Brian Williams
Brian Douglas Williams (born May 5, 1959) is an American journalist at MSNBC, serving as the network's chief anchor and host of its flagship weeknight news program, The 11th Hour with Brian Williams.[1][2]
Brian Williams | |
---|---|
Williams in 2011 | |
Born | Brian Douglas Williams May 5, 1959 Ridgewood, New Jersey, U.S. |
Years active | 1981–present |
Employer | General Electric (1993–2013) Comcast (2013–present) |
Television | NBC News reporter (1993–2004) NBC Nightly News weekend anchor (1993–1999) NBC Nightly News anchor (2004–2015) MSNBC anchor (2015–present) The 11th Hour anchor (2016–present) |
Spouse(s) | Jane Gillan Stoddard
(m. 1986) |
Children | 2, including Allison Williams |
Parents |
|
Awards | 12 News & Documentary Emmy Awards George Polk Award duPont-Columbia University Award Walter Cronkite Award for Excellence in Journalism |
Williams is known for his ten years as anchor and managing editor of NBC Nightly News, the evening news program on NBC. After Williams joined the program in December 2004,[3] NBC News was awarded the Peabody Award for its coverage of Hurricane Katrina, and Williams accepted the award on behalf of the organization.[4] In February 2015, Williams was suspended for six months from NBC Nightly News for "misrepresent[ing] events which occurred while he was covering the Iraq War in 2003",[5] and on June 18, 2015, he was demoted to breaking news anchor for MSNBC.[6]
Early life
Born on May 5, 1959, in Ridgewood, New Jersey,[7] Williams was raised in a "boisterous" Catholic home, of largely Irish descent.[8] He is the son of Dorothy May (née Pampel) and Gordon Lewis Williams, who was an executive vice president of the National Retail Merchants Association, in New York.[9][10] His mother was an amateur stage actress.[8] Williams is the youngest of four siblings.[11]
He lived in Elmira, New York, for nine years before moving to Middletown Township, New Jersey, when he was in junior high school.[12]
Williams graduated from Mater Dei High School, a Roman Catholic high school in the New Monmouth section of Middletown.[13] While in high school, he was a volunteer firefighter for three years at the Middletown Township Fire Department. Also while in high school, he was the editorial editor for the school newspaper.[14] He suffered an accident during a football game that left him with a crooked nose.[15] His first job was as a busboy at Perkins Pancake House.[16]
Following high school, Williams attended Brookdale Community College before transferring to the Catholic University of America and then George Washington University.[12] He did not take a degree, ultimately interning with the administration of President Jimmy Carter. He later called leaving college one of his "great regrets."[17]
Career
Early broadcast career
Williams first worked in broadcasting in 1981 at KOAM-TV in Pittsburg, Kansas. The following year he covered news in the Washington, D.C., area at then-independent station WTTG, then worked in Philadelphia for WCAU, then owned and operated by CBS.[18] Beginning in 1987 he broadcast in New York City at WCBS.
Williams joined NBC News in 1993, where he anchored the national Weekend Nightly News and was chief White House correspondent.[19] In the summer of 1996 he began serving as anchor and managing editor of The News with Brian Williams, broadcast on MSNBC and CNBC.[20] Williams also served as primary substitute anchor on The NBC Nightly News with Tom Brokaw, and its weekend anchor.[21]
NBC Nightly News
Williams became anchor of NBC Nightly News on December 2, 2004, replacing the retiring Tom Brokaw. His coverage of Hurricane Katrina was widely praised, particularly "for venting his anger and frustration over the government's failure to act quickly to help the victims."[22] The network was awarded a Peabody, the committee concluding that "... Williams, and the entire staff of NBC Nightly News exemplified the highest levels of journalistic excellence."[4] NBC Nightly News also earned the George Polk Award[23] and the duPont-Columbia University Award for its Katrina coverage.[24] Vanity Fair called Williams' work on Katrina "Murrow-worthy" and reported that during the hurricane, he became "a nation's anchor". The New York Times characterized Williams' reporting of the hurricane as "a defining moment".[25]
In 2007, Time magazine named Williams one of the 100 most influential people in the world.[26]
In 2009, Williams was awarded the Walter Cronkite Award for Excellence in Journalism by Arizona State University.[27] At the announcement of the award, Cronkite said he was one of Williams' "ardent admirers" and described him as a "fastidious newsman" who brought credit to the television news reporting profession.[27]
While anchoring the Nightly News, Williams received 12 News & Documentary Emmy Awards. For "outstanding" work as anchor and managing editor of the Nightly News, he received one Emmy in 2006 (for Nightly News coverage of the 2005 Hurricane Katrina),[28] two in 2007,[29] one in 2009,[30] two in 2010,[31] one in 2011,[32] one in 2013,[33] and one in 2014.[34] The 2014 Emmy was awarded Nightly News for its coverage of a deadly series of tornadoes in Oklahoma, for which it also received the duPont-Columbia University Award.[35]
Williams also received a 2012 Emmy for his interview program Rock Center[36] and a 2013 Emmy for being one of the executive producers and editors of a documentary on the John F. Kennedy Presidential Library and Museum.[33] He also shared a 2014 Emmy awarded for an NBC News Special on the Boston Marathon bombing.[34]
Based on the Nielsen ratings, from late 2008 Williams' news broadcast consistently had more viewers than its two main rivals, ABC's World News Tonight and CBS Evening News.[37] In fact, from late 2008 to late 2014, NBC Nightly News beat the other two network programs in the Nielsen ratings all but one week.[37]
In February 2015, Williams was suspended for six months from the broadcast for misrepresenting his experience in the 2003 invasion of Iraq.[5] At the time, his salary was $10 million a year,[38] with a five-year contract signed in December 2014.[39]
Rock Center with Brian Williams
On October 4, 2011, it was announced that Williams would be the host of Rock Center with Brian Williams, a news magazine program premiering on October 31, 2011, at 10:00 pm Eastern, replacing the canceled drama series The Playboy Club.[40]
Named after the nickname of Rockefeller Center, the New York City landmark where NBC Radio City Studios are located, the program would become the first new NBC News program to launch in primetime in nearly two decades.[41]
NBC cancelled Rock Center on May 10, 2013, due to low ratings; the network was also having trouble finding a permanent time slot for the program. The last show aired on June 21, 2013.[42]
Williams reportedly felt "insulted" by the program's cancellation.[43]
Iraq War helicopter lie
On February 4, 2015, Williams apologized for and recanted his disproven Iraq War story, which he had told on a Nightly News broadcast on January 30, 2015. He claimed that a military helicopter he was traveling in had been "forced down after being hit by an RPG".[44][45] Soon after it aired, Williams' story was criticized by Lance Reynolds, a flight engineer on board one of the three Chinook helicopters that had been attacked.[46] Reynolds and other crew members said Williams had been aboard one of a separate group of helicopters from the helicopter that had been fired upon, which was flying about half an hour behind and was forced to make an emergency landing because of a sandstorm rather than an attack.[45][47] Additional soldiers soon came forward both to confirm that Williams was not in the group of helicopters one of which had come under fire, and to express their hurt that Williams had inserted himself into the event.[48]
In his original on-air reporting of the incident on March 26, 2003, for Dateline NBC, Williams had said only that "the Chinook ahead of us was almost blown out of the sky ... by an RPG" and made an emergency landing. But in introducing the piece, NBC News anchor Tom Brokaw described Williams as having "got [him]self into ... a close call in the skies over Iraq",[49] and the story was headlined, "Target Iraq: Helicopter NBC's Brian Williams Was Riding In Comes Under Fire".[45]
A book published by NBC in 2003 said that "Army Chinook helicopters [were] forced to make a desert landing after being attacked by Iraqi Fedayeen", with Williams aboard.[50]
In a 2007 retelling, Williams did not state that his craft had been hit, but said: "I looked down the tube of an RPG that had been fired at us, and it hit the chopper in front of us." This contradicted the statements by the crew of the craft that was hit, that it was at least 30 minutes ahead of Williams' helicopter. However, the soldiers who piloted Williams' helicopter in Iraq said no rocket-propelled grenades had been fired at the aircraft, a fact that Williams did not dispute and apologized for.[51] In a 2013 account, Williams said his helicopter had been "hit ... and landed very quickly".[52]
In a February 5, 2015 interview with CNN, the pilot (Alejandro Xirau) of the Chinook in which Williams was traveling said that while the aircraft did not sustain RPG fire, it did indeed sustain small-arms fire and the door gunners returned fire.[53]
On February 10, 2015, NBC News President Deborah Turness suspended Williams without pay for six months from his position as Managing Editor and Anchor of the Nightly News for having misrepresented the Iraq incident.[5] On June 18, 2015, he was demoted to breaking news anchor for MSNBC.[6]
Journalist Malcolm Gladwell reexamined the story in a podcast episode entitled "Free Brian Williams" from his Revisionist History podcast. Gladwell argued that the evolving versions of Williams' story over many years matched the normal pattern of how human memory works. Over time, people conflate and combine different memories, shift times and locations, and misremember details large and small.[54]
MSNBC
In September 2015, Williams returned to the air as MSNBC's chief anchor.[1] News events that Williams has since covered for MSNBC include Pope Francis's trip to the United States; the Umpqua Community College shooting; and terrorist attacks in Paris, San Bernardino, Brussels, and Nice. In January 2016, Williams also added the role of chief elections anchor for MSNBC and subsequently debuted in the new role during coverage of the 2016 Iowa caucuses.[55]
As part of his chief anchor duties, Williams currently anchors a nightly news and politics wrap-up show, titled The 11th Hour with Brian Williams. The New York Post labeled the program a "legit hit" in February 2019, noting the show had been "beating [competitors] CNN and Fox News for three months straight."[56] Williams, alongside co-anchors Rachel Maddow & Joy Reid and lead analyst Nicolle Wallace, led the network's coverage of the 2020 United States presidential election.[56]
Other activities
Williams frequently appeared on The Daily Show as a celebrity guest interviewed by Jon Stewart and in 2007, made regular cameos as a giant head sidekick looking on Jon Stewart and helping out with pronunciations of foreign names and occasionally other foreign affairs all beginning at the premiere of the new Daily Show set. He appeared on the Weekend Update segment of Saturday Night Live on the season 32 premiere hosted by Dane Cook and then hosted a season 33 episode on November 3, 2007. With this episode, Williams was the first, and so far only, sitting network news anchor to host SNL.[57]
Williams appeared on Sesame Street in a 2007 episode, announcing the word of the day, "squid," in a special broadcast. Williams appeared on Sesame Street again in a 2008 episode, reporting for Sesame Street Nightly News about the "mine-itis" outbreak, becoming a victim. He was also the host of the 2009 Annual Sesame Workshop Benefit Gala.
On February 22, 2010, while covering the Winter Olympics, Williams did a skit with Brian Williams, the Canadian sportscaster of CTV Sports, on the CTV Olympic set.[58] Some in the media dubbed this the new "Battle of the Brians," as NBC's Williams compared his own modest set to CTV's expensive Olympic studio.[59]
Williams regularly appeared on Late Night with Jimmy Fallon, where he slow jams the news of the previous week as Fallon sings and reiterates what Williams says, with The Roots providing the musical backing. A mash-up video created by Fallon, where Williams appears to rap to hip-hop instrumentals, became popular within a few hours.[60] Williams has also made numerous appearances on Late Show with David Letterman. During an appearance on July 26, 2011, he demonstrated a skilled vocal impersonation of TV personality Regis Philbin. He has also appeared on Late Night with Conan O'Brien, where he took part in numerous skits and interviews.
—Williams on 30 Rock, proposing a new NBC show to Jack Donaghy[61]
Williams made frequent guest appearances on NBC's television comedy 30 Rock, as a caricatured version of himself. In the episode "The Ones", he is seen at home receiving proposition calls meant for Tracy Jordan. In "Audition Day", he auditions to be a new TGS cast member. He also is seen once on the show taunting Tina Fey's character, Liz Lemon. In April 2012, on the West Coast installment of the 30 Rock season 6 live show, Williams portrayed a news anchor covering the Apollo 13 story.
Williams was the commencement speaker at Bates College in May 2005,[62] The Catholic University of America in May 2004,[63] Ohio State University in June 2008,[64] and at the University of Notre Dame in 2010.[65] In May 2012, he spoke at the George Washington University commencement on the National Mall.[66] He was the commencement speaker for Elon University's graduating class of 2013, which included his son Douglas.[67]
Williams also collaborated on the Encyclopedia of world history from Backpack Books published in 2003.
Williams has written for publications including The New York Times[68] and Time magazine.[69]
Controversies
The Iraq War controversy prompted greater scrutiny of several earlier statements made by Williams, including some he made regarding Hurricane Katrina and its aftermath.[70][71] For example, Williams referred inconsistently to a suicide inside the New Orleans Superdome after Katrina.[72] CNN reported in a 2005 television documentary that Williams said he was not a witness to the suicide: "We heard the story of a man killing himself, falling from the upper deck."[73] In a 2014 interview, however, Williams said, "We watched, all of us watched, as one man committed suicide."[74]
Appearing on The Daily Show in August 2006, he told host Jon Stewart that he was nearly hit the previous month by Katyusha rockets fired from Lebanon by Hezbollah while flying in an Israeli Air Force (IAF) Black Hawk helicopter: "Here's a view of rockets I have never seen, passing underneath us, 1,500 feet beneath us. And we've got the gunner doors on this thing, and I'm saying to the general, some four-star: 'It wouldn't take much for them to adjust the aim and try to do a ring toss right through our open doors, would it?' Anytime you want to cross over to the other side, baby, travel with me."[75]
In another version of the same story, related by Williams during an interview conducted at Fairfield University a year later, he claimed that the rockets passed "just underneath the helicopter I was riding in."[76] The claim was drawn into question since there are no four-star generals in the Israel Defense Forces (IDF), Israeli helicopter doors are routinely closed during flights and the IAF's Black Hawks do not carry gunners.[77] An IDF spokesman who was on the helicopter in question did confirm afterwards that there was Katyusha fire and, although the helicopter was not in danger, the "trajectory of the rockets was beneath us."[78]
A reference to the fall of the Berlin Wall also received scrutiny. In 2008, Williams said he was "at the Brandenburg Gate the night the wall came down", while CBS and other sources report that he did not arrive until the next day.[79][80] "The night the wall came down" is widely recognized as November 9, 1989, according to a CNN report.[80] Williams joked in 2014 that he was upset Tom Brokaw had arrived first, adding that "by the second night of the story, we were all there."[80]
Another statement by Williams, this one regarding the Navy SEALs, also received attention. Williams said he flew into Baghdad with SEAL Team Six, but Special Operations Command spokesman Ken McGraw stated the SEALs do not embed journalists.[81]
On June 19, 2015, his suspension drawing to a close, Williams gave another apology and an account about his role in news going forward in an exclusive interview with Matt Lauer on the Today Show.[82]
On April 7, 2017, Williams referred to the 2017 Shayrat missile strike footage of missiles being fired from a US warship as "beautiful pictures". This brought widespread criticism from the media and social networking.[83][84][85]
Personal life
Williams married Jane Gillan Stoddard, at the First Presbyterian Church of New Canaan, Connecticut, on June 7, 1986.[86] They currently live in New Canaan, Connecticut.[87]
Actress Allison Williams is their daughter. The Williams' son, Doug, is the late-night anchor of Geico SportsNite on SportsNet New York, a regional sports channel available in the New York metropolitan area. Doug Williams' program occasionally airs at the same time as his father's MSNBC program.[88]
Brian Williams was named "Father of the Year" in 1996 by the National Father's Day Committee.[89][90]
Williams was a member of the board of directors of the Congressional Medal of Honor Foundation from September 2006 until resigning in the wake of the scandal over his Iraq War comments.[91]
Honorary degrees
Location | Date | School | Degree |
---|---|---|---|
District of Columbia | 15 May 2004 | Catholic University of America | Doctor of Humane Letters (DHL)[92] |
Maine | 30 May 2005 | Bates College | Doctor of Humane Letters (DHL)[93] |
Ohio | 8 June 2008 | The Ohio State University | Doctor of Journalism (DJ)[94] |
Indiana | 16 May 2010 | University of Notre Dame | Doctor of Laws (LL.D)[95] |
New York | 21 May 2011 | Fordham University | Doctor of Humane Letters (DHL)[96] |
District of Columbia | 2012 | George Washington University | Doctor of Humane Letters (DHL)[97] |
Television
Year | Title | Role | First episode | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|
2007 | Saturday Night Live | Himself | Host | |
2009–12 | 30 Rock | Himself | The Ones | |
2013 | Family Guy | Himself | "Space Cadet" | voice only |
2013 | The Soup | Himself | Himself |
Career timeline
- 1981: KOAM-TV
- 1982–86: WTTG-TV correspondent
- 1985: Panorama Host
- 1985–87: WCAU-TV New Jersey correspondent
- 1987–93: WCBS-TV Anchor of weekday noon and weekend night newscasts; reporter
- 1993–present: NBC News
- 1993–94, 1996–2004: correspondent
- 1993–99: NBC Nightly News weekend anchor
- 1994–96: White House correspondent
- 1996–04: MSNBC The News with Brian Williams anchor
- 2004–15: NBC Nightly News anchor
- 2011–13: Rock Center with Brian Williams host
- 2015: six-month suspension from NBC Nightly News without pay for misrepresenting Iraq War experience
- 2015–present: MSNBC Chief Breaking News Anchor
- 2016–present: The 11th Hour with Brian Williams Anchor
See also
References
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I come from a loud Irish-Catholic family.
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Mr. Williams grew up in Mom-apple-pie-and-TV-trays style in Middletown, Monmouth County, a town of true middle class. ... Mr. Williams, who was in junior high when the family moved there from Elmira, N.Y., was an average student who had his eyes on fast cars, fun summer jobs and hanging out at the local fire station, where he became a volunteer firefighter.
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Graduated from Mater Dei, a Roman Catholic High School in New Monmouth, N.J.
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- Operation Iraqi Freedom: The Inside Story|date=September 1, 2003
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- "Archived copy" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on March 3, 2016. Retrieved February 14, 2018.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
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- "Honorary Degree - University Awards & Recognition - The Ohio State University". www.osu.edu.
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External links
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Brian Williams. |
- NBC News bio
- Appearances on C-SPAN
- "Brian Williams: My First Big Break", Mediabistro (2012)
- "The duPont Talks: Tom Brokaw and Brian Williams", Columbia Journalism School (2014)
- Chmiel, David, "His Heart Belongs to Jersey", New Jersey Monthly, June 9, 2008.
Media offices | ||
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Preceded by Andrea Mitchell |
Chief White House Correspondent of NBC News 1994–1996 |
Succeeded by David Bloom |
Preceded by Tom Brokaw |
Weekday Anchor of NBC Nightly News 2004–2015 |
Succeeded by Lester Holt |