Chicago Sun-Times

NBC, ABC exec, model for ‘Network’

- BY DAVID BAUDER AP Media Writer

NEW YORK — Richard Wald, a longtime journalist who helped build ABC News into a powerhouse following a career in newspapers, has died. He was 92.

Mr. Wald suffered a stroke early last week and never regained consciousn­ess before dying Friday at a hospital in New Rochelle, New York, said his son, news executive Jonathan Wald.

The wiry, optimistic newshound taught journalism at his alma mater, Columbia University, after retiring from ABC News in 1999. He served on the boards of the Pulitzer Prizes, Du-Pont-Columbia and Peabody awards.

He worked at now-defunct New York newspapers the Herald Tribune and World Journal Tribune, as well as the Washington Post, and oversaw “new journalism” stalwarts like Jimmy Breslin, Thomas Wolfe and Gail Sheehy.

Explaining why he joined NBC News in the late 1960s, Mr. Wald often said, “I didn’t leave newspapers. Newspapers left me.”

He was NBC News president from 1973 to 1977, where he installed Tom Brokaw and Jane Pauley as “Today” show hosts. He also let screenwrit­er Paddy Chayefsky trail him for two days, and became the model for the network news president in the satiric film “Network.” Forced out at NBC because of tension with his bosses, he joined ABC News and was a top deputy to the mercurial Roone Arledge.

A sports executive who was given authority over a struggling news division, Arledge had plenty of ideas but little news experience. Mr. Wald, with fellow executive David Burke, helped implement the good ideas, said Tom Bettag, a former executive producer at “Nightline,” a show that Mr. Wald gave a name to.

“He was enormously upbeat, full of energy,” Bettag said.

Mr. Wald’s wife of 67 years, Edith, died in December. He is survived by three children and seven grandchild­ren.

 ?? SUN-TIMES LIBRARY ?? Richard Wald
SUN-TIMES LIBRARY Richard Wald

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