I don’t have live access to the latest news feeds right now. Here’s what I can share based on widely known information up to the present:
- John Charles Daly (1914–1991) was a prominent American journalist, game show host, and TV personalities associated with CBS News and ABC, best remembered for hosting What's My Line? in the 1950s–60s.[2][4]
- He made notable early wartime reports, including delivering the first national radio bulletin on Pearl Harbor and later relaying the Roosevelt death news in 1945, which solidified his place in broadcast history.[1][3][5]
- After a long career in journalism and television, Daly held executive roles, including a period as director of Voice of America, before leaving VOA in the late 1960s; his career is often cited in broadcast history references.[3][5]
If you want the absolute latest mention or contemporary coverage (e.g., tributes, retrospectives, or new scholarship), I can search today for current articles and provide direct links and summaries. Would you like me to do that? If yes, I’ll fetch up-to-date sources and cite them.
Illustration to help contextualize: a timeline of Daly’s major milestones (reporting Pearl Harbor, Roosevelt death bulletin, hosting WML, VOA tenure) can be helpful to orient new readers, but I can also provide a concise bullet list or a brief biographical paragraph if you prefer.
Sources
Journalist, Game Show Host, and Radio Personality. He is probably best remembered for hosting the CBS television panel show What's My Line? from 1950 until 1967. Born John Charles Patrick Croghan Daly in Johannesburg, South Africa, where his American father worked as a geologist. After his father died of tropical...
www.findagrave.comJohn Charles Patrick Croghan Daly was an American journalist, host, CBS radio and television personality, ABC News executive, TV anchor, and game show host, bes...
www.wikiwand.comBonaventure University, American International College, honorary law degree from Norwich University. Died in Chevy Chase, Maryland, 24 February 1991. John Daly *Courtesy CBS Photo Archive* On 7 December 1941 John Charles Daly, Jr., made an indelible mark upon U.S. radio audiences with the first bulletin of the bombing of Pearl Harbor. Working for the Columbia Broadcasting System (CBS), Daly broke into the network at 2:25 P.M. Eastern time: "The Japanese have attacked Pearl Harbor, Hawaii, by...
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