The Sunday Column – The loss of a legend
I was sitting in a garden in Glasnevin when Ellen Parikka walked out and asked “Do you know who Tim Russert is?” I told her he was a big journalist in the US. “He’s dead,” she responded.
The host of NBC’s Meet the Press, a show which thanks to iTunes I could continue to watch after NTL replaced CNBC with Living, Russert was one of the few newsmen left that didn’t bring an agenda into affairs. On my many trips to the US in the past two years I always looked forward to being able to watch Russert in action at the time of the day suited to such Sunday morning fare.
This was a man that loved his job and loved doing it well. Be a guest Republican or Democrat, Russert would interview them in a manner that was by no means badgering but was effective at getting the requisite information and trapping spoofers. He’d give the subject enough rope to hand themselves before striking with a question rooted in research of previous comments made by the guest, often in a previous appearance on Meet the Press.
Personalities rarely get remembered in journalism, only the few immortalised in cinema like Woodward and Bernstein tend to get remembered after their prime. The public’s memory of Russert will likely fade in a short few years but for one Dublin-based freelancer, his ethics and method will live on.
Ar dheis Dé go raibh a anam
Sorry this column is two days late. My limited broadband access at present is making it difficult to post on time.
Labels: journalism, journalist, meet the press, sunday column, tim russert, tribute


