Mary Tyler Moore, Michael J. Fox, Katie Couric Enter Broadcasting & Cable Hall of Fame On November 12 as 'Bible' of TV & Radio Celebrates 70 Years.Entertainment Editors NEW YORK--(ENTERTAINMENT WIRE)--Oct. 2, 2001 Portion of Proceeds to Benefit Survivors of Terrorist Attack Victims Broadcasting & Cable Magazine will set aside a portion of the net proceeds Net Proceeds The amount received after all costs are deducted from the sale of a piece of property or security. Notes: In the case of an investor selling a security, net proceeds represent the proceeds from the sale minus any trading costs (i.e. commissions). of its November 12 Hall of Fame gala in New York New York, state, United States New York, Middle Atlantic state of the United States. It is bordered by Vermont, Massachusetts, Connecticut, and the Atlantic Ocean (E), New Jersey and Pennsylvania (S), Lakes Erie and Ontario and the Canadian province of for families of media people killed in the September 11 terrorist attack that destroyed the World Trade Center. The black-tie gala at New York's Marriott Marquis, scheduled a year ago, marks the induction of nine luminaries of TV and radio into the Broadcasting & Cable Hall of Fame, also known as the "Honor Roll of the Fifth Estate." They include actors Mary Tyler Moore This article is about the actress. For her 1970s television series, also known as "Mary Tyler Moore", see The Mary Tyler Moore Show. Mary Tyler Moore and Michael J. Fox, Katie Couric of NBC's "Today," and Disney chairman & CEO (1) (Chief Executive Officer) The highest individual in command of an organization. Typically the president of the company, the CEO reports to the Chairman of the Board. Michael D. Eisner. The gala also celebrates the 70th anniversary of Broadcasting & Cable Magazine, the "Bible of the Fifth Estate," founded in 1931. Six broadcast engineers representing five New York TV stations lost their lives in the attack on the building that housed their station's transmitters. In addition to a fund benefiting the families of industry survivors, the International Radio & Television Foundation and the Broadcasters' Foundation, the traditional beneficiaries of the Hall of Fame gala, will also receive a portion of the event's net proceeds. In addition to Moore, Fox, Couric, and Eisner, the 2001 Broadcasting & Cable Hall of Fame inductees include MTV Networks president & CEO Tom Freston, Inner City Broadcasting group chairman Hal Jackson, "Saturday Night Live This article is about the American television series. For the show related to Big Brother (UK), see Saturday Night Live (UK). Saturday Night Live (SNL " creator and executive producer Lorne Michaels, UHF- TV pioneer William Lowell Putnam William Lowell Putnam II (November 22 1861 - June 1923) (more commonly known as William Putnam, Sr.) was an American lawyer and banker. He graduated from Harvard in 1882, and proceeded to make a professional name for himself in legal and financial circles. , and Cox Communications president & CEO James O. Robbins. Host of the eleventh annual Broadcasting & Cable Hall of Fame ceremony will be ABC ABC in full American Broadcasting Co. Major U.S. television network. It began when the expanding national radio network NBC split into the separate Red and Blue networks in 1928. News' Sam Donaldson, who has officiated all but once since 1991. Posthumous inductees this year are broadcast personality Arlene Francis, actress Nancy Marchand, actor Carroll O'Connor, and producer and foreign correspondent Ted Yates. Established in 1991 by Broadcasting & Cable Magazine, the Hall of Fame, the "Honor Roll of the Fifth Estate," recognizes luminaries in TV, radio, and cable for "unparalleled excellence and service to the industry." Its members include the most respected figures in the industry. Notable among them are Lucille Ball, Johnny Carson, Walter Cronkite, Jackie Gleason, Bob Hope, Norman Lear, Edward R. Murrow Noun 1. Edward R. Murrow - United States broadcast journalist remembered for his reports from London during World War II (1908-1965) Edward Roscoe Murrow, Murrow , William S. Paley
William S. Paley (September 28, 1901 in Chicago, Illinois – October 26, 1990 in New York, New York) was the chief executive who built CBS from a small , President Ronald Reagan, Gene Roddenberry, Rod Serling, Frank Stanton, and Orson Welles. Founded in 1931 as Broadcasting, the News Magazine of the Fifth Estate, Broadcasting & Cable (as it has been known since 1993) is America's premier journal of television, radio, and related media, now owned by Cahners Business Information. Details for the eleventh annual Broadcasting & Cable Hall of Fame gala are as follows: Date: Monday, November 12, 2001 Time: Reception 6 pm, dinner & program 7pm Place: Marriott Marquis, Broadway Ballroom, West 45 Street & Broadway, Manhattan Prices: Tables of ten $12,500, $10,000, $7,500; Single tickets $500 Dress: Black tie Reservations: 212/889-6716. |
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