Linda Winslow and I are delighted to be here with you [PBS President Paula Kerger], and with all, to make a few announcements -- maybe, in our family world of public television, even make some news.
But let me first say the news is not -- repeat not -- about my leaving the NewsHour.
It is true that many months ago I began to think about such an awful thing. But then, as you all know, a year ago -- almost to the week -- I had an aortic valve replaced with that of an anonymous but delightful animal known as the pig.
The surgeon and the cardiologist involved in that operation told me, "If it works, Jim, you will come away feeling and acting ten years younger."
Well, the news is whether it's seen as good news or bad news depends on the particular news consumer, so to speak, that's exactly what happened.
The truth is that sometimes I think it took off more than ten.
No, the news today has to do with the future of the NewsHour -- with me, not without me.
And it is a future that, with a little luck and a lot of hard thinking and hard work by all of us, will be even more glorious and important than our past and present have been.
I believe -- we believe -- we have the opportunity, and the obligation, to have more than a second wind, but, to be specific, a fifth wind.
Our first was behind the Robert MacNeil Report, then came the MacNeil-Lehrer Report, the MacNeil-Lehrer NewsHour, the present NewsHour -- and, now, a new fifth incarnation. Behind a fifth wind of what Robin MacNeil and his many helpers began nearly 35 years ago. |