
#MEET THE PRESS COMMENTATOR TV#
On Tuesday’s “MTP Daily” on MSNBC (and his first TV appearance since Sunday), Todd addressed the issue by first explaining what had happened. He said exactly what Todd claimed he didn’t.
#MEET THE PRESS COMMENTATOR FULL#
The fact of the matter is, if “Meet the Press” had run the full clip, it would have shown that Barr did say he believed he was upholding the law. He was almost admitting that, yeah, this is a political job.” He didn’t make the case that he was upholding the rule of law. Todd added, “It’s a correct answer, but he’s the attorney general. That’s where the clip was cut off and where Todd asked panelist Peggy Noonan about Barr’s cynicism.

On the clip, Barr said, “Well, history is written by the winners so it largely depends on who is writing the history.” Barr was asked how his recommendation of dropping charges against former national security adviser Michael Flynn will be remembered. They made a big apology on Tuesday.ĭuring Sunday’s show, moderator Chuck Todd set up a panel discussion by showing a clip of Attorney General William Barr on CBS. “Meet the Press” made a big mistake on Sunday. To have it delivered to your inbox Monday-Friday, click here. Russert often cited the advice given him by Lawrence Spivak, one of his predecessors on Meet the Press: Be aggressive, persistent and civil.The Poynter Report is our daily media newsletter. But when he became a journalist, "he applied a lawyer's ability for inquisition to find the truth," says Folkenflik. When Russert first joined NBC, he did so as a senior executive. Daniel Patrick Moynihan and former New York Gov.

An ardent fan of the Buffalo Bills, Russert went on to receive a Jesuit education and ultimately earned a law degree. He wrote a book called Big Russ & Me,about his relationship with his father, a garbage collector, that became a New York Times best-seller. Russert was a proud son of Buffalo, N.Y., where he was born to Catholic working-class parents. Russert's colleagues say he routinely championed their work and strengthened it through his own endless list of well-placed contacts. "People throughout NBC are clearly in deep mourning," Folkenflik says. He was also a commanding and comforting presence at NBC's Washington bureau. Hillary Clinton in the Democratic primaries last month, it was Russert's pronouncement that made it clear her viability was coming to an end. Barack Obama pulled away from New York Sen. He marveled at the chaos of election night in 2000 - and helped make sense of it by scribbling on a white board. With his wry smile and his trademark white board and felt marker, Russert was known for his incisive calculations of the U.S. "He took advantage of the cable channel to be on the air as much as events warranted," says Folkenflik. But Russert's passion for the political game was infectious, and he used MSNBC to chase the latest stories.

Russert did not betray his personal beliefs on the air, but he held powerful figures accountable - senators, presidents, prime ministers alike. "If you were not ready for prime time, Tim Russert's questioning would expose that," he says. NPR media correspondent David Folkenflik likened Russert's table at the popular Sunday morning news program to the smoke-filled rooms of previous generations where serious political issues were debated. A visibly shaken Brokaw called him "one of the premier journalists of our time," adding: "I think I can invoke personal privilege to say this news division will not be the same without his strong, clear voice."

Though Russert's death was first revealed in online reports, former NBC anchor Tom Brokaw announced the news on the network's sister cable channel MSNBC. He was preparing for this Sunday's installment of NBC's political interview show, Meet the Press, which he had presided over since late 1991. Tim Russert, one of the nation's most respected political journalists, collapsed and died from an apparent heart attack on Friday at the NBC News bureau in Washington, D.C. Senate, 1977-82.Įducation: Bachelor's degree, John Carroll University, 1972 law degree, Cleveland-Marshall College of Law at Cleveland State University, 1976. Work: Moderator, NBC News' Meet the Press, 1991-2008 Washington bureau chief, NBC News, 1988-2008 reporter, NBC News, 1984-88 counselor, New York governor's office in Albany, N.Y., 1983-84 special counsel, U.S.
