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The Spokesman-Review Newspaper
Spokane, Washington  Est. May 19, 1883

An era is passing for TV news as Brokaw heads out the door


Tom Brokaw
 (The Spokesman-Review)
David Bauder Associated Press

As a 16-year-old high school student, Tom Brokaw spent his first working Election Night in a radio station newsroom in Yankton, S.D. He reported results from rural polling places, and ate chicken catered from Kip’s Blue Moon restaurant.

His last Election Night will be considerably grander.

NBC News is building a huge temple of democracy at New York’s Rockefeller Center. A giant jigsaw-puzzle map of the United States will cover the famed ice skating surface and the General Electric building will be the backdrop for an electronic bar graph tracking the Bush-Kerry fight.

NBC is expecting a big night for TV viewers, and Brokaw will be at the center of it all.

Election Night will also mark the end of an era in broadcast journalism. For more than two decades, the three biggest networks have turned to the same men to anchor coverage of important news stories — Brokaw, Peter Jennings and Dan Rather.

This should be Brokaw’s last hurrah, since he steps down as NBC’s chief anchorman Dec. 1. By Election Day 2008, certainly one and maybe all three network faces will be different. Rather turns 73 on Halloween and is fighting for his future after CBS’s botched story on President Bush‘s National Guard service. Jennings is 66.

“It’s a natural transition and it’s a new generation taking over,” said Brokaw, 64. “I had my opportunity when I replaced John (Chancellor). Dan replaced Walter (Cronkite).”

What Brokaw has found most touching are the moments in airports where folks approach him to say they’ll miss seeing him on television.

“They rely on us,” he said. “You feel at the end of having done it all these years that if people still have faith in what you’ve done and feel a personal connection, and feel it so strongly that they’re willing to come up to you and express that, that’s very gratifying.”

On Election Night, his sidekick in an anchor booth overlooking the rink will be Tim Russert. Brokaw’s eventual replacement, Brian Williams, will report that night from a nearby booth.

NBC will almost certainly be the most-watched network that night, and not for nostalgic reasons. Brokaw has been lengthening NBC’s lead in the evening news ratings race in recent months, and it has been the network of choice for most big political events this year.

Citing an NBC News poll that found 74 percent of Americans who said the election was very important to them, Brokaw said the last time he saw such a tuned-in electorate was during the 1968 Vietnam-era campaign between Richard Nixon and Hubert Humphrey.

“Here you have two men of privilege, both from Yale University, both from the same fraternity, members of Skull & Bones, with distinctly different points of view about how the world should take shape in the next four years and what the place of the United States should be in it,” he said.

“That’s a story of almost Shakespearean proportion,” he said. “And that’s the story we need to tell.”

The birthday bunch

Actor-producer David Nelson is 68. Former Rolling Stones bassist Bill Wyman is 68. Actor F. Murray Abraham is 65. Actor Kevin Kline is 57. Actor B.D. Wong is 42. Drummer Ben Gillies of Silverchair is 25. Singer Adrienne Bailon of 3LW is 21.