About: Bob McKeown   Sponge Permalink

An Entity of Type : dbkwik:resource/J-Bbb9dL2KoHEWl6-mWOcw==, within Data Space : 134.155.108.49:8890 associated with source dataset(s)

Robert "Bob" McKeown (pron.: /məˈkjuːən/) (born October 10, 1950) is an investigative reporter with CBC News. He has also worked with NBC and CBS. McKeown returned to the CBC in November 2002 to host its investigative program, The Fifth Estate, a show which he had hosted from 1981 to 1990. Prior to his current position, McKeown spent eight years working for Dateline NBC as a correspondent and five years with CBS News. He is a graduate of Yale University and had a six-year professional football career before dedicating himself to journalism.

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  • Bob McKeown
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  • Robert "Bob" McKeown (pron.: /məˈkjuːən/) (born October 10, 1950) is an investigative reporter with CBC News. He has also worked with NBC and CBS. McKeown returned to the CBC in November 2002 to host its investigative program, The Fifth Estate, a show which he had hosted from 1981 to 1990. Prior to his current position, McKeown spent eight years working for Dateline NBC as a correspondent and five years with CBS News. He is a graduate of Yale University and had a six-year professional football career before dedicating himself to journalism.
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  • Retired
Name
  • Bob McKeown
  • McKeown, Bob
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  • 225(xsd:integer)
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  • -
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  • 6(xsd:integer)
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Position
  • Center
Honors
  • - Grey Cup Champion
Date of Birth
  • 1950-10-10(xsd:date)
Short Description
  • Canadian football player and journalist
abstract
  • Robert "Bob" McKeown (pron.: /məˈkjuːən/) (born October 10, 1950) is an investigative reporter with CBC News. He has also worked with NBC and CBS. McKeown returned to the CBC in November 2002 to host its investigative program, The Fifth Estate, a show which he had hosted from 1981 to 1990. Prior to his current position, McKeown spent eight years working for Dateline NBC as a correspondent and five years with CBS News. He is a graduate of Yale University and had a six-year professional football career before dedicating himself to journalism. McKeown's work with Dateline includes coverage of the World Trade Center Attacks and the Oklahoma City bombing and investigations into hurricanes, tornados, great white sharks and pastor Benny Hinn (on whom he also did a Fifth Estate report). A five-year stint with CBS News is highlighted by his award-winning coverage of the Persian Gulf War. McKeown was the first reporter to broadcast from the front lines during Operation Desert Storm and reached Kuwait City as Iraqi troops were fleeing, almost a day before allied forces arrived. People Magazine wrote: "McKeown and his crew survived artillery, minefields and Iraqi snipers to get the best story of the Gulf War." While at CBS, he was also a Correspondent for two prime-time newsmagazines, Street Stories and America Tonight, and contributed to 48 Hours and the CBS Evening News. In addition to hosting The Fifth Estate in the 1980s, McKeown produced, wrote and directed several critically acclaimed documentaries. These include The Boys on the Bus, an intimate portrait of the Edmonton Oilers as they won the 1987 Stanley Cup, Les Canadiens, a history of the Montreal Canadiens, and Strangers in a Strange Land, which depicted the trials and tribulations of a Canadian movie crew in China as it shot a feature film about the legendary doctor, Norman Bethune. In January 2005, McKeown challenged a statement made by American conservative polemicist Ann Coulter during her Fifth Estate interview. Coulter asserted that Canada's non-participation in the 2003 invasion of Iraq demonstrated that Canada's "loyal friendship" with the United States was weaker than in the past. As part of her broader attempt to compare the Canadian response to the Iraq war with that of Vietnam, Coulter erroneously asserted that "Canada sent troops to Vietnam." McKeown corrected her, "No, actually, Canada didn't send troops to Vietnam." Although no uniformed Canadian troops were involved in war, Canadians did participate through counterinsurgency efforts in South Vietnam and reconnaissance for US bombing runs in North Vietnam. Later during an interview on the American C-SPAN channel, Coulter stated that McKeown did not mention that 10,000 Canadian troops ran across the border to enlist in the United States army. She also went on to call McKeown "a bubble-head, a Ted Baxter." She had said she would get back to CBC, but she still hasn't.[citation needed] He has also taken on other conservative pundits, such as Fox News Channel host Bill O'Reilly, whom he accused of lying and distorting facts, while trying to convey the news to the American people.[citation needed] McKeown used O'Reilly's reference to what he called the "Paris Business Review" and the billions of dollars France had lost due to the boycott that he had initialized following Frances decision not to participate in the 2003 invasion of Iraq. McKeown pointed out that trade between France and the United States actually went up since O'Reilly initialized the boycott and that the Paris Business Review does not even exist. In all, Bob McKeown has reported from more than 60 countries and has been recognized with dozens of major journalistic prizes, including two Emmys - for the Gulf War and Dateline—two Geminis, two Edward R. Murrow awards, two Gracies, two National Headliner awards and a National Press Club award. In 1982, McKeown anchored a special Fifth Estate report about animal cruelty in Hollywood, focusing on the 1958 Walt Disney film White Wilderness as well as the television program Mutual of Omaha’s Wild Kingdom. In the report, McKeown found that the lemming scene was filmed not at the Arctic Ocean, but at the Bow River near downtown Calgary, where the lemmings were forced into the river; in addition, he also discovered that the footage of a polar bear cub falling down an Arctic ice slope was in actuality filmed in a Calgary film studio. In light of the findings for the report, McKeown asked Wild Kingdom host Marlin Perkins if he had deliberately injured or killed animals while making wildlife films. Perkins, then in his seventies, "firmly asked for the camera to be turned off, then punched a shocked McKeown in the face."
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