"Take a risk for a principle you believe in"
Weekends won't be the same on NPR: News legend Daniel Schorr is dead at 93
Weekends just won't be the same on NPR. Legendary newsman Daniel Schorr, whose regular banter with Scott Simon on "Weekend Edition" was a Saturday morning highlight in my home, has died.
Schorr, whose last NPR commentary was nearly two weeks ago, was 93. He passed away Friday at a Washington, DC hospital after a brief illness.
Before his death, Schorr was a walking advertisement for continuing to work long after a traditional retirement age. He remained articulate, insightful and current. Unlike some of his news colleagues who seemed to stay on long after their prime (Helen Thomas comes to mind), Schorr remained relevant in the public discussion of current events.
He and Simon crisply covered the week in review in a little over five minutes. During his final broadcast, they discussed the U.S.-Russia spy swap, the Justice Department's lawsuit against Arizona's new immigration law and President Obama's meeting with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu where Schorr surmised that two world leaders were "condemned to be friends" because of their strategic interests.
Unlike many of the mindless talking heads that dominate the media nowadays, Schorr was a fearless newsman who retained a healthy skepticism throughout his career. He made the profession look good.
He was a passionate defender of free speech, a frequent critic of the mainstream media for being too timid and a hard-hitting reporter whose critical coverage won him a place on a then-President Richard Nixon's enemies list in the early '70s. He read the list on the air and professed disappointment that he was only No. 17.
At the age of 12, Schorr broke into the news business when he saw woman who had jumped or fallen from the roof of his Bronx apartment building lying on the sidewalk and phoned in a tip to a newspaper after summoning help. He was paid $5.
He joined CBS as one of the last new members of the legendary Edward R. Murrow's news team but left the network in 1976 because he felt it did not support him after he was criticized for leaking a Congressional report on illegal FBI and CIA activities. Three years later, he was Ted Turner's first hire at CNN, then a little-known network. In 1985, he landed at NPR, where his wry commentary fit right in.
In a 2003 interview, he called NPR "a satisfying home for the evening of my career. I no longer pursue scoops, but concentrate on the context and the meaning of things. I interact with journalists a third to half my age who seem to regard me as a walking history book."
Even to the end, he advised journalists to withstand the pressure to conform. "At least once in your lifetime take a risk for a principle you believe in, even if it brings you up against your bosses."
Listen to Schorr's commentary on Watergate below:
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Listen to Schorr's commentary on September 11:
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Listen to Schorr's commentary on the beginning of CNN:
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