I love being a part of CBS.

I'm very comfortable at CBS.

I really enjoy my job at CBS.

I'm loyal to CBS. They have been loyal to me.

The first thing I did for TV was a pilot for CBS.

The job I wanted before I was in college was to work for CBS.

CBS is the largest out-of-home advertising company in the U.S.

NBC programs great shows; it just doesn't have the eyeballs CBS does.

When I left 'The Garry Moore Show,' I signed a 10-year contract with CBS.

CBS's halftime show during the 2004 Super Bowl was a new low for television.

In the end, Dan Rather's legend skewered him, CBS and the craft of journalism.

I did a CBS thing when I was a teenager that was a 'Music Minute' or something.

I told CBS, 'My career is going down the toilet, and you're pulling the chain.'

I think that the very fact that CBS fought and fought and fought in Texas, in New York.

I was actually offered a talk show on CBS at one point, and I just didn't want to do it.

CBS was very generous in their offer to re-sign me. But I simply want to try something new.

The Nixon administration really put a lot of pressure on CBS not to run the second broadcast.

I knew Kathy Joosten; we worked together on a very short-lived series called 'Thanks' for CBS.

If my forgeries looked as bad as the CBS documents, it would have been 'Catch Me In Two Days'.

Do you know that I was the anchor on the 'CBS Morning Show?' And my newsman was Walter Cronkite.

I watched Dylan record 'Blonde On Blonde' in my first week at work at CBS. It was just incredible.

There are younger people watching CBS, but their audience isn't 13 to 25. The CW specializes in that.

When I graduated, I was really lucky because I got hired immediately by CBS as a production assistant.

When I started as a color man in the booth with CBS, I would make footballs out of a roll of toilet paper.

I worked for CBS News in the aftermath of all the greatness. I actually brought coffee to Edward R. Murrow.

I was really lucky to work at CBS news. I was blessed to be able to live my dream in many ways at CBS news.

You know, I was at CBS News for 28 years. I may have run an unidentified source. Frankly, I don't remember.

When I came to CBS it was the mother church. I mean that was - everybody wanted to go to work for CBS News.

CBS exhausted the Texas courts. They went from the trial court to the intermediate court to the highest court.

Believe me, although I really like the show, the reality of Philly Homicide is nothing like CBS's 'Cold Case.'

CBS has received a strong and positive response from the YouTube community about the quality of its programming.

Nobody in college races home and says, 'I can't wait to see the news! I can't wait to see who CBS is going to hire!'

I always wanted to be an anchorman, but after college I wound up working behind the scenes at CBS News for 10 years.

The reason I've been able to maintain my position of chairman of CBS in addition to all the Viacom stuff is my team.

I just needed a job. Before being hired as an usher at the CBS Theatre, I didn't even know there was a show business!

'Survivor' is one of CBS's signature series and symbol of enduring quality and entertainment on prime time television.

I've sold shows based on my standup twice to CBS, but they've never gone past the script stage. TV is very competitive.

After being let go from CBS and looking for a year for work, I will never catch myself complaining about being too busy.

I was at CBS News on a fluke. I replaced somebody who was on vacation. I worked as a copy boy, then became a news writer.

I'd been fired by CBS News in a semipublic way, and as the months went by, there was a perception that I was damaged goods.

CBS's Ed Murrow may have been over-celebrated as the principled observer for the masses, fair yet unafraid to take on the bullies.

Years ago, I did a CBS audition. I was nervous. They introduced me as 'Scott Bakoola.' Not a good sign. I also didn't get the show.

At the heart of 'CBS News' is a group of inspiring, enterprising people led by the outstanding team of David Rhodes and Jeff Fager.

I was just overcome with the idea that one day I wanted to be one of those voices at the Masters and work for CBS and cover the NFL.

Landing on 'Morning Joe' wasn't a fluke. I was a poli sci major in college. I interned at the CBS political unit, covered conventions.

The dream for me was always the Masters and after my freshman season on the Houston golf team I knew CBS was the only way I'd get there.

I had no idea what awaited me when I took a job with CBS Records, and it was a total surprise to find I had a gift and an ear for music.

I am thrilled to be joining 'CBS News' and to have the opportunity to collaborate with some of our profession's most talented journalists.

I left the golden age of documentaries to go into the golden days of the 'CBS Evening News.' You could see that the audiences were eroding.

The principle though remains the same, and the important thing is CBS fought hard, very hard, to protect that principle and will fight again.

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