A reporter is always concerned with tomorrow. There's nothing tangible of yesterday. All I can say I've done is agitate the air ten or fifteen minutes and then boom - it's gone.
Just once in a while let us exalt the importance of ideas and information.
Just because your voice reaches halfway around the world doesn't mean you are wiser than when it reached only to the end of the bar.
If we were to do the Second Coming of Christ in color for a full hour, there would be a considerable number of stations which would decline to carry it on the grounds that a Western or a quiz show would be more profitable.
Good night, and good luck.
Fame is morally neutral.
Difficulty is the excuse history never accepts.
A satellite has no conscience.
Our major obligation is not to mistake slogans for solutions.
Most truths are so naked that people feel sorry for them and cover them up, at least a little bit.
People say conversation is a lost art; how often I have wished it were.
The newest computer can merely compound, at speed, the oldest problem in the relations between human beings, and in the end the communicator will be confronted with the old problem, of what to say and how to say it.
The obscure we see eventually. The completely obvious, it seems, takes longer.
The politician in my country seeks votes, affection and respect, in that order. With few notable exceptions, they are simply men who want to be loved.
The speed of communications is wondrous to behold. It is also true that speed can multiply the distribution of information that we know to be untrue.