host and correspondent Allison Keyes covered the news from Lower Manhattan on 9/11.
“People needed to know what was going on that day,” Keyes said, “in real time, no filter, no politics. Here’s what’s happening.”
As the final days of CBS News Radio approached, she and her coleagues reflected on its legacy.
“It leaves a huge gap in the field of news,” Keys said. “I want the listeners to know how proud and honored I am to have worked for this amazing place, with these amazing people.”
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