CNN founder Ted Turner, a pioneer of cable TV news, dies at 87
Source: CNN US
Updated May 6, 2026, 10:14 AM ET
PUBLISHED May 6, 2026, 10:07 AM ET
Ted Turner, the media maverick and philanthropist who founded CNN, a pioneering 24-hour network that revolutionized television news, died Wednesday, according to a news release from Turner Enterprises. He was 87.
The Ohio-born Atlanta businessman, nicknamed The Mouth of the South for his outspoken nature, built a media empire that encompassed cables first superstation and popular channels for movies and cartoons, plus professional sports teams like the Atlanta Braves.
Turner was also an internationally known yachtsman; a philanthropist who founded the United Nations Foundation; an activist who sought the worldwide elimination of nuclear weapons; and a conservationist who became one of the foremost landowners in the United States. He played a crucial role in reintroducing bison to the American west. He even created the Captain Planet cartoon to educate kids about the environment.
But it was his audacious vision to deliver news from around the world in real time, at all hours, that really made him famous once his idea finally took off. In 1991, Turner was named Time magazines Man of the Year for influencing the dynamic of events and turning viewers in 150 countries into instant witnesses of history.
Read more: https://www.cnn.com/2026/05/06/us/ted-turner-death
And it has been destroyed. He had a humble concept of stationing 2 employees (usually a reporter and sound person) in multiple countries, with a sat phone, and broadcast live from around the world.
I remember being on a small cruise boat (with 100 tourists on board) going down the Nile River in Egypt from Luxor to Aswan, watching CNN from the boat's lounge back in 1992.
AverageOldGuy
(4,176 posts)I'm 81 -- slept late, not feeling so hot myself.
OLDMDDEM
(3,288 posts)littlemissmartypants
(34,381 posts)...
question everything
(52,408 posts)RIP
Yo_Mama_Been_Loggin
(137,500 posts)This was in response to the Olympic boycotts between the US and the USSR back in the eighties.
Wonder what snarky comment the slobfather going to make about him?
BumRushDaShow
(172,337 posts)with the largest privately-owned herd in the U.S.

Bengus81
(10,376 posts)Still owns it AFAIK..........
electric_blue68
(27,348 posts)BumRushDaShow
(172,337 posts)electric_blue68
(27,348 posts)ProfessorGAC
(77,297 posts)...hastening the fall of the USSR.
With tge Superstation & CNN, he demonstrated to the moneyed world that there was profit in satellite television.
Once other outfits adopted his model, there was no way to fully block information about the west filtering into the soviet bloc.
He did it because he saw the money potential, but he accomplished much more than that.
Polybius
(22,122 posts)CNN and Headline News Network were never the same without him. RIP Sir.
fujiyamasan
(2,052 posts)I just looked it up and apparently Turner followed through on his $1B pledge to the UN.
Interesting personality
Its a shame what ended up happening to CNN though. They had great anchors early on like Bernard Shaw.
electric_blue68
(27,348 posts)LetMyPeopleVote
(182,112 posts)
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