During the 1920s, he was a magazine editor. In 1930, he became a broadcaster with the
CBS radio network. After two years, he switched to the
NBC radio network but returned to CBS in 1947. He hosted the first-ever television-news broadcast in 1930 and the first regularly scheduled television news broadcast, beginning on
February 21,
1940, on NBC. But television news was a short-lived venture for him, and he favored radio. Indeed, it was over radio that he presented and commented upon the news for four decades until his retirement in
1976, the longest radio career of anyone in his day (a record later surpassed by
Paul Harvey). "No other journalist or world figure, with the possible exception of Winston Churchill, has remained in the public spotlight for so long," wrote
Norman R. Bowen in
Lowell Thomas: The Stranger Everyone Knows (1968). His signature sign-on was "Good evening, everybody" and his sign-off "So long, until tomorrow," phrases he would use in titling his two volumes of memoirs.
Thomas never lost his fascination with the movies. He narrated
Twentieth Century Fox's
Movietone newsreels until
1952. That year he went into business with
Mike Todd and
Louis B. Mayer to exploit
Cinerama, a movie format that used three projectors and an enormous curved screen. Because of both the cost and technical issues in synchronizing the projectors, Cinerama never caught on, but a quarter-century later, Thomas was still raving about it in his memoirs and wondering why someone wasn't trying to revive it. Thomas is also known for his television series of the 1950s entitled
High Adventure and television's
Lowell Thomas Remembers in the 1970s.
"The world's foremost globetrotter" took his radio show on his travels, broadcasting from the four corners of the globe. Once on the
Spanish Steps in
Rome he was asked by a fellow American, "Lowell Thomas, don't you ever go home?" He was a fanatical skier, helping develop the
Mont Tremblant Resort in
Quebec and skiing near
Tucson, Arizona.
Thomas's most amusing on-air gaffe occurred during one of his daily CBS news broadcasts in the early 1960s. He was reading a story "cold" which had the phrase "She suffered a fatal heart attack" in it. The line came out of Thomas's mouth as "She suffered a fatal fart attack". Realizing instantly what he had said, he collapsed into gales of roaring laughter, which continued into - and beyond - his announcers chuckling sign-off for the day. Some of his famous "
bloopers" were included in the numerous LPs released in the 1950s through 1970s by
Kermit Schaefer.
He was a successful businessman, helping to found
Capital Cities Communications, which in
1986 took over the
American Broadcasting Company, and developed the Quaker Hill community in
Dutchess County, New York, near
Pawling, where Thomas resided when not on the road. Among his neighbors there was
Thomas E. Dewey, one of a huge circle of friends that included everyone from the
Dalai Lama to
Franklin D. Roosevelt. In
1976, President
Gerald Ford awarded Thomas the
Presidential Medal of Freedom. He has two stars on the
Hollywood Walk of Fame and was inducted into the
Radio Hall of Fame in
1989.
In May 1955, The board of directors of The Lancaster and Chester Railway Co. of South Carolina, appointed him Press Agent, in N.Y.C.("The Official Guide of the Railways and Steam Navigation Lines" page 543).
His wife of 58 years, Fran Ryan, who often travelled with him, died in February 1975. He was married a second time in 1977 to Marianna Munn. True to form, he embarked with her on a 50,000-mile honeymoon trip that took him to many of his favourite old destinations. Thomas died at his home at Pawling at the age of eighty-nine and was buried in Christ Church Cemetery.
His son,
Lowell Thomas, Jr., was a film and television producer who collaborated with his father on several projects before becoming a State Senator, and later the
Lieutenant Governor of Alaska, in the
1970s. Today, Lowell Thomas Jr. remains an active bush pilot and environmental activist in Alaska.
Lowell Thomas has the communications building at
Marist College (in Poughkeepsie New York) named in his honor.