Dark Days at the White House: Watergate and Richard Nixon - ABC News

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  • Опубликовано: 4 июн 2024
  • An episode of the ABC News Great TV News Stories series entitled "Dark Days at the White House: The Watergate Scandal and the Resignation of President Richard M. Nixon" covering the Watergate Scandal and the downfall of President Nixon from 1972 to 1974.
    ABC News newscasters and reporters included in this video are Frank Reynolds, Ted Koppel, Sam Donaldson, Tom Jarriel, Harry Reasoner, Howard K. Smith, Bill Gill, David Schoumacher, and Bill Zimmerman. If you're a Forensics Files fan, you'll recognize narrator Peter Thomas's voice.
    From the VHS Tape: "The story of the President at the center of the Watergate Maelstrom, his near impeachment, his last dark days at the White House, and his sudden resignation in disgrace."
    A part of the "ABC News Great TV News Stories" VHS series - watch more at ruclips.net/p/PLH...
    00:00 Intro
    01:38 Jan. 20, 1972 - State of the Union
    02:24 June 17, 1972
    02:51 June 22, 1972
    03:01 Aug. 29, 1972
    03:38 Oct. 10, 1972
    05:20 Interlude (1972 election and indictments)
    06:17 Feb. 7, 1973
    06:31 March 26, 1973
    07:52 April 17, 1973
    09:39 April 19, 1973
    11:02 April 30, 1973
    13:13 May 14, 1973
    14:22 May 18, 1973
    16:21 June 25, 1973
    23:46 July 20, 1973
    25:16 July 21, 1973
    26:31 July 23, 1973
    28:44 Interlude (Saturday night massacre)
    29:27 Oct. 22, 1973
    30:42 Oct. 23, 1973
    31:05 Oct. 26, 1973
    32:02 Nov. 7, 1973
    32:24 Nov. 15, 1973
    32:40 Nov. 17, 1973
    33:35 Nov. 21, 1973
    35: 11 Nov. 26, 1973
    35:25 Jan. 15, 1974
    36:50 Jan. 30, 1974 - State of the Union
    37:31 Feb. 6, 1974
    37:54 Feb. 25, 1974
    38:14 Interlude (Haldeman/Erlichmann/Mitchell indictments)
    38:30 March 6, 1974
    39:50 Interlude (Tapes and transcripts)
    40:50 May 1, 1974
    41:41 May 9, 1974
    43:10 Interlude (Nixon travels)
    43:39 July 24, 1974
    44:04 July 26, 1974
    46:27 July 27, 1974
    47:25 Interlude (House committee - impeachment)
    48:03 July 31, 1974
    48:44 Aug. 2, 1974
    48:57 Aug. 5, 1974
    50:56 Aug. 8, 1974 - Nixon announces resignation
    56:44 Aug. 9, 1974 - Nixon leaves the White House
    58:35 Epilogue
    59:24 May 8, 1980 - 20/20 interview with Nixon excerpt

Комментарии • 619

  • @PremiumVibesMedia
    @PremiumVibesMedia 5 лет назад +235

    The best thing about old news stories was the amount of raw footage they would just put in. No graphics. No over the top narration. Just news.

    • @joijaxx
      @joijaxx 4 года назад +5

      Premium Vibes word!

    • @tommygunn2457
      @tommygunn2457 4 года назад +4

      Ahh yeah, the good ole days. Do what you want, just don't get caught.

    • @muttleycrew
      @muttleycrew 3 года назад +6

      tommy gunn same applies now with one distinction: do what you want and it’s okay getting caught too. If you’re running a political party nothing has any consequence anymore

    • @sillygoose635
      @sillygoose635 3 года назад +2

      bro, newsreels were a thing.

    • @josephmackela8466
      @josephmackela8466 3 года назад +3

      You could take them more seriously!!

  • @StephenGlasskeys
    @StephenGlasskeys 8 лет назад +149

    This is one of the most unique Watergate documentaries I've seen, the old news footage is priceless.

    • @xuploads
      @xuploads 8 лет назад +9

      +Stephen Glasskeys Yeah it's amazing, I thought I had already seen every watergate documentary. Thanks a lot to the uploader this must have been hard to find..

    • @hoss73ford
      @hoss73ford 8 лет назад +8

      +X This came out on a VHS tape in the 1980s. I found it in a video rental store in 1988. Loved it from the very beginning. Like to find a CBS & NBC version.

    • @bluecollarlit
      @bluecollarlit 5 лет назад +2

      I find it interesting, too. The haircuts! The ties! 🙂

    • @bluecollarlit
      @bluecollarlit 5 лет назад +1

      Pardon me, I didn't mean to comment twice. I only typed it once, don't know what causes that, sorry.

    • @gloriawashingon1452
      @gloriawashingon1452 5 лет назад +2

      I love it..insert Drumpf....

  • @crystalhatfield7902
    @crystalhatfield7902 3 года назад +88

    Thank you SO MUCH for this!!! My Grandfather is Bill Gill (2:50 into this vid) and this is the FIRST time I have been able to see his reporting. That is amazing!! It has been very difficult finding footage of him for a few reasons but I am hoping to run across more. Your channel is fantastic!! So grateful!

    • @samiadilrus
      @samiadilrus 2 года назад +12

      must be so amazing to see him in action! glad to come across your comment

    • @Hush_Money2
      @Hush_Money2 Год назад +7

      Cool.😀👍🏻

    • @haroldcheeseburger
      @haroldcheeseburger Год назад +8

      Your Grandfather rocks!

    • @johndalton3180
      @johndalton3180 10 месяцев назад +1

      Good man, your grandpa.

    • @ValkyrieofNOLA
      @ValkyrieofNOLA 9 месяцев назад +1

      Oh wow, that’s so cool! I’m glad you got to see footage of your grandfather and I hope you have better luck finding more footage of him. Maybe you can go to the networks that he worked for and see if they have any footage in their archives. I’m sure they would be willing to give you copies of the footage already broadcast publicly. The unpublished footage may not be available to anyone outside of the network though…

  • @teviottilehurst
    @teviottilehurst Год назад +55

    50 years tonight the burglary occurred. Despite being a foreigner (British), I have always been fascinated with Watergate. This video takes us through the events in chronological order. I really enjoyed it. Thank you.

    • @Bob31415
      @Bob31415 Год назад +4

      Your english is very good for a foreigner, lol.

    • @CinemaDemocratica
      @CinemaDemocratica Год назад +3

      Did you know that there's a fictionalized version out there? It's a really fun read. It's called *Watergate* and it's written by Thomas Mallon.

    • @vagabond5218
      @vagabond5218 9 месяцев назад +1

      The British documentaries on the Watergate scandal are the best

  • @alexanderh7502
    @alexanderh7502 Год назад +10

    Nixon conducted an unbiased investigation of... Nixon, and found that... Nixon, was completely innocent.

  • @mariekatherine5238
    @mariekatherine5238 4 года назад +8

    Was this really 46 years ago? I was 16, on a camping trip, in Massachusetts. A group of us sat on the sand, listening to this from all the radios in the campsites. When Nixon said, “I will resign effective..,”.the place erupted with applause and the partying commenced.

    • @matthewgabbard6415
      @matthewgabbard6415 3 года назад

      That’s a cool memory, thanks for sharing it

    • @beachbum1523
      @beachbum1523 3 года назад

      Well, it actually all began about 50 years ago with the antiwar protests. That's what set the stage for Watergate.

    • @jaybonham5641
      @jaybonham5641 Год назад +2

      Republicans throughout the country felt just the opposite (Remember the rest of the country that voted for Nixon?). Then we got Jimmy Carter - an utter failure of a president.

  • @danieldroukis5431
    @danieldroukis5431 8 лет назад +140

    "Well, I'm not a crook." One of the most memorable quotes in presidential history.

    • @AriannaEuryaleMusic
      @AriannaEuryaleMusic 8 лет назад +8

      +Droukis Daniel
      ...and one of the funniest

    • @JIMvc2
      @JIMvc2 8 лет назад +2

      +Euryale Music I was going to say that xD

    • @jessejameshollywood7218
      @jessejameshollywood7218 4 года назад +6

      ..."most memorable quotes in presidential history"....."most memorable recent presidential quotes "---->"What you see and what you hear is not whats happening"****Smile

    • @mckavitt13
      @mckavitt13 3 года назад +4

      I thought it when I heard it recently in another Watergate tape. What a LIAR.

    • @kayhathaway6956
      @kayhathaway6956 3 года назад +4

      I was 12 when he said that. Even at that age, I thought, ‘What have you done that you need to say the words, “I’m not a crook.”’? I remember feeling embarrassed for our country. That was our President needing to say, “I’m not a crook.”! I wish that he would have just lied again saying, “I’m not guilty.”

  • @ReasonQuest
    @ReasonQuest Год назад +7

    I DID recognize Peter Thomas' voice (narrator) even before I read it was him. His voice is sooooo good.

  • @dooge83
    @dooge83 8 лет назад +27

    Is it me, or is Nixon's resignation speech rather repetitive? That said, this is a wonderful documentary! Thank you for posting!

  • @Booker830
    @Booker830 Год назад +5

    WAS " the worst ". Now an even scarier one., X45.

  • @BL-no7jp
    @BL-no7jp 11 месяцев назад +8

    This take me back to my high school years, when my parents were Republicans. Every time Nixon was aired that year, my mother cursed at the TV with a few choice words for Nixon and she flipped parties. My question today, where is the outrage?

  • @patszer8314
    @patszer8314 4 года назад +27

    (Nixon talking to the press) "I also stopped beating my wife" (Silence) Who says Nixon didn't have a sense of humor?

    • @robertmoir-vj1kq
      @robertmoir-vj1kq 4 года назад +1

      I m sure Nixon also had a sense of humor Roman why did you used to beat your wife ?

    • @syourke3
      @syourke3 4 года назад +6

      But Nixon really did beat his wife! More than once! When he resigned, he returned to San Clemente where he battered Pat Nixon so badly, she was hospitalized! So Nixon lies again when he told the press that he’d stopped beating his wife!

    • @RoseSharon7777
      @RoseSharon7777 3 года назад +3

      He actually beat her badly.

    • @ralphm8088
      @ralphm8088 Месяц назад

      He stole it from Jim Garrison, who said it to Carson

  • @malinwj1167
    @malinwj1167 7 лет назад +14

    Props to Peter Thomas - the greatest voiceover/narrator of all time. At least it sounds like him lol

  • @3dartistguy
    @3dartistguy 8 месяцев назад +4

    I wonder how Nixon reacted to Ford calling Nixon's presidency "a long national nightmare."

  • @rickpaton7538
    @rickpaton7538 Год назад +11

    6:16 "The Senate tonight voted 77 to nothing". To think that such unanimity on anything was possible so recently. We couldn't get a unanimous vote on the sky appearing to be blue today. And in this case it had political implications. Ha!

    • @user-tv8mg2vh5f
      @user-tv8mg2vh5f 2 месяца назад

      Always wondered what happened to the other 23 senators. Didn’t they vote?

    • @rickpaton7538
      @rickpaton7538 2 месяца назад

      @@user-tv8mg2vh5f likely abstentions. Didn't want to be a party to a decision either way.

  • @joeylamuel5828
    @joeylamuel5828 Год назад +16

    Thing is, he'd probably get away with it entirely today.

    • @Steve-gc5nt
      @Steve-gc5nt Год назад +6

      Of course he would. Look at the crap that Trump gets away with.

    • @vz4779
      @vz4779 Год назад

      He did get away with it. He never went to jail, he was pardoned by Ford. He lived a comfortable life in San Clemente California. All his yes men went to jail.

  • @timothyleebrown1593
    @timothyleebrown1593 Год назад +6

    The irony is everything he announced that he was "not" he actually "was"!!

  • @gordieparenteau6555
    @gordieparenteau6555 Год назад +7

    Watergate seems like child's play by comparison to now.

    • @Dana_inc
      @Dana_inc 3 месяца назад

      Tell me about! I now know the 20 18 21 20 8!

  • @soslow67
    @soslow67 5 лет назад +9

    Did anybody else trip out after hearing the voice from Forensic Files? @5:25

    • @WendyCR72
      @WendyCR72 5 лет назад +3

      His name was Peter Thomas and he had quite the career before Forensic Files. :-) He died in 2016 at age 91.

  • @christophergreen4616
    @christophergreen4616 4 года назад +3

    There was no better voice narrator than Peter Thomas. With Forensic Files 2 coming out next year, I don't know how successful it will be without him.

    • @jefolson6989
      @jefolson6989 Год назад +1

      There is a new narrator. It just isn't the same without Peter's beautiful voice and creepy delivery. It was HIS show. Now it's just another crime procedural like hundreds of others.

  • @community1949
    @community1949 7 лет назад +42

    They picked the wrong guy to pin the whole thing on - John Dean - that back-fired big time. Nixon said to Dean to keep a list of press people who had given them a hard time about this situation because after the election they were going to get them. Sounds like Trump.

  • @producerlp
    @producerlp 8 лет назад +9

    THIS IS AWESOME! THANK YOU!!! I need to attempt to locate all of the ABC News Great TV News Stories documentary series.

  • @tonywalton1052
    @tonywalton1052 5 лет назад +28

    great documentary, gives you what happened as it happened, view this and you know the history

  • @qqq2211
    @qqq2211 8 лет назад +23

    Fantastic documentary thank you so very much for posting

  • @danhefferland9834
    @danhefferland9834 4 года назад +8

    Peter Thomas narrating? Love his voice

  • @joeyexos6567
    @joeyexos6567 9 месяцев назад +3

    Twitter files makes Watergate look like a speeding ticket

  • @oogachaka.studio
    @oogachaka.studio 2 года назад +16

    Him joking about "I've also stopped beatingy wife" when he really was beating his wife 🤮

    • @annmcerlean6937
      @annmcerlean6937 Год назад +2

      what was his point when he said it?

    • @shaneturner500
      @shaneturner500 Год назад +3

      @@annmcerlean6937 the reporter asked if Nixon considered the charges as impeachable if applied to him. Nixons response of “I’ve also stopped beating my wife” was his way of pointing out that the reporters question could have been interpreted as to presume that he was guilty. “Have you stopped beating your wife?” Is the most common example of a loaded question meant to entrap someone into admitting to an inferred crime.

    • @marblox9300
      @marblox9300 11 месяцев назад +1

      The darkest days at the White House actually started in 2021.

    • @charlesheck6812
      @charlesheck6812 5 месяцев назад

      @@annmcerlean6937it was Nixon’s barbed sarcastic way of accusing the reporter of asking a loaded, question-begging, thinly veiled accusation of a “question”designed to entrap him no matter how he answered it.

    • @charlesheck6812
      @charlesheck6812 5 месяцев назад

      a close aid said it happened on at least one occasion that he witnessed

  • @happydayz7857
    @happydayz7857 9 месяцев назад +3

    The narrator of Forensic Files! Love his voice!

    • @rayali9854
      @rayali9854 9 месяцев назад +1

      His voice is as chilling as the stories he narrates

  • @maxshenkwrites
    @maxshenkwrites 3 года назад +2

    Really a great find-- thank you for posting it!

  • @LolManI-75
    @LolManI-75 11 месяцев назад +3

    8 years since this vid was posted, god I feel old
    And 50 years since he was inaugurated for his short lived second term

  • @adamfrazer5150
    @adamfrazer5150 10 месяцев назад +2

    Just to be able to view these in the condition they aired to people of the time, I find invaluable for many reasons - perhaps the most valuable element at all, is that it is here to be viewed.
    Many thanks for making this and many more broadcasts of the day available 👍🍻

  • @thefettfan3994
    @thefettfan3994 Год назад +7

    A very paranoid politician all throughout his presidency terms, the chief architect and creator of his own downfall. A very pathetic final Whitehouse speech on the day of his leaving.

    • @annmcerlean6937
      @annmcerlean6937 Год назад +1

      I was watching a documentary about his childhood, and Nixon had lost maybe two brothers. He was pressured to please his parents and make them proud during his career. It sounded like he took on the role of three sons.

    • @GD-rd6ig
      @GD-rd6ig 10 месяцев назад +1

      His final White House speech was actually very revealing. A moving confessional. Nixon unplugged.

  • @kimjohnson8471
    @kimjohnson8471 Год назад +3

    We need reporters like Frank today (4/2023).

  • @erichall3512
    @erichall3512 Год назад +3

    YorkVid great channel of older news stories that you can't find anywhere else good sub

  • @hoss73ford
    @hoss73ford 8 лет назад +16

    A little better picture grade than my VHS tape (now converted to dvd) that I found at Blockbuster for rent back in the 1980s. How such a minor incident morphed into what it became. One lie always leads to bigger lies. I think if Nixon had come clean, he may have been better off. Buying silence gets no one anywhere for very long.

    • @billanthony7896
      @billanthony7896 7 лет назад +10

      Mark Muffs- Yeah, if he had simply gotten out in front of it publicly right at the get go, taken responsibility up front and apologized, he might have survived with a political slap on the wrist. He might have gone down in history as a statesman. Instead, his sleazy political instincts were his downfall.

  • @nancymcmonarch
    @nancymcmonarch Год назад +5

    Wow. I'd forgotten how traumatic this was at the time.

    • @myleshagar9722
      @myleshagar9722 8 месяцев назад

      Nixon was guilty of opening to China, arms control with Russia, and trying to end the Vietnam War, but they could not assassinate him so soon after the King and Kennedys assassinations. Peace and world cooperation is not possible as long the US exists is present form.

  • @tadekmajewski
    @tadekmajewski 4 года назад +12

    _ nixon lying to the end, never admitting to doing anything wrong.

    • @kyleparker733
      @kyleparker733 Год назад +1

      And then Ford pardoned him. Which is how Carter won the presidency in '76. Jimmy was a good, spiritual man. He just didn't have the backbone to be a good president. He had a bachelor's degree in nuclear engineering. Heck, he went in and helped them solve the 3 mile island debacle. Imo, he would have served this country best by being a plant manager at a nuclear power plant

    • @tadekmajewski
      @tadekmajewski Год назад

      How long is it going to take Biden's presidency to admit wrong doing? Forever.

    • @marblox9300
      @marblox9300 11 месяцев назад +1

      The darkest days at the White House actually started in 2021.

  • @deepdrag8131
    @deepdrag8131 2 года назад +17

    38:55 “Well, I’ve -uh- also quit beating my wife.”
    I recently learned that, after he was defeated for governor of California in 1962, Nixon did blacken Pat’s eye. After that she consulted a divorce lawyer.

    • @waynemerlo7448
      @waynemerlo7448 2 года назад +7

      OMG! Imagine making a joke about that. It was a different world back then. The mere fact he saw humour in that was sickening.

    • @robertlevine2827
      @robertlevine2827 Год назад +6

      That wasn't the only time he beat her.

    • @paultheaudaciousbradford6772
      @paultheaudaciousbradford6772 Год назад +3

      @@robertlevine2827 What else do you know?

    • @robertlevine2827
      @robertlevine2827 Год назад +3

      @@paultheaudaciousbradford6772 Nothing else, really. It was sometime during the Watergate crisis that he beat her, usually when drinking as a result of the strain.

    • @kellyharper8072
      @kellyharper8072 Год назад +3

      @@robertlevine2827 Yes makes sense. From everything I’ve read he drank heavily for quite a while.

  • @swordnquilstarskgrem
    @swordnquilstarskgrem 8 лет назад +32

    I've always loved that the fox being allowed to edit his own henhouse tapes was thought of as a smart thing to do by those saying that "Nixon was much too smart to do any of this stuff." Let's try it out shall we? "Well, Mr. Police Officer, I know you say that it's on tape that I asked a hitman to kill my husband, but as you can see in this transcript of the tape in question that I edited myself, there's nothing whatsoever showing that at all!" "Oh. Okay, Ma'am. You're free to go, then. Sorry to have bothered you."

  • @patszer8314
    @patszer8314 4 года назад +8

    During Watergate I remember these clocks that came out that had a cartoon picture of Nixon with his eyes ticking side to side marking each second with the caption "I AM NOT A CROOK."

  • @deloysterns
    @deloysterns 5 лет назад +10

    Always been interested in this..I was born on June 22 1972

    • @robertmoir-vj1kq
      @robertmoir-vj1kq 4 года назад +1

      you were born June 22nd 1972 huh Deloy Sterns ? I remember that day it was not one of my good days

    • @bradleyparker4035
      @bradleyparker4035 4 года назад +1

      Also on June 22nd in 1941 the Germans invaded the Soviet Union 😲😲😲

  • @NxDoyle
    @NxDoyle 7 лет назад +10

    Feels like I'm in Grade 8 History watching a video in class.

  • @eamonwright7488
    @eamonwright7488 6 лет назад +16

    This was a uniquely awesome documentary on the subject. Probably my favorite behind the Discovery Channel Collectors edition from 90s after Nixon passed away.

    • @CinemaDemocratica
      @CinemaDemocratica Год назад +3

      The American Experience bio of Nixon (narrated by Wil Lyman) was also excellent on Watergate.

  • @rascaldem
    @rascaldem 8 лет назад +14

    One of the most awkward answers to a question I have ever heard a human being give. Get ready to get douche chills... 38:33

    • @warlaker
      @warlaker 7 лет назад +2

      He was so busted when he was asked that.

  • @BillyAlabama
    @BillyAlabama Год назад +4

    “I am not a crook!” Well…

  • @calamartepatrick1728
    @calamartepatrick1728 7 лет назад +5

    In March of 1974 President Nixon sent General Vernon Walters, who was then deputy director of the CIA, as his special representative for a secret meeting with two PLO leaders, Khalad Hassan and Majed Abu Sharar, who represented, respectively the so-called "right" and "left" wings of Fatah, the largest and most influential of the Palestinian factions that made up the PLO.
    Although the meeting evidently ended with great promise of working out a comprehensive Middle East settlement, British journalist Alan Hart reports that not long afterward, Henry Kissinger sabotaged that back-channel effort by President Nixon to achieve peace.
    Although the details are spelled out clearly in Hart’s biography of Yasser Arafat, few Americans know - although they should know - that Chairman Arafat and the two Hassan brothers told Hart, in Hart’s words, "that they were convinced that the government of Israel and the Jewish lobby in America had made use of the Watergate affair to break Nixon before he forced Israel to make the necessary withdrawals for peace."
    Khalad Hassan also told Hart that he (Hassan) had discussed Nixon’s continuing back-channel peace initiatives with then-King Feisal of Saudi Arabia who had played a part in the effort. Evidently, according to Hart’ rendition, President Nixon himself told King Feisal this:
    “If [Nixon] found his way blocked by Israel and the Jewish lobby, he would throw away his prepared text when he made his next State of the Union report [in January of 1975] and that he would tell the people of America, live on TV and radio, the whole truth about how Israel and its friends in America were the obstacle to peace.”
    In other words, Nixon was preparing to expose the way in which the Government of Israel and its supporters in America controlled American foreign policy.
    President Nixon never had the opportunity to make such a bold move. The media focus on the burgeoning Watergate scandal drove him from office. Thanks to an inside source today remembered as “Deep Throat,” The Washington Post led the the drumbeat for Nixon’s removal from office.
    In that regard it is interesting to note that former American diplomat Richard Curtiss, executive editor of The Washington Report on Middle East Affairs, stated frankly in 1995 that “it’s long been our opinion that whoever played the role of ‘Deep Throat’ was in fact only a conduit for information collected by Israel’s Mossad and used to discredit Nixon,” and that Nixon’s attempt to reassess U.S. relations with Israel was “the catalyst that led directly to his downfall..”
    There is, in fact, evidence that the enigmatic source “Deep Throat” was, at the least, an indirect operative of Israel’s Mossad. In her book, Katharine the Great, a critical biography of Katharine Graham, the late publisher of The Washington Post, Jewish-American journalist Debra Davis has almost certainly provided the real key to Watergate.
    Miss Davis presents a solid case that the Post’s famed Watergate source - ”Deep Throat” - was most likely Richard Ober, the right-hand man of James Angleton, the CIA’s counterintelligence chief and longtime and Israeli-allied liaison to the Mossad.
    Miss Davis revealed that Ober was in charge of a joint CIA-Israeli counterintelligence desk established by Angleton inside the Nixon White House.
    From this listening post, Ober (at Angleton’s direction) provided inside information about Watergate that helped bring down the Nixon administration.
    So despite all that you - and the American people - have heard from the major media about Watergate, this information is not something that is in widespread distribution. Suffice it to say, based on what we have discussed here today, I think you understand why.

  • @ThomasKossatz
    @ThomasKossatz 5 лет назад +4

    Fords first words before congress: "I am a Ford, no Lincoln!"

    • @paperbackonly8438
      @paperbackonly8438 5 лет назад +1

      Thomas Kossatz Yeah ... I never quite understood that ... what is Lincoln, besides the President and the American car?

    • @drewzerna4087
      @drewzerna4087 4 года назад +3

      Paperback Only The Lincoln brand of car is a subsidiary of the Ford Motor company

  • @RikSchneider
    @RikSchneider 8 лет назад +6

    ABC News, with a very good documentary about Watergate.

  • @TomSanderson100
    @TomSanderson100 8 лет назад +7

    Great uploads many thanks

  • @chiclet_teeth
    @chiclet_teeth 5 лет назад +11

    "I also quit beating my wife" AWKWARD.

    • @chiclet_teeth
      @chiclet_teeth 5 лет назад +5

      @Afrika Steele Yeah...I just found it weird and awkward that he would even mention it. I guess he was trying to be humorous but in a way, that made it even worse.

    • @jasonrfoss248
      @jasonrfoss248 5 лет назад +4

      This is an old-time expression used by men to get out of answering loaded questions from reporters. They would no longer be appropriate now but back then it was kind of the standard response when a reporter asked that type of question.

    • @efan2012
      @efan2012 4 года назад +2

      It really was.. on one hand it showed how dry and weird his sense of humor was. On the other it's especially awkward considering that there's actual rumors he beat the hell out of Pat several times (first time was after he lost the California governor's race in 62, there was another one right after his resignation.. yikes.) His daughters denied it but that report insits it was true but he couldn't report on it then and said that was his biggest regret. He wrote a book 2 years ago and it was in it.

    • @chiclet_teeth
      @chiclet_teeth 4 года назад +1

      @@efan2012 definitely a different time. I love watching and reading stuff about the Watergate era. I find it fascinating. I wish I could find more Haldeman and Erlichman post Watergate interviews.

    • @warlaker
      @warlaker Год назад

      Old, and now unfitting answer to loaded or trick questions like "Do you still beat your wife?"

  • @geraldbush8172
    @geraldbush8172 2 года назад +4

    Nothing,compared to today.

  • @carrietezeno6327
    @carrietezeno6327 Год назад +2

    I Was A Kid I Remember This Scandal I Didn't Understand This Now That I Am Older I Do Thank You You Tube 😊

  • @btimez1983
    @btimez1983 4 года назад +4

    Peter Addenbrooke Thomas (Forensic Files narrator) sounds so young! I wonder when this special is from.

    • @jessebaseal6577
      @jessebaseal6577 Год назад

      Yeah I really suspected that the narrator was Peter Thomas. Heard him a lot at forensic files.

  • @alexanderkingtickle
    @alexanderkingtickle Год назад +8

    Nixon did some great things during his term and couldve been remembered as an incredible President. it’s such a shame his own ego got in the way and Watergate happened.
    what’s always puzzled me is why he did all this. he won the 72 election in a whopping landslide - the country liked him, and there was literally NO reason for the DNC bugging. i guess the only person who could answer that question would be Nixon himself.

  • @bostonblackie9503
    @bostonblackie9503 Год назад +4

    There actually was such a thing as journalism!

    • @Raydensheraj
      @Raydensheraj 3 месяца назад

      Blame Rupert Murdoch and far right Christian nationalist Reagan destroying the Fair Act.

  • @teamla1047
    @teamla1047 5 лет назад +28

    it really freaked me out when Nixon insulted the press. A little too close for comfort.

    • @hope5047
      @hope5047 4 года назад +5

      Because press is corrupted

    • @DividedByAlgorithms
      @DividedByAlgorithms 3 года назад +5

      @@hope5047 Minds Are Corrupted. Media Plays On American Laziness and Stupidity For Viewership.

    • @erselley9017
      @erselley9017 Год назад +5

      It creeped me out because of how fast he switched. He was just making a joke and they laughed and he even smiled. Then on a dime he switches to this creepy dude who drops the boom on those people. His whole face completely changed. It's unsettling to see someone who can easily and quickly switch their personalities.

    • @marblox9300
      @marblox9300 11 месяцев назад +1

      The darkest days at the White House actually started in 2021.

    • @erichaynes7502
      @erichaynes7502 11 месяцев назад +1

      He just couldn't take any type of criticism. It was his fatal flaw.

  • @stevedunch581
    @stevedunch581 10 месяцев назад +3

    Nixon was in hot water and knew it the whole time

  • @kyleparker733
    @kyleparker733 Год назад +1

    My goodness. I was coming out of my toddler years to a young child. Thank you for the time travel backto a time so long ago.😊

  • @joelbader2510
    @joelbader2510 6 лет назад +14

    Americans-and people everywhere-should study history by watching videos such as this one and by reading books and thinking, by asking questions about what they are told. That is a way for leaders everywhere to be kept in check--and for people to learn how to lead
    .

    • @icebergslim8926
      @icebergslim8926 6 лет назад +1

      Joel Bader agreed these documentaries are all different perspectives at the same thing and people should even watch documentaries made from different countries about the same topic because you see their perspectives

    • @Tripp1993
      @Tripp1993 4 года назад

      Agreed.
      Not learning from mistakes got us into this mess.
      It's not just from the right, it's on both sides of the political argument, i.e. the culture wars.
      Historians are needed in every field, no matter what. I am also becoming a film and television historian, and let me tell you this: if we're going to make sure we NEVER have a repeat of this disastrous chain of events ever again, I'm agreeing with you... and also from other countries about topics like this. Different perspectives on insane events like this could make the world a much safer place than ever before.

    • @marblox9300
      @marblox9300 11 месяцев назад +1

      The darkest days at the White House actually started in 2021.

  • @micmac99
    @micmac99 7 лет назад +73

    We are going through this ALL OVER AGAIN in 2016-17.

    • @miikored1095
      @miikored1095 7 лет назад +7

      Michael Sheldon Reed TRUEEEEEEE

    • @beatle1956
      @beatle1956 6 лет назад +3

      You tell 'em Einstein!!...I guess your fellow libtards at your Mensa meetings agree with you.

    • @jeffedwards823
      @jeffedwards823 6 лет назад +2

      WesMan exactly

    • @Ben_306
      @Ben_306 6 лет назад +2

      You're not going through this again. This is because the republican primary vote is controlled by it's own segment of the media today. This means that standing up to the president today is much harder then it would've been in the 70's.

    • @APOCALYPSE_X-MEN
      @APOCALYPSE_X-MEN 6 лет назад +4

      WesMan He gives his opinion, and then you insult and attack the man. Also, he gave no indication of his political affiliation. You assumed most likely based on his appearance.

  • @RichardMNixon-zh6uz
    @RichardMNixon-zh6uz 8 лет назад +33

    Bullshit.

    • @justinthomas1710
      @justinthomas1710 8 лет назад +1

      I agree Mr. President.

    • @ElZappata
      @ElZappata 8 лет назад +1

      Right on Dick...i mean Mr. President!

    • @jeffvan6606
      @jeffvan6606 7 лет назад +1

      aw come on now Dicky Poo.. don't just single out ABC- What about CBS and NBC ? not to mention TASS and the BBC LMAO

    • @nightshade6522
      @nightshade6522 7 лет назад +5

      lol Richard Nixon was a crook

    • @justinthomas1710
      @justinthomas1710 7 лет назад

      Please go complain about white people on the internet...then go ask for their help as we know that you do.

  • @scottrobinson9752
    @scottrobinson9752 Год назад +3

    This seems like child's play compared to today's political shenanigans.

  • @ClassPresidentAlejandro1999
    @ClassPresidentAlejandro1999 3 года назад +1

    when did this aire?

  • @TonyMichaels166
    @TonyMichaels166 9 месяцев назад +2

    “You don’t have Nixon to kick around anymore.” Dick Nixon, 1962, after losing the election for Governor of California

  • @Donamtrx
    @Donamtrx 4 года назад +5

    This narrator is the "Forensic Files" guy!

  • @daveverplank
    @daveverplank 5 лет назад +13

    47:25 the Judiciary Committee voted out the articles. The full House did not vote them out yet, so the Senate could not conduct a trial yet as the narrator erroneously stated.

  • @eamonwright7488
    @eamonwright7488 Год назад +2

    35:12 I wonder how doped up he was during this rambling speech?
    It almost sounds like a Steve Brule skit. lol

  • @erselley9017
    @erselley9017 Год назад +5

    Question. Does anyone know the story behind Nixon practically assaulting that dude in the beginning? It looked like one of his staffers so I assumed he was joking. However his face looked like he was furious and the victim looked genuinely alarmed but they may have cut the footage before he laughed. Either way I'm dying to know the story.
    0:34 is the time stamp

    • @marblox9300
      @marblox9300 11 месяцев назад +1

      The darkest days at the White House actually started in 2021.

    • @markbahouth2713
      @markbahouth2713 11 месяцев назад +1

      @ erselley
      Nixon hated the news media and was in a bad mood . to get the reporters to back off and quit hounding him he turned around HIS press secretary Ron Ziegler and pushed Ziegler towards the reporters like a battering ram to fend them off. he ( nixon ) was not mad at his press secretary but the national media .
      P.S. i also was curious why Nixon shoved his aid away from him , so i did some research on this famous incident. take what i believe now, with a grain of salt. i am not always correct.

    • @veritasvincit2251
      @veritasvincit2251 10 месяцев назад

      Somewhere in the depths of my study of Watergate, I think there is a witnessed retelling of what Nixon said to Ziegler during the 'push'. It may have come from The Final Days by Woodward/ Bernstein.
      In any event, that book is a stunning piece of journalism. The chapter on the choreography used to transfer certain tapes from the Grand Jury to the Judiciary Committee is worth reading. That careful, memorialized process of sending vital evidence between branches of government restored my faith in our national institutions.

  • @TheMangoMussolini
    @TheMangoMussolini 2 года назад +1

    Sure was great to see Harry Reasoner again. Always my #1 on TV. Even as a kid, I always thought that he would have made a super cowboy character for TV.

  • @kimberlybrabson6944
    @kimberlybrabson6944 7 лет назад +7

    Damn, that's scandalous!!

  • @abdullkilawi5504
    @abdullkilawi5504 8 лет назад +2

    Unique stories

  • @AzimuthTao
    @AzimuthTao 6 лет назад +24

    The problem with Nixon, much like Trump is that he never owned up to his crimes.
    The difference is that the country still had a sense of decency during the Watergate period and even Republicans had to admit that Nixon was wrong.
    Today, the partisan divide prevents that kind of common sense process from taking place.
    The only hope is that justice will prevail and those people on the wrong side will wear that shame as a heavy burden...
    so heavy that the rule of law will once again be respected in this country.

    • @vrusimov
      @vrusimov 5 лет назад +5

      Want something to really think about? If Bill Clinton had never become president I think it is likely that Trump would not have become president. The issues of alleged lewd and/or lascivious conduct on the part of a candidate would simply be a bar too high to hurdle in reaching the presidency. Clinton, whatever you think about him personally or subjectively, ultimately pushed the Overton window wide enough that alleged sexual indiscretions were not so taboo anymore and thus not a slam-dunk bar to the presidency. Now we have Trump, who has normalized even more bad conduct and bad behavior...a defining downward of deviancy on the part of a politician. He has ensured that not only is alleged sexual indiscretions not taboo but capaciously corrosive, fabulist, divisive and dehumanizing rhetoric is as well.

    • @m.woodsrobinson9244
      @m.woodsrobinson9244 5 лет назад +1

      @@vrusimov I agree with you. You allow one to get away with misconduct, you open the gates of hell for someone worse down the road. Absolutely correct!

    • @Sponsorship4u2
      @Sponsorship4u2 Год назад +4

      @@vrusimov By this logic Nixon is ultimately responsible because Watergate allowed criminality to be rampant in the White House! Kennedy being w/Marilyn Monroe is also responsible
      Your entire argument is nonsensical on its face

    • @billbazen9432
      @billbazen9432 10 месяцев назад

      Democrats laugh at the rule of law.

    • @edgarsouthwold7358
      @edgarsouthwold7358 6 месяцев назад

      Shhhhhhh

  • @oldblackstock2499
    @oldblackstock2499 4 года назад +1

    One great thing about the news people of that time is that when they asked a question they just accepted the answer or ask another question. They didn't cut someone off , they just let it go and went on to another question. They realized that elected officials can't always give a detailed answer. Then was much more cordial than today.

  • @sueapollonio3000
    @sueapollonio3000 Год назад +3

    THIS PALES IN COMPARISON TO WHATS HAPPENING TODAY IN 2023, THE DIFFERENCE :? PEOPLE WERE IDENTIFIED AND PROSECUTED FOR THEIR CRIMES IN 72 FAIRLY QUICKLY

    • @Rjensen2
      @Rjensen2 Год назад +1

      Quite a difference between burglars and the President.
      And Nixon got a pardon.

  • @blueboy2602
    @blueboy2602 7 лет назад +10

    Its just plain poppycock.....this is my favorite documentry on Nixon.

  • @leftykoufax7084
    @leftykoufax7084 6 лет назад +1

    Great watch.

  • @pillettadoinswartsh4974
    @pillettadoinswartsh4974 5 лет назад +3

    What's with that music at the beginning??? That's music to advertise vacation spots in the Caribbean.

  • @randyrysdale852
    @randyrysdale852 8 лет назад +19

    business as usual. only thing, they got caught

    • @hoss73ford
      @hoss73ford 8 лет назад +1

      +randy rysdale When Nixon fired Cox in October 1973 that was the last straw. Everyone was out to get him and as much dirt as possible.

    • @randyrysdale852
      @randyrysdale852 8 лет назад +1

      i remember archibald cox, what was his deal??

    • @hoss73ford
      @hoss73ford 8 лет назад +3

      +randy rysdale Cox was a special prosecutor hired for the case. When he was hired there wasn't any public knowledge of the tapes but when it came out, he demanded them and stood his ground. Transcripts wouldn't do. So Nixon fired him. At the time I thought wtf---how does one get fired for doing their job?? The next guy they hired they had it set up that the president couldn't touch him. Cox lived to the ripe old age of 92, outliving Watergate by 30 years.

    • @randyrysdale852
      @randyrysdale852 8 лет назад +1

      i remember now thnx

    • @muttleycrew
      @muttleycrew 3 года назад

      Mark Muffs hence the graffiti at the time “Nixon is a Cox sacker”

  • @LineMountain
    @LineMountain 5 лет назад +6

    Amazing most of this is black and white. Such different times.

    • @maltmustang5075
      @maltmustang5075 Год назад +1

      Everything on network TV was broadcast in full color by 1966, but not everything [like the news and sporting events] ended up being preserved in color. Videotape was expensive and space consuming back then. Not sure if ABC News saved a color videotape of every single newscast, but they definitely made black and white kinescopes [film], which is what you're seeing in many parts of this program. Maybe a lot of the original color videotapes were not easily available when this show was being produced, or maybe they didn't exist anymore. But take my word [from someone who was around back then], anything you're seeing in black & white here WAS originally broadcast in color!

  • @brandonjones8059
    @brandonjones8059 Год назад +3

    What I find fascinating is when this first happened America really didn’t think twice you can tell by how the country voted. 49/50 states elected him.

  • @dfb1976
    @dfb1976 4 года назад +1

    Totally different level

  • @michaelbarnhart2593
    @michaelbarnhart2593 8 лет назад +4

    "....and the ultimate triumph of the American system." Nixon needed to go, but I struggle with that statement. The President would never go through an impeachment trial because countless other heads would have rolled in government if he talked, so a deal must have been worked out. My opinion.

    • @mywirsrxed
      @mywirsrxed 6 лет назад +2

      Of course there was a "deal" made. Ford pardoned Nixon almost immediately after he assumed the presidency.

    • @brianwellbrock8431
      @brianwellbrock8431 5 лет назад +1

      Agreed. Especially the dirt he must have had on Ford alone. He mustve told them that unless he gets a full pardon hed take it to trial and begin spilling his guts and probably collapse any trust that was left in the govt.

  • @ernier4592
    @ernier4592 Год назад +1

    0:35 I’ve seen this clip before of Nixon pushing the guy but never got the context of it. Does anyone know?

    • @eamonwright7488
      @eamonwright7488 Год назад +1

      I believe thats press secretary Ronald Zeigler. At several instances, Zeigler's job was on the line. Nixon and especially Haldeman and Erlichman were bullies to him according to Macgruber.

  • @WindsorPilatesRocks
    @WindsorPilatesRocks 7 лет назад +7

    I love the narrator I recognize his voice from many tv shows and commercials but can't seem to recall his name.

    • @guyguy8695
      @guyguy8695 2 года назад +3

      Tom Brokaw

    • @strwbrywoman
      @strwbrywoman 2 года назад +5

      Peter Thomas. He does forensic files too

    • @jefolson6989
      @jefolson6989 Год назад +5

      @@strwbrywoman yep its Peter Thomas, before his voice got wonderfully creepy. RIP. I knew him briefly just before he died. He did his work from his home studio in Florida. He had a great gig and worked right up to the end (in his 90s) The new guy on Forensic Files just can't fill his shoes.

    • @mariesummers4326
      @mariesummers4326 Год назад +2

      @@jefolson6989 forensic files I love that show

  • @malcolmmarshall5946
    @malcolmmarshall5946 2 года назад +2

    At 37:13, you can see Pat Nixon whisper "stand up" to Tricia. And then wow, what a shifty, conniving grin Nixon gives.

  • @lipadier
    @lipadier 7 лет назад +5

    Comprehensive documentary.

  • @AndyinMelbourne
    @AndyinMelbourne 3 года назад

    At 1:00:33, the guy in the middle of the 3, I'm sure that's Robert Muldoon from NZ.

  • @Mike20216
    @Mike20216 Год назад +5

    Woodward and Bernstein led and the corporate media reluctantly followed, but then tried to take a lot of the credit

    • @Sponsorship4u2
      @Sponsorship4u2 Год назад

      Let’s not forget Martha Mitchell she had been telling people for years

  • @klucko1996
    @klucko1996 Год назад +4

    one of the best, but saddest documentaries Ever !!

  • @DavidKeithWilliams
    @DavidKeithWilliams 3 года назад +2

    I really wonder if Richard Nixon thought saying "Well I have also stopped beating my wife." was actually funny.

    • @jasonrfoss248
      @jasonrfoss248 3 года назад +1

      It’s a long time and often used red herring.

    • @DavidKeithWilliams
      @DavidKeithWilliams 3 года назад +2

      Clearly, Richard Nixon has been gone for many years, multiple decades in fact. However, the euphemisms he used should not have been something that related to his personal life, like physically abusing his wife, which he did.

  • @ValkyrieofNOLA
    @ValkyrieofNOLA 9 месяцев назад +1

    Does anyone wonder if the future generations will look back on this time period like we are looking at the Watergate scandal now? Will it be a prominent event in American history that will be taught to school children with the same impetus as the Civil War, the Civil Rights Movement, Watergate?

  • @oldblackstock2499
    @oldblackstock2499 4 года назад +2

    When the Nixon's and Ford's walked to the helicopter Ford was in reality already President. Because twenty minutes before Nixon gave his resignation to the Secretary of State . So, then he was no longer President. This was an excellent program. I appreciate the way it was done. I was a kid in the 70s. So, I barely understood it. So with this we can look back on this important historical even.

  • @ferabra8939
    @ferabra8939 6 лет назад +2

    It was so obvious that Nixon was covering up...What he would never have done is accept help from USSR produced intelligence on McGovern, Kennedy, Muskie...Even Nixon had limits, I guess.

  • @malcolmmarshall5946
    @malcolmmarshall5946 3 года назад +9

    All three networks were broadcasting in color by 1966. The Watergate scandal, 1973-74, was all in color. These must be from the networks' "source" tapes, which were still black and white.

  • @kungfumind.
    @kungfumind. 4 года назад +6

    I wish the media went back to just reporting the news versus their commenting

  • @nightowl3582
    @nightowl3582 3 года назад +1

    It's the "Forensics Files" narrator

  • @machenderson
    @machenderson 5 лет назад +2

    I find it odd that in 1965 most if not all comedy type T.V. (in United States) went to color, but not the news broadcast of 1973.

    • @maltmustang5075
      @maltmustang5075 Год назад

      Everything on network TV was broadcast in full color by 1966, but not everything [like the news and sporting events] ended up being preserved in color. Videotape was expensive and space consuming back then. Not sure if ABC News saved a color videotape of every single newscast, but they definitely made black and white kinescopes [film], which is what you're seeing in many parts of this program. Maybe a lot of the original color videotapes were not easily available when this show was being produced, or maybe they didn't exist anymore. But take my word [from someone who was around back then], anything you're seeing in black & white here WAS originally broadcast in color!

    • @kaydeedid
      @kaydeedid 11 месяцев назад

      @@maltmustang5075 I attest to that. Color tv being rather new to average families in 1966. Was thrilled when dad brought one home. I watched tv excessively between 66 and 75 when I turned 18 got married and left home. The news was broadcast in color.

  • @adrianwheeler4625
    @adrianwheeler4625 4 года назад +8

    people complain about corruption in our government & rightly so. but this would never have come to the public in the Soviet Union.

  • @Nigelrathbone1
    @Nigelrathbone1 5 месяцев назад

    I remember the moment Nixon resigned - on my summer job as a 14 year old dish washer of the Lancaster, Pa Horse Inn restaurant. I watched it live with the entire restaurant staff on the bar TV around closing time.

  • @nick56677
    @nick56677 10 месяцев назад +4

    Nixon had no need to spy on the competition. He won 49 states and 520 out of the 537 Electoral Votes😂. A clear case of what unnecessary Paranoia can do to someone. Nixon could've stayed home the election year and cruised to victory

    • @stevenmcghee6649
      @stevenmcghee6649 9 месяцев назад +2

      That one state he didn't win - Massachusetts? - kept preying on his mind.

    • @stephenwright8824
      @stephenwright8824 4 месяца назад

      @@stevenmcghee6649 I'm from Massachusetts. I can see that happening, and it didn't help that our Governor barred his VP, Agnew, from even campaigning here in '72.
      Plus, Massachusetts is the home of the Kennedys, so there's that too.