Wednesday, October 3, 2012

Moderator Jim Lehrer knows the debate game







Veteran journalist Jim Lehrer discusses presidential debates on CNN's

Veteran journalist Jim Lehrer discusses presidential debates on CNN's "Reliable Sources."

STORY HIGHLIGHTS



  • Veteran PBS journalist has moderated 11 previous debates

  • Wrote a book tracing the history of televised presidential debates

  • Married 52 years; 3 daughters, six grandchildren

  • Admitted dropping the ball when Clinton talked about Monica Lewinsky





(CNN) -- Jim Lehrer is hosting his 12th presidential or vice-presidential debate Wednesday night. His background includes decades of print and television journalism, as well as a stint in the military.

Here are some things you might not know about Lehrer:

-- Co-founder and executive editor of what is now called "PBS NewsHour"; he stepped back from daily anchor duties in May 2011.

-- Has presided over 11 presidential and vice-presidential debates, beginning in 1988.

-- Wrote "Tension City: Inside the Presidential Debates, From Kennedy-Nixon to Obama-McCain."

-- Has compared moderating a presidential debate to "walking on the blade of a very sharp knife."

-- Has been involved in journalism for 53 years, first at newspapers in Dallas, and for 37 years at "NewsHour" in its various forms.

-- Interviewed President Bill Clinton the day the Monica Lewinsky scandal broke and admitted he didn't pick up on Clinton's use of the present tense when he said, "There is no improper relationship."

-- Has won numerous awards, including two Emmys, a George Foster Peabody Award, the National Humanities Medal and the National Press Club's Fourth Estate Award.

-- Has also written 20 novels, two memoirs and three plays.

-- Born in Wichita, Kansas, in 1934.

-- Bachelor's degree in journalism, University of Missouri, 1956.

-- U.S. Marine Corps, 1956-59.

-- Married since 1960; three daughters, six grandchildren.

-- Underwent a heart valve procedure in April 2008 that was deemed "a complete success."

Full coverage of the first 2012 presidential debates

Leaving the PBS anchor chair

iReport: What questions would you ask?


Source & Image : CNN Politics

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