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  1. However, Nixon granted David Frost an exclusive series of interviews in 1977. He was publishing his memoirs at the time, but his publicist Irving Paul Lazar believed that he could reach a mass audience by using television. Frost's New York–based talk show had been canceled some years earlier.

  2. In 1977, former president Richard Nixon agreed to be interviewed by British journalist David Frost for recordings broadcast on television. The interview tapes went over twenty-eight hours, and were produced as four television episodes, viewed by millions of people worldwide.

  3. Dec 5, 2008 · Richard Nixon is telling David Frost about the day in March 1973 when he realized he had to fire his chief domestic advisor, John Ehrlichman, for abetting the Watergate cover-up — or, rather,...

    • Richard Corliss
  4. Frost had secured the exclusive rights to interview him. Thus the prosecution of Richard Nixon would be left to a television interview by a foreigner. I took the job. The resulting...

    • Did Nixon overstate the importance of the Frost interviews?1
    • Did Nixon overstate the importance of the Frost interviews?2
    • Did Nixon overstate the importance of the Frost interviews?3
    • Did Nixon overstate the importance of the Frost interviews?4
    • Did Nixon overstate the importance of the Frost interviews?5
  5. Finally agreeing in 1977 to a full, unedited interview series with the late David Frost, Nixon revealed much about the extent of the scandal and his own direct role in it. Via The Guardian .

  6. Sep 10, 2007 · The Guardian's Great Interviews of the 20th Century are full of these shocking, satisfying moments of revelation. Richard Nixon, in conversation with David Frost, is finally made to...

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  8. Sep 2, 2013 · Frost’s best-known interview was with Nixon and it was controversial well before it was aired. Even though the former president was to break his silence for the first time since leaving...

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