'60 Minutes' legend Wallace dead at 93

'60 Minutes' legend Wallace dead at 93

WASHINGTON, April 8 (UPI) —
Mike Wallace, longtime pioneer interviewer for CBS’ “60 Minutes” has died after a long illness, the network said. He was 93.

Wallace, one of the original correspondents and hosts of “60 Minutes,” which started in 1968, died Saturday night in New Haven, Conn.

Wallace was best known for a signature interviewing technique, asking the tough and often irreverent questions, The New York Times reported Sunday. He characterized himself as “nosy and insistent.”

He asked the Ayatollah Khoumeini if he was crazy. He asked mobster Mickey Cohen, “How many men have you killed, Mickey?” CBS News reported.

Wallace semi-retired in 2006, often returning to “60 Minutes” to interview key figures like Mitt Romney, Mahmoud Ahmadinejad and Jack Kevorkian. His final interview appeared on the newsmagazine in January 2008 when he sat down with baseball legend Roger Clemens.

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