The first televised debate in this country was between which two candidates?

The first televised presidential debate took place on Sept. 26, 1960, between Vice President Richard M. Nixon and U.S. Senator John F. Kennedy. The first televised debate is considered among the most important in American history not just because of its use of a new medium but its impact on the presidential race that year.

Many historians believe Nixon's ​pale, sickly and sweaty appearance helped to seal his demise in the 1960 presidential election, even though he and Kennedy were considered equals in their knowledge of policy issues. "On sound points of argument," The New York Times later wrote, "Nixon probably took most of the honors." Kennedy went on to win the election that year.

The introduction of television to the electoral process forced candidates to tend not only the substance of serious policy issues but such stylistic matters as their manner of dress and haircut. Some historians have bemoaned the introduction of television to the political process, particularly the presidential debates.

"The present formula of TV debate is designed to corrupt the public judgment and, eventually, the whole political process," historian Henry Steele Commager wrote in the Times after the Kennedy-Nixon debates of 1960. "The American presidency is too great an office to be subjected to the indignity of this technique."

Other critics have argued that the introduction of television to the political process forces candidates to speak in short sound bites that can be cut and rebroadcast for easy consumption through advertisements or news broadcasts. The effect has been to remove most nuanced discussion of serious issues from American discourse.

The reaction wasn't all negative to the first televised presidential debate. Some journalists and media critics said the medium allowed broader access to Americans of the often cryptic political process.

Theodore H. White, writing in The Making of the President 1960, said the televised debates allowed for the "simultaneous gathering of all the tribes of America to ponder their choice between two chieftains in the largest political convocation in the history of man."

Another media heavyweight, Walter Lippmann, described the 1960 presidential debates as a "bold innovation which is bound to be carried forward into future campaigns and could not now be abandoned."

An estimated 70 million Americans tuned in to the first televised debate, which was the first of four that year and the first time two presidential candidates met face-to-face during a general election campaign. The first televised debate was broadcast by CBS affiliate WBBM-TV in Chicago, which aired the forum in place of the regularly scheduled Andy Griffith Show.

The moderator of the first 1960 presidential debate was CBS journalist Howard K. Smith. The forum lasted 60 minutes and focused on domestic issues. A panel of three journalists—Sander Vanocur of NBC News, Charles Warren of Mutual News, and Stuart Novins of CBS—asked questions of each candidate.

Both Kennedy and Nixon were allowed to make 8-minute opening statements and 3-minute closing statements. In between, they were allowed 2 and a half minutes to respond to questions and a short amount of time for rebuttals to their opponent.

The producer and director of the first televised presidential debate was Don Hewitt, who later went on to create the popular television news magazine 60 Minutes on CBS. Hewitt has advanced the theory that television viewers believed Kennedy won the debate because of Nixon's sickly appearance, and radio listeners who could not see either candidate thought the vice president emerged victorious.

In an interview with the Archive of American Television, Hewitt described Nixon's appearance as "green, sallow" and said the Republican was in need of a clean shave. While Nixon believed the first televised presidential debate to be "just another campaign appearance," Kennedy knew the event was momentous and rested beforehand. "Kennedy took it seriously," Hewitt said. About Nixon's appearance, he added: "Should a presidential election turn on makeup? No, but this one did."

A Chicago newspaper wondered, perhaps in jest, whether Nixon had been sabotaged by his makeup artist.

On Sept. 26, 1960, a debate between the two major candidates for the presidency of the United States was presented on television for the first time. CBS produced the debate, under the direction of Don Hewitt, who would go on to be the executive producer of 60 Minutes (begun 1968). A total of four debates between the Democratic candidate, Sen. John F. Kennedy, and the Republican candidate, Vice Pres. Richard M. Nixon, were simulcast on all three networks, and production responsibilities were rotated among them. The first debate, though, was the most influential and the most watched, reaching a then-record audience estimated to be about 70 million. That important political issues could be discussed by the candidates for the country’s highest office and made effortlessly accessible to the nearly 90 percent of American homes that had televisions by 1960 demonstrated television’s ability to play an important civic role in American life. Broadcast without commercials, this long-form debate suggested that television could assist the democratic process beyond the airing of 30-second commercials; it promised estimable uses for the new medium.

Broadcasting the Kennedy-Nixon debates was not the only attempt by networks to improve their scandal-tarnished reputations. All three networks also introduced documentary series in 1959 and 1960 that were designed to provide in-depth reporting on serious subjects important to the nation. CBS Reports (begun 1959 and irregularly scheduled) was the most celebrated. In 1960 Edward R. Murrow, the respected pioneer of broadcast journalism, was the chief correspondent on Harvest of Shame, a CBS Reports documentary about the plight of migrant farm labourers. Beautifully photographed, powerfully argued, and strongly supporting federal legislation to protect migrant workers, Harvest of Shame illustrated how effectively the journalistic essay could work on television.

For all of the prestige that TV garnered from the broadcasts of the Kennedy-Nixon debates, however, controversy quickly surrounded them as well. Many argued that television was changing the political process and that how one looked and presented oneself on TV was more important than what one said. This seemed to be the case during the first debate. Younger, tanned, and dressed in a dark suit, Kennedy appeared to overshadow the more haggard, gray-suited Nixon, whose hastily applied makeup job scarcely covered his late-in-the-day stubble of facial hair. Informal surveys taken after the debate indicated that audiences who listened on the radio tended to think Nixon had won, while those who watched on TV claimed victory for Kennedy. Many also believed that Kennedy won the election because he won the first debate and that he won the first debate because he looked better on TV than his opponent. (It must be remembered, however, that the un-telegenic Nixon would go on to win two presidential elections.) Arguments about the impact of television on politics, of course, continue to be central to the political process to this day. Programs such as CBS Reports would become progressively more rare on television, and Harvest of Shame would be among the last of Murrow’s assignments for CBS. Disenchanted by the increasingly commercial nature of television and the impact that trend was having on the CBS news department, Murrow left the network in 1961 and accepted President Kennedy’s appointment as director of the U.S. Information Agency.

Also joining the Kennedy administration in 1961 was Newton Minow, whom the president appointed as the chair of the Federal Communications Commission (FFC), the regulatory agency of the U.S. government that oversees broadcasting. Although the FCC can exercise no prior restraint of television content, it is charged with ensuring that stations operate within the “public interest, convenience, and necessity.” All broadcast stations must be licensed by the FCC, which has the power to rescind or to not renew the license of any station it deems is not acting in the public interest. Before the deregulatory actions of the 1970s and ’80s, this power loomed even larger over stations and, because networks depend upon affiliates to air their programs, over network executives as well. As chairman, Minow addressed the National Association of Broadcasters on May 9, 1961.

In his speech, Minow articulated the thoughts of many intellectuals about television. He praised the Golden Age anthology dramas (most of which had already left the air), the documentary series, and the presidential debates (which helped put Kennedy, and therefore Minow, in office). He went so far as to claim that “when television is good…nothing is better.” He continued, however, to point out that when it is bad, “nothing is worse.” He then invited the station owners and employees to watch their own stations from sign-on to sign-off, and he assured them that what they would see would be a “a vast wasteland” of “game shows, violence, audience participation shows, formula comedies about totally unbelievable families, blood and thunder, mayhem, violence, sadism, murder, Western bad men, Western good men, private eyes, gangsters, more violence, and cartoons,” all punctuated by an endless stream of commercials. Although the First Amendment precludes the FCC from directly regulating the content of programming, Minow’s language in this speech was powerful and aggressive with regard to the broadcasting industry. “I understand that many people feel that in the past licenses were often renewed pro forma,” Minow said as his speech was drawing to a close. “I say to you now: renewal will not be pro forma in the future. There is nothing permanent or sacred about a broadcast license.”