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Peter Jennings

C

cabradio

Guest
I find it odd that with this being the News/Talk board, that no mention has yet been made about the passing of Peter Jennings. While he was TV news, I'm sure his newscasts had some effect on all of us.

Thoughts?<P ID="signature">______________



</P>
 
> I find it odd that with this being the News/Talk board, that
> no mention has yet been made about the passing of Peter
> Jennings. While he was TV news, I'm sure his newscasts had
> some effect on all of us.

There is a significant thread about this in the National Television forum. Lots of affectionate reports about him, including in-depth stuff even from the BBC which has a memorial forum established for those who want to discuss him.

In the past year, we've seen the passing of the torch of all three major anchors. Each time everyone suggests what will come next may be no national newscast at all or a major format change, but to date, that has never happened. The 6:30 news still seems to be comfort food at a time when people don't necessarily want to see big changes in how the networks handle news. There are still plenty of viewers who rely on network national news to get a concise look at the day's events without having to wade through the endless E!-style reporting going on on MSNBC and Fox, and CNN's ongoing self-congratulatory pats on the back for making it to 25. CNN at least ran an older Larry King with Peter Jennings as a tribute. Fox couldn't be bothered when the search for missing blondes continue, and MSNBC was running stale crime documentaries again.
 
> I find it odd that with this being the News/Talk board, that
> no mention has yet been made about the passing of Peter
> Jennings. While he was TV news, I'm sure his newscasts had
> some effect on all of us.
>
> Thoughts?
>

As someone posted today, moderators are not consistent. Most move off-topic posts to the correct board. You solicit them. Peter Jennings spent his entire US career in television, not radio. And I question the phrase "his newscasts." He did some excellent reporting in the field before becoming the principal news reader. He did some excellent anchoring during breaking news coverage when he had to wing it. But the regular evening newscast was the result of the work of writers, editors, and producers who put news on a TelePrompter for him to read. He was a good presenter, but it was not "his newscast." I also question your assumption that ABC's broadcast had "some effect on all of us." I watched occasionally and ABC put together a slick, well-produced package. But I can't say it had an effect on me. If World News Tonight had an effect on you, please share it.
 
> As someone posted today, moderators are not consistent.
> Most move off-topic posts to the correct board. You solicit
> them. Peter Jennings spent his entire US career in
> television, not radio.

He did news for ABC Radio for some time as well.

> And I question the phrase "his
> newscasts." He did some excellent reporting in the field
> before becoming the principal news reader. He did some
> excellent anchoring during breaking news coverage when he
> had to wing it. But the regular evening newscast was the
> result of the work of writers, editors, and producers who
> put news on a TelePrompter for him to read.

Peter Jennings was also the Senior Editor of the newscast, so he often wrote a lot of the copy. He also reviewed, in advance, nearly every piece, and could easily pick up when a technical fault occured in that he had reviewed it before going on air. He also insisted on coverage on certain stories that the other producers would have never cared about reporting.

> I also question
> your assumption that ABC's broadcast had "some effect on all
> of us." I watched occasionally and ABC put together a
> slick, well-produced package. But I can't say it had an
> effect on me. If World News Tonight had an effect on you,
> please share it.

I think a newscast has an effect on us because the story has an affect on us and we remember how it was covered. I remember watching Frank Reynolds getting furious at his producers the day Reagan was shot when he reported on the death of James Brady, which turned out to be wrong.

I remember watching Peter on 9/11 when I was fiddling with a TV set in a local hospital trying to get news coverage of what was then a plane crash into the WTC. I remember finally getting our ABC affiliate and watching the coverage, and hearing the entire waiting room and staff who had been slowly gathering around the TV gasp when Peter questioned one of the reporters with, "the whole building fell down?" I recall being surprised at how much composure Jennings held during the coverage, until you could hear him getting a bit testy over the whereabouts of George Bush. I didn't see the moment he semi-lost it in discussing a call he had with his children that day, but it was memorialized as part of the coverage honoring him.

The story was always the important thing, but how it was also told became part of my memory as well.
<P ID="edit"><FONT class="small">Edited by dampier on 08/08/05 05:30 PM.</FONT></P>
 
> As someone posted today, moderators are not consistent.
> Most move off-topic posts to the correct board. You solicit
> them.

While this is TV related...it is the passing of one of our Country's most watched newscasters. I wouldn't solicit this on the CHR board, or on the CT Board (which I also moderate)...but this board has a News tie in. I think it is justified.

> Peter Jennings spent his entire US career in
> television, not radio. And I question the phrase "his
> newscasts." He did some excellent reporting in the field
> before becoming the principal news reader. He did some
> excellent anchoring during breaking news coverage when he
> had to wing it. But the regular evening newscast was the
> result of the work of writers, editors, and producers who
> put news on a TelePrompter for him to read. He was a good
> presenter, but it was not "his newscast."

Well, I differ slightly. While I acknowledge the news writing staff to be integral...there is a reason he was the anchor. He had a way with delivering it. That's why it was called "...with Peter Jennings." It's just like people associate certian actors with characters they play...not the writer's that wrote the story.

> I also question your assumption that ABC's broadcast had "some effect on all
> of us." I watched occasionally and ABC put together a slick, well-produced > package. But I can't say it had an effect on me. If World News Tonight had > an effect on you, please share it.

You are reading into what I said a little to deep...Well, I'm not old enough to remember Walter Cronkite's newscasts, but I can tell you he impacted the way our Country watched the news...so is the same with Jennings. While he may not be as legendary as Cronkite, and may not deserve such a status in our history books, I'm certain ... let's say MANY (instead of ALL) American's will remember sitting down to watch the news and see his face and hear his voice deliver it. And for some, he may have helped define their views of the world...but all I meant ws that he will leave a lasting impression....Like a song on the radio...it's just burned into your mind...no reason for it, but a memory that will last and will "affect" you. Sometime down the road, in the future, some newscaster will replay a portion of one of his reports, maybe from 9/11 and a memory will be triggered and maybe a certain comfort, or maybe a certian agitiation will come over you for him having been even a small part of your life.

That's all...<P ID="signature">______________



</P>
 
> Peter Jennings spent his entire US career in
> television, not radio.

Incorrect. Peter Jennings may have been famous or noteworthy because of his TV anchor position, but he also contributed to the ABC Radio News divison, from at least 1966 (see Jeff Roteman's ABC Radio News page for example (his picture is 6th row down, 2nd from the left.)

He was also a commentator on the ABC Information Network after the split in 1968. If I'm not mistaken, he may also have done the 5pm ABC Information cast before he left the air.

Regardless, his radio career was in addition to his TV duties. At least here in America. (I'll leave out his kids program on CBC.)

<P ID="edit"><FONT class="small">Edited by Johnny Morgan on 08/08/05 06:04 PM.</FONT></P>
 
> I find it odd that with this being the News/Talk board, that
> no mention has yet been made about the passing of Peter
> Jennings. While he was TV news, I'm sure his newscasts had
> some effect on all of us.
>
> Thoughts?

He was a class act, all the way!
 
In the case of Walter Cronkite and later Dan Rather, both were managing editor of the newscast. I don't know whether Jennings held a similar position.<P ID="signature">______________
Did the Corinthians ever write back?</P>
 
I believe the majority of people that are looking back can remember a distinct "Peter Jennings moment". For me it was his coverage of the Berlin Wall coming down...i remember Jennings offering what I felt was a combination of his own relief of seeing this wall come down as well as delivering the "hard news" related to the event in history. He reflected on his experiences of seeing the wall go up and reporting on it....and he said how glad he was he could see the wall come down in his lifetime. This was an insight I remember that no anchor was offering.....this is my "Jennings moment".


> In the past year, we've seen the passing of the torch of all
> three major anchors. Each time everyone suggests what will
> come next may be no national newscast at all or a major
> format change, but to date, that has never happened. The
> 6:30 news still seems to be comfort food at a time when
> people don't necessarily want to see big changes in how the
> networks handle news. There are still plenty of viewers who
> rely on network national news to get a concise look at the
> day's events without having to wade through the endless
> E!-style reporting going on on MSNBC and Fox, and CNN's
> ongoing self-congratulatory pats on the back for making it
> to 25. CNN at least ran an older Larry King with Peter
> Jennings as a tribute. Fox couldn't be bothered when the
> search for missing blondes continue, and MSNBC was running
> stale crime documentaries again.
>
 
> I find it odd that with this being the News/Talk board, that
> no mention has yet been made about the passing of Peter
> Jennings. While he was TV news, I'm sure his newscasts had
> some effect on all of us.
>
> Thoughts?
>
On Majority Report tonight, Laura Flanders commented on how it was called "WORLD News Tonight"- it used to have something like a third of its content devoted to international stories. This was done on purpose, to seperate the newscast from the other two networks.
 
> >There are still plenty of viewers
> who
> > rely on network national news to get a concise look at the
>
> > day's events without having to wade through the endless
> > E!-style reporting going on on MSNBC and Fox, and CNN's
> > ongoing self-congratulatory pats on the back for making it
>
> > to 25.

Speaking of E!-style reporting, I'm afraid that with Jennings gone, ABC will start using WHOOSH sfx on their Monday through Friday newscasts, as they already do on their weekend casts. I stopped watching the CBS Evening News when Rather left and the WHOOSHs arrived; now I may have to stop watching ABC altogether and get my news from PBS and the Internet (with the sound turned off).
 
> > >There are still plenty of viewers
> > who
> > > rely on network national news to get a concise look at
> the
> >
> > > day's events without having to wade through the endless
> > > E!-style reporting going on on MSNBC and Fox, and CNN's
> > > ongoing self-congratulatory pats on the back for making
> it
> >
> > > to 25.
>
> Speaking of E!-style reporting, I'm afraid that with
> Jennings gone, ABC will start using WHOOSH sfx on their
> Monday through Friday newscasts, as they already do on their
> weekend casts. I stopped watching the CBS Evening News when
> Rather left and the WHOOSHs arrived; now I may have to stop
> watching ABC altogether and get my news from PBS and the
> Internet (with the sound turned off).
>
any word yet on who will permanently replace jennings? from what i understand, charlie gibson has a killer schedule right now anchoring gma with diane and filling in for jennings-david5258
 
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