(Translated by https://www.hiragana.jp/)
John Seigenthaler, Jr. - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The Wayback Machine - https://web.archive.org/web/20071030212335/http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John_Seigenthaler%2C_Jr.

John Seigenthaler, Jr.

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Jump to: navigation, search
Seigenthaler on MSNBC.
Seigenthaler on MSNBC.

John Michael Seigenthaler (born December 21, 1955) is an American news anchor and correspondent who worked for both NBC and MSNBC. He is the son of the newspaper journalist John Lawrence Seigenthaler. He is best known for his 7-year tenure as weekend anchor of "NBC Nightly News."

Contents

[edit] Life and career

Seigenthaler is a graduate of Duke University where he received a bachelor of science degree in public policy in 1978.

Seigenthaler began his television news career as a writer and producer at WKRN-TV in Nashville, Tennessee. From 1981-90, he reported and produced for WSMV-TV, Nashville and also hosted a weekday public affairs show. From there he moved to KOMO-TV in Seattle, where he anchored the weekend evening news. In January 1992, he married KOMO weeknight anchor Kerry Brock. Then he moved back to WKRN-TV, where he co-anchored the evening news.

Seigenthaler served as the anchor for the weekend edition of NBC Nightly News for more than seven years of his 11-year tenure with NBC News. Seigenthaler announced during his April 1, 2007 newscast that it was his final broadcast as anchor of the weekend edition of NBC Nightly News. [1] He also hosted the television shows "MSNBC Investigates" and "MSNBC Reports" on MSNBC. NBC News President Steve Capus said Seigenthaler's contract was not renewed because the network could no longer afford the luxury of having an anchor whose primary duty was anchoring the weekend evening news programs. It was announced in October, 2006 that job cuts and consolidation of operations would slice some $750 million from parent NBC Universal's budget by 2008.

Seigenthaler and Brock have a son and live in Connecticut.

[edit] Journalism awards

[edit] Bibliography

  • Seigenthaler, John M. (1997). Nashville: City of Note (Urban Tapestry Series). Memphis, TN: Towery Pub. ISBN 1-881096-43-2. 

[edit] References

  1. ^ Associated Press (April 2, 2007). John Seigenthaler Leaves NBC Anchor Spot.
Personal tools
In other languages