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  1. El 26 de septiembre de 2021 se cumple el 61 aniversario de un debate político que cambió las reglas del juego, el de Kennedy contra Nixon.Todo un clásico que los amantes del marketing político hemos analizado en algún que otro momento porque no sólo fue el primero en la historia que fue retransmitido por televisión, sino que además marcó un antes y un después en la comunicación ...

  2. 26. Sept. 2019 · On This Day: First Kennedy-Nixon Debate. On September 26, 1960, then-Senator John F. Kennedy and then-Vice President Richard Nixon faced off in the first televised presidential debate.

  3. 15. Nov. 2023 · El primer debate entre candidatos presidenciales de 1960 (hay quien habla de un primer debate presidencial en 1956 en el que no participaron los candidatos ), televisado el lunes 26 de septiembre desde los estudios de WBBM en Chicago, no fue el primer cara a cara entre Kennedy y Nixon. Ese cara a cara se había producido 13 años antes, en ...

  4. Background. The four 1960 presidential debates with John F. Kennedy and Richard Nixon were the first televised general-election presidential debates and brought new criteria to the presidential candidates campaigning. The first Kennedy-Nixon debate captured over 65 million viewers resulting in a major impact in the election's outcome and outreach.

  5. 26. Sept. 2011 · 1960 Debates. There were four presidential debates and no vice presidential debates during the 1960 general election. Courtesy of ABC News© 1960. GO TO: September 26, 1960 October 7, 1960 October 13, 1960 October 21, 1960. General Election Presidential Debate. John F. Kennedy (D), United States Senator (MA) and. Richard M. Nixon (R), Vice ...

  6. 26. Sept. 2017 · Before the debate, Nixon led by six percentage points in the national polls. There were three other debates between Nixon and Kennedy that fall, and a healthier Nixon was judged to have won two of them, with the final debate a draw. However, the last three debates were watched by 20 million fewer people than the September 26 th event.

  7. Nixon, pale and underweight from a recent hospitalization, appeared sickly and sweaty, while Kennedy appeared calm and confident. As the story goes, those who listened to the debate on the radio thought Nixon had won. But those listeners were in the minority. By 1960, 88% of American households had televisions — up from just 11% the decade ...