Newsman Jennings Dead At 67
Canadian-Born Broadcaster Was Face Of ABC News For Decades
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Play CBS Video Video A Look At Jennings' Career Peter Jennings was a news prodigy who took a step backward when he realized he needed more seasoning. And he got it, Bob Schieffer reports.
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Video Rather Reflects On Jennings Dan Rather, in Lebanon on assignment, paused to speak with Bob Schieffer about the death of Peter Jennings, his dear friend and one-time competitor.
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Video Colleagues Remember Jennings Peter Jennings, the former anchor of ABC's evening news program, died from lung cancer that was discovered too late to treat. Jim Axelrod reports on the reaction to the news legend's death.
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Peter Jennings, in this photo released by ABC, reports from Baghdad on the January Iraqi elections. (AP Photo/ABC)
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The then-anchors of the three network broadcasts, NBC News' Tom Brokaw (left), CBS News' Dan Rather (center), and ABC News' Peter Jennings, at a panel discussion in October 2004. (AP)
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Photo Essay Peter Jennings A look at the career of a top anchorman, with audio reflections from former CBS News anchor Dan Rather.
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In The Spotlight Jennings: 1938-2005 Video Coverage: Friends and colleagues remember journalist Peter Jennings.
"When it's clearly an emotional experience for the audience, the anchor should not add his or her emotional layers," Jennings said in an interview with the Star Tribune in Minneapolis.
Two-thirds of local broadcasters responding to a 1993 survey by Broadcasting & Cable magazine said Jennings was the best network news anchor. Washington Journalism Review named him anchor of the year three straight years.
With Americans looking more inward in the mid to late-1990s, NBC's Tom Brokaw surpassed Jennings in the ratings. ABC was still a close No. 2, however. When Brokaw stepped down in November 2004, followed shortly by Rather at CBS, ABC began an advertising campaign stressing Jennings' experience — an ironic twist given how his ABC News career began.
But ABC was never able to learn whether Jennings could take advantage of his role as an elder statesman; his cancer diagnosis came only a month after Rather left the CBS anchor chair.
Jennings was proud of his Canadian citizenship, although it was occasionally a sore point with some critics. When Jennings spoke at the dedication of a museum celebrating the U.S. Constitution in 2003, U.S. Supreme Court Justice Antonin Scalia told him, "not bad for a Canadian."
Jennings whispered back his secret: He had just passed a test earning him dual citizenship in the United States.
"My decision to do this has nothing to do with politics," Jennings told The Associated Press at the time. "It has nothing to do with my profession. It has everything to do with my family."
Restlessly curious, Jennings pushed ABC News to use the turn of the century for a massive historical study. He co-wrote a book, "The Century," with Todd Brewster and anchored a marathon 25-hour special ending Jan. 1, 2000. Jennings and Brewster also traveled the backroads to write "In Search of America."
Jennings also led a documentary team at ABC News, which struck a chord in 2000 with the high-rated spiritual special "The Search for Jesus."
"I have never spent a day in my adult life where I didn't learn something," Jennings told the Saturday Evening Post. "And if there is a born-again quality to me, that's it."
He is survived by his wife, Kayce Freed, and his two children, Elizabeth, 25, and Christopher, 23.
©MMV, CBS Broadcasting Inc. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. The Associated Press contributed to this report.
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