In an era when most #news on television is something that's already known and just being chewed over, there's something reassuring in finding that the largest audience of the day chooses a program dedicated to simply presenting it. On @abcworldnewstonight, @davidmuirabc embraces what, seven decades on, counts as a tradition. "I was the kid who would excuse myself from the backyard and go in and watch Peter Jennings," he says of his childhood in Syracuse, N.Y. "I was drawn to him. And I don't think at 12 or 13 you can put into words why you're drawn to a particular #journalist, but Peter's curiosity was infectious. He seemed to be the one who was having a conversation with #America every night … I think now, in the age that we're in, it's more of a two-way conversation.” The 44-year-old, the nation's best-liked #anchorman, has been sitting in Jennings' old chair for nearly four years now. Muir raised himself to the position of anchor by reading the news from a cardboard box in his living room, then from behind desks at local stations in Syracuse and Boston before ABC hired him in 2003. "I think that in this era, where people are really hungry for someone that they can trust and a team they can trust, that it's just something they sense in their gut," Muir says. "And we go out there and try to earn that trust every single night. And we're not perfect. One of the great gifts of this job is that you can go out the next night and give it your best shot again. But we never forget that we're reporting to a divided country.” The tricky part, especially with Donald Trump, is how often the questions are critical. Muir got the first TV interview with Trump in the White House and made news by challenging the new President's contention that a think-tank study found widespread voter fraud. Before mainstream media became an epithet, nightly newscasts helped define the nation that gathered to watch them. Muir senses that they still can. Read more on TIME.com. Photograph by @kristaschlueter for TIME

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TIME Magazineのインスタグラム(time) - 8月20日 03時30分


In an era when most #news on television is something that's already known and just being chewed over, there's something reassuring in finding that the largest audience of the day chooses a program dedicated to simply presenting it. On @abcworldnewstonight, @davidmuirabc embraces what, seven decades on, counts as a tradition. "I was the kid who would excuse myself from the backyard and go in and watch Peter Jennings," he says of his childhood in Syracuse, N.Y. "I was drawn to him. And I don't think at 12 or 13 you can put into words why you're drawn to a particular #journalist, but Peter's curiosity was infectious. He seemed to be the one who was having a conversation with #America every night … I think now, in the age that we're in, it's more of a two-way conversation.” The 44-year-old, the nation's best-liked #anchorman, has been sitting in Jennings' old chair for nearly four years now. Muir raised himself to the position of anchor by reading the news from a cardboard box in his living room, then from behind desks at local stations in Syracuse and Boston before ABC hired him in 2003. "I think that in this era, where people are really hungry for someone that they can trust and a team they can trust, that it's just something they sense in their gut," Muir says. "And we go out there and try to earn that trust every single night. And we're not perfect. One of the great gifts of this job is that you can go out the next night and give it your best shot again. But we never forget that we're reporting to a divided country.” The tricky part, especially with Donald Trump, is how often the questions are critical. Muir got the first TV interview with Trump in the White House and made news by challenging the new President's contention that a think-tank study found widespread voter fraud. Before mainstream media became an epithet, nightly newscasts helped define the nation that gathered to watch them. Muir senses that they still can. Read more on TIME.com. Photograph by @kristaschlueter for TIME


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