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  1. George Putnam (July 14, 1914 – September 12, 2008) was an American television news reporter and talk show host based in Los Angeles. He was known for his catchy phrase "and that’s the up-to-the-minute news, up to the minute, that’s all the news" at the end of his broadcast.

  2. George Palmer Putnam (September 7, 1887 – January 4, 1950) was an American publisher, writer and explorer. Known for his marriage to (and being the widower of) Amelia Earhart, he had also achieved fame as one of the most successful promoters in the United States during the 1930s. Early life.

  3. George Putnam, the pioneer television news anchorman and conservative commentator whose distinctive stentorian voice was familiar to millions of Southern Californians during his heyday in...

  4. George Putnam may refer to: George Putnam (editor) (1872–1961), Oregon newspaper publisher and editor of the Statesman Journal. George Putnam (newsman) (1914–2008), Los Angeles, California, television newsman. George D. Putnam (born 1948), screenwriter, Unlawful Entry.

  5. Jan 12, 2009 · Well, George Putnam, who until recently hosted CRN Digital Talk Radio’s syndicated “Talk Back,” dated Mae West, interviewed Ronald Reagan and was the inspiration for Ted Baxter. And to his listeners, Putnam was as big and legendary a character as any of them. He died Sept. 12 at age 94.

  6. Sep 12, 2008 · George Putnam, a fixture in Los Angeles television from its early beginnings in the 1950s and one of the forbearers of conservative talkradio, died of a kidney ailment Friday in Chino, Calif....

  7. Sep 13, 2008 · Former Los Angeles television news anchor George Putnam, whose booming, iconic voice famously inspired the character of Ted Baxter on the classic sitcom “The Mary Tyler Moore Show,” died in his...