Mike Wallace

Mike Wallace
Myron Leon "Mike" Wallacewas an American journalist, game show host, actor and media personality. He interviewed a wide range of prominent newsmakers during his sixty-year career. He was one of the original correspondents for CBS' 60 Minutes, which debuted in 1968. Wallace retired as a regular full-time correspondent in 2006, but still appeared occasionally on the series until 2008...
NationalityAmerican
ProfessionJournalist
Date of Birth9 May 1918
CountryUnited States of America
I was trying to be respectful, but I got really mad at the doctor. I told him there was nothing wrong with me, this was all just a misunderstanding.
I think going down to $20 dilutes the brand and makes it seem like a budget title. The message it sends is ESPN is a budget brand and it's not worth as much as Madden.
What you're saying is that you were a living steroids experiment for your entire career,
I even asked Eleanor Roosevelt difficult questions and she loved it.
I didn't appreciate the way it came down, but I respect the fact NASCAR has to do what it thinks is best.
Portals do drive e-commerce, ... But I think some e-commerce companies overpaid and expected too much. As e-commerce companies build their own stream of traffic, they'll need to depend on portals less and less.
Let the answer hang there for two or three or four seconds.
She's of a certain age now. She doesn't want to keep getting on planes. She's very wise to do what she's doing.
Shake it off and get back in there, ... The thing that is going to make a difference is you shaking it off.
My 40 years with CBS News have been a fascinating voyage of discovery. Thirty-seven years with '60 Minutes' have given me the chance to travel the globe, meet and report on world issues, and broadcast what I've learned to an audience at home that had long trusted CBS News reporters like Walter Cronkite and Eric Sevareid.
There are too many people out there like that -- and what's on the scoreboard is important -- but there is a lot more to football.
I feel fulfilled when we've revealed a person.
What's an ambush interview? You walk up to a fellow who you want to talk to, and he hasn't been - he hadn't been willing to talk to you before. You've sent him letters, and you've tried to talk to him on the phone. So you walk up to him on the street and ask him a question - that's an ambush?
When I went to Ann Arbor, University of Michigan, what I really wanted to be was a radio announcer.