United Press International He began his career as a reporter at
United Press International, in
Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, the eastern division news headquarters (1959–60), where the stories he covered included the steelworkers strike of 1959, the visits of Soviet leaders Kozlov and
Khrushchev,
Wightman Cup Tennis. He wrote both for newspapers and radio.
CBS News Broadcasts In 1961 he was hired by CBS News as a writer for daily news broadcasts, becoming a producer for Calendar, a public affairs program with
Harry Reasoner; and the
CBS Evening News with Walter Cronkite. His assignments for the evening news covered major news events, including the
civil rights movement. He was the producer of CBS News coverage in
Selma, Alabama including "Bloody Sunday" (March 1965) and for the Senate passage of the
Voting Rights Act that followed. Other assignments included the
Republican Convention of 1964, the successful presidential campaign of
Lyndon Johnson, the funeral of
Winston Churchill in London, the space program (the Mercury 6 flight of
Wally Schirra), and the World Series, Dodgers vs the Orioles, Cardinals vs. the Red Sox.
Documentary film years at CBS News and PBS CBS News, 1966–79. PBS, 1982–92, for Frontline, The American Experience and Nova. His thirty documentaries include a chronicle of modern China beginning with Misunderstanding China (CBS News), Shanghai (CBS News), Looking for Mao (PBS/Frontline), China After Tiananmen (PBS/Frontline) and The Revolutionary, an independent feature-length film. When
US-China relations were restored in 1972 after a 20-year hiatus, each of the three U.S. television networks was allowed access to film a documentary. Drasnin drew the assignment for CBS News, spending ten-weeks inside the country to make the film
Shanghai. In 1991, he reported in depth from China in the wake of the government's violent crackdown on student-led demonstrations in Beijing's
Tiananmen Square,
China After Tiananmen. His foreign reporting also covered southern Africa and the last stands of white colonial rule in Who's Got A Right to Rhodesia (CBS News) and in Apartheid (PBS/Frontline). Mr. Drasnin's domestic topics include The Guns of Autumn (CBS News), You and the Commercial (CBS News), Health in America (CBS News), Inside the Union (CBS News), The Radio Priest (PBS/The American Experience), The Chip vs The Chess Master (PBS/Nova), and Forever Baseball (PBS/The American Experience.). == Personal life ==