The Capital

Bennett and Nawaz to replace Woodruff on PBS ‘NewsHour’

- By David Bauder

In what’s being portrayed as a generation­al change, PBS recently said that Geoff Bennett and Amna Nawaz will replace Washington veteran Judy Woodruff as anchors of the weeknight “NewsHour” at the beginning of 2023.

Woodruff, 75, is leaving the daily anchor job that she has been doing since 2013 and embarking on a two-year reporting project on the nation’s divisions. Her last show as anchor will be Dec. 30.

Nawaz, 43, has been Woodruff ’s chief substitute since joining “NewsHour” in 2018. She has won Peabody Awards for her reporting on the Jan. 6, 2021, insurrecti­on and global plastic pollution, and previously worked at ABC and NBC News.

Bennett, 42, became anchor of the weekend “NewsHour” earlier this year after jumping from NBC. The Washington reporter covered the White House and Congress for NBC and, prior to that, NPR.

“You can’t understate the importance of this moment,” Nawaz said. “It is an enormous change for an incredible institutio­n that doesn’t do this change often. On that level, I think both of us understand very deeply what we are taking on.”

More buttoned-down than commercial TV, “NewsHour” reports on stories of the day along with deeper, magazinest­yle pieces. It was spoofed on a recent “Saturday Night Live” segment as “we’re what your grandma’s talking about when she says, ‘I saw this on the news.’ ”

The show is broadening its audience beyond the estimated 2 million viewers who watch on television each evening by taking an active presence on TikTok, Instagram and YouTube. “NewsHour” gets more than a million unique viewers each day on YouTube, according to Google Analytics and YouTube.

“There are few places these days that cover the fullness of American life, from hard news to feature stories, the way the ‘NewsHour’ does,” Bennett said.

PBS CEO Paula Kerger said the hirings also further the system’s effort to have the “NewsHour” broaden its focus beyond Washington news.

“One of the strengths of the public media system is we have these stations all across the country, and we have been talking about ways to leverage that,” she said. There are 179 separate licenses for PBS outlets.

Having two anchors gives “NewsHour” more flexibilit­y to use them as reporters who can travel for stories, said Sara Just, the show’s senior executive producer. Since its start in 1975, the show has used both single and co-anchors, essentiall­y with just four people having occupied the role.

Robert MacNeil and

Jim Lehrer coanchored for two decades before MacNeil retired. Lehrer took it over alone and, after he left in 2011, Woodruff and Gwen Ifill started as regular co-anchors in 2013. Following Ifill’s death in 2016, Woodruff became sole anchor.

Woodruff, whose television career had included time at NBC News and two stints at PBS surroundin­g a stretch at CNN, said she felt like the midterm elections seemed like the right time to retreat. She recoils from an alliterati­ve word: retirement.

“I honestly wanted to step away from the anchor desk at a point where I still have the energy and enthusiasm to do some reporting that really matters to me,” she said.

She plans a whopping week off before diving into “America at a Crossroads,” a two-year project examining the nation’s political and social divisions. She plans to talk with citizens and experts of all stripes, hoping to deliver suggestion­s to improve things.

Woodruff will be reporting what she finds regularly on “NewsHour,” building toward a special at the end.

 ?? MIKE MORGAN/PBS ?? Geoff Bennett and Amna Nawaz will replace Judy Woodruff as anchors of the weeknight “NewsHour.”
MIKE MORGAN/PBS Geoff Bennett and Amna Nawaz will replace Judy Woodruff as anchors of the weeknight “NewsHour.”
 ?? ?? Woodruff
Woodruff

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