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Talk show pioneer Phil Donahue dies

Phil Donahue, who changed the face of US daytime television with a long-running syndicated talk show that highlighted topical and often provocative social and political issues, has died at age 88.

Donahue died surrounded by his family on Sunday following an illness, the Today show reported.

Debuting in 1970 when US daytime television offered its mostly female viewers a diet of soap operas, game shows and home-making programs, Donahue’s show tackled subject matter once considered taboo for television – including abortion, the sexual revolution and race relations.

With his boyish charm, irrepressible energy and thick white hair, Donahue was known for aggressively questioning his guests and bounding through the studio to give his audience a chance to be heard.

The success of his show paved the way for other daytime talk-show hosts, most notably Oprah Winfrey, whose program eventually eclipsed Donahue’s in the ratings.

“If it weren’t for Phil Donahue, there never would have been an Oprah show,” Winfrey has said.

Among the proliferation of daytime shows following in Donahue’s wake were a number that became known for sensationalism and occasional violence.

Such programs, hosted by personalities including Jerry Springer, Geraldo Rivera, Sally Jessy Raphael and Maury Povich were his “illegitimate children,” Donahue told interviewers, adding he loved them all.

With the daytime talk field becoming increasingly crowded, loud and rude, Donahue’s program slid in popularity, leading to its cancellation in 1996 after 26 years and thousands of shows on television, the longest run for a syndicated US talk show.

At its height, Donahue’s show was acclaimed by People magazine in 1979 as “a national forum for America’s housewives”.

“I think they appreciate the issues the show raises and enjoy the challenge of getting emotionally and intellectually involved in what’s happening,” Donahue told People that year.

“There are no prizes and nobody screams, we put on an honest sharing of ideas,” he said of his show, which generally tackled one topic per hour-long episode.

Donahue, who often spoke of his Roman Catholic upbringing, was one of the first television personalities to forcefully address sexual abuse of children by clergy in the Catholic Church.

He first dealt with the sex abuse scandal in a 1988 episode and revisited it in later seasons of his show, giving victims a chance to tell their stories.

His later projects included hosting a talk show from 2002 to 2003 on the cable network MSNBC and co-directing the 2006 documentary film Body of War that took a critical view of the US invasion of Iraq, focusing on a US soldier who was paralysed in the war.

In addition to hot-topic issues, Donahue occasionally devoted time to lighter fare like misdiagnosed allergies and traded quips with celebrity guests from comedian Jerry Lewis to shock rocker Marilyn Manson.

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For an episode on cross-dressing, Donahue wore a skirt.

He won nine Daytime Emmys for best talk-show host.

Outside of his famous talk show, Donahue pursued several other projects.

He partnered with Soviet journalist Vladimir Pozner for a groundbreaking television discussion series during the Cold War in the 1980s.

The US-Soviet Bridge featured simultaneous broadcasts from the United States and the Soviet Union, where studio audiences could ask questions of one another.

Donahue and Pozner also co-hosted a weekly issues roundtable, Pozner /Donahue, on CNBC in the 1990s.

Born on December 21, 1935, in Cleveland and raised in that Ohio city, Donahue was the son of a furniture salesman and a department store clerk.

After graduating from the University of Notre Dame, he worked his way up in broadcasting until he was given the chance in 1967 to host his own program, The Phil Donahue Show, on a Dayton, Ohio, television station.

He caused a stir with some viewers by inviting an atheist as his first guest.

The show gained syndication across the US in 1970.

-AAP

 

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