Inside the News
A Texas sign off: PBS's legendary Jim Lehrer motors to Houston with bus tales
Jim Lehrer — the celebrated chief anchor of PBS NewsHour steps down this week after 36 years — but first he'll be landing in Houston on Monday for a special engagement at the Omni Houston Hotel for Houston's PBS station. The KUHT "Elevate Lecture" represents a bit of a homecoming for the diehard Texan, who got his start working for the Houston Chronicle while attending junior college in Victoria and also edited his high school newspaper in San Antonio.
When not in front of the camera, Lehrer has penned 20 novels, two memoirs and three plays. But in the popular conscious, he may be best known for his role as moderator during 11 nationally televised presidential debates. His upcoming book, Tension City, is a non-fiction volume depicting a behind-the-scenes view of those debates. With a looming 2012 presidential election, Lehrer could very well comment on potential plans of moderating a future debate in this Houston appearance.
"For people with an affinity for public television, Lehrer will offer the back story, the surprises and the little moments that never make it on air," HoustonPBS director of programming Ken Lawrence tells CultureMap. "For others, it will offer a greater understanding of what exactly is public television."
More than anything, Monday's audience will see a national journalism figure in an unusually unguarded state. "Jim is a real very down-home kind of person," Lawrence says. The Houstonian also suggests that the 77-year-old "Texas boy" Lehrer will impart stories about his early life in South Texas, and ascension to public television at Dallas' KERA station in 1970.
Of course, it's the quirks that make the man, and Lehrer's most intriguing eccentricity may be his interest in the era of American travel buses. "I'd put money down that he talks about his fascination with buses," says Lawrence. "I know that he is an avid collector of bus memorabilia, particularly with bus lines that are long gone and mostly forgotten."
Lawrence recalls an instance when he was working for a public television station in Ohio that invited Lehrer to speak and used a piece of vintage bus company memorabilia "to sweeten the deal."
As for Lehrer's post-"Elevate Lecture" plans, Lawrence suggests, "While he's stepping down as the primary NewsHour anchor, he will probably stay involved, and God bless him, he'll keep his hand in as much as he wants and as much as he can. But I think he will also branch into other new things."
The Jim Lehrer "Elevate Lecture" is at the Omni Houston Hotel on Monday at 7 p.m., $25 for general admission and $75 for a special reception with Lehrer. Tickets are available on the KUHT website.