Miami Herald (Sunday)

Robert MacNeil, the stately journalist who brought news to PBS, dies at 93

- BY STEPHEN BATTAGLIO

Robert MacNeil, whose coverage of the Watergate scandal led to the first nightly newscast for PBS, died Friday after a long illness. He was 93.

A PBS representa­tive confirmed MacNeil’s death. No cause of was cited.

MacNeil was the founding anchor of “PBS NewsHour,” which was first launched in 1975 as “The Robert MacNeil Report” and later renamed “The MacNeil/Lehrer NewsHour.” In the years before cable news and the internet, the program was the lone national TV alternativ­e to the newscasts on ABC, CBS and NBC. MacNeil was born in Halifax, Nova Scotia, on Jan. 19, 1931, the son of a member of the Royal Canadian Mounted Police. He dropped out of Dalhousie University in Halifax to pursue an acting career and became an announcer for CBC.

After moving to England in 1955, he turned to journalism, joining the news service Reuters. Five years later he became a London correspond­ent for NBC News.

MacNeil was transferre­d to NBC’s Washington bureau in 1963 during the Kennedy administra­tion and reported extensivel­y from Dallas when President John F. Kennedy was killed by an assassin. Viewers who watched NBC News on Nov. 22, 1963, heard MacNeil call in from a phone booth to confirm the president’s death.

MacNeil became an anchor at NBC News and on the network’s local

New York station, WNBC.

MacNeil was hired by

PBS in 1971 to be the host its first public affairs program, “Washington Week In Review.” The service planned to team him with another former NBC

News journalist, Sander Vanocur, to cover the 1972 presidenti­al campaign.

But PBS plans to get into the news business met resistance from President Nixon’s administra­tion. Nixon objected to the hiring of Vanocur, who was known to be close to Kennedy, who defeated him in the 1960 presidenti­al race.

Vanocur didn’t take the job, and MacNeil was eventually teamed with Jim Lehrer, a former Dallas

newspaper reporter who worked behind the scenes at PBS. They ended up providing coverage of the Senate hearings on Watergate.

The commercial networks were hesitant to preempt their game shows and soap operas to present the hearings. They rotated in providing gavel-to-gavel coverage.

But for noncommerc­ial PBS, the hearings were a major opportunit­y. For 47 days and nights in 1973, the service covered every minute of the proceeding­s.

Their Watergate coverage brought PBS big ratings. Financial contributi­ons poured in.

A year after the hearings, MacNeil was given his own nightly half-hour program, produced out of the studios of PBS New York flagship WNET. Lehrer reported from Washington, D.C., and his name was added to the program title in 1976 when it was offered to stations nationally.

In 1983, the program was renamed “The MacNeil/Lehrer NewsHour” and became a signature series for PBS that still airs today as “PBS NewsHour.”

MacNeil is survived by two children from his first marriage and two from his second marriage.

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Robert MacNeil

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