Aaron Brown To Return To TV In PBS Series

stumble digg reddit del.ico.us news trust

LYNN ELBER | April 28, 2008 07:35 AM EST | AP

Compare other versions »

Show your support.
Buzz this article up.
Bettina Hansen/The Cronkite Journal This picture provided by The Cronkite Journal shows Aaron Brown at Arizona State University on April 23, 2008. Brown, the former CNN anchor who found cable TV an awkward fit, is joining PBS' "Wide Angle" series to end his on-air absence of more than two years. (AP Photo/The Cronkite Journal, Bettina Hansen)

LOS ANGELES — Aaron Brown, the former CNN anchor who found cable TV an awkward fit, is joining PBS' "Wide Angle" series and ending his on-air absence of more than two years.

"If I was going to do broadcast journalism again, be a public person again ... then it had to be something different from what I'd done," Brown told The Associated Press. "You can count on one hand how many gigs there are like this."

Anchoring "Wide Angle," a weekly public affairs series with a global focus, offers the chance "to work in an environment where people just think about making good TV and good journalism," Brown said.

"By the end (of an episode), you understand the world you live in and how it's connected to you," he said Saturday.

Brown, 59, who left CNN in November 2005 during a shake-up that gave his time slot to rising star Anderson Cooper, said he was contractually barred from working in TV until last June. He's been teaching at Arizona State University as its first Walter Cronkite Professor of Journalism.

"Wide Angle" begins its seventh season July 1. PBS planned to announce Brown's hiring on Monday.

Brown has distinguished himself as an anchor by avoiding a "booming voice-of-God" approach and instead delivering news as a storyteller, said Stephen Segaller, director of national production at Thirteen/WNET, the New York station that produces "Wide Angle."

Besides his distinctive on-camera demeanor, Brown has "a good sense of what international stories will mean to American audiences and how the stories will play," Segaller said.

Brown contrasted the work he expects to do at PBS with how cable television operated at times during his tenure.

"I don't want to get into the business of indicting cable TV, but some of what went on was just television, not journalism," he said. Expanding on his comments, he said that cable TV is a tough business that can be pushed into focusing on sensational, "tabloidy stories."

"I understand why they do it. It's a very ratings-driven environment," Brown said.

Before joining CNN, Brown worked at ABC as a reporter on programs including "World News Tonight with Peter Jennings" and "Nightline" and as anchor of "World News Tonight Saturday" and "World News Now."

His first day at CNN was Sept. 11, 2001, and his heartfelt anchoring from a rooftop in Manhattan immediately thrust him into a major role there. But expectations that he would become the face of the network didn't pan out.

Brown's quirky, cerebral 10 p.m. newscast had a following with fans who enjoyed his commentaries and "The Whip," a quick review of top international stories, but he lost ratings ground to Greta Van Susteren of Fox News Channel.

CNN chose to showcase its hotter personality, Cooper, whose profile had grown in 2005 and peaked during Hurricane Katrina coverage. Brown's time slot went to Cooper and Brown left by what CNN termed mutual agreement.

Reflecting on his time at the channel, Brown said he became "oddly emblematic" of what he termed an "anti-tabloid guy."

"I didn't practice the `high church' of journalism all the time, but I think there was some sense that I was uncomfortable in that other, tabloidy world, and I think viewers knew that and I couldn't pull it off," he said.

Besides serving as anchor of "Wide Angle" and helping prepare episodes for broadcast, Brown plans to do field work on a story, possibly involving Venezuela or the Middle East. Topics to be covered this season include the crisis in the Sudan and the changing role of Japan's military.

 
 

Comments
164
Pending Comments
0

Want to reply to a comment? Hint: Click "Reply" at the bottom of the comment; after being approved your comment will appear directly underneath the comment you replied to

View Comments:
Page: 1 2 3 4 5 Next › Last » (5 pages total)

I used to love watching Aaron Brown on CNN. He was so mature, so calm, so fair in his coverage of the day's news. I should have known it wouldn't last.

How can an intelligent, insightful, fair, analytical, calm, mature adult possibly compete with the chemically-impaired brain damaged line-up of cons, liars, conspirators, racist sexist losers they've got on Fox news. I wonder if when they got rid of Aaron Brown at CNN, they had some HR policy of only hiring coked-up crazies like they guy who recently got nailed in central park with his meth and his doggie leash, or hand cuffs or whatever it was he had with him. (?? Oh wouldn't we love to know more).

I'm glad to see Aaron Brown is back and I'll be a grateful viewer.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:25 PM on 04/30/2008

A la Bill Moyers, another liberal talking head returns to TV courtesy of the American tax payer. Pathetic!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:11 PM on 04/30/2008

If I have to pay more taxes to make up for the tax breaks that radical right wing churches receive, then you can pay a little bit to fund some liberal voices on public television. It all balances out.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:20 AM on 05/01/2008

You want to compare "tax breaks" for charitable/religious organizations where people have free will to participate or reject them vs. mandated government funding of political speech on PBS? Are you really that stupid to equate the two?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:29 PM on 05/04/2008

Great NEWS! And I do mean "news." We got more in-depth information out of Aaron Brown's one-hour on NewsNight, than we do watching CNN all day these days. I found myself even TiVo-ing Aaron every night. NewsNight explored serious issues etter than most, and then in lighter moments would make you laugh out loud with his exchanges with the NPR Annoying Music Guy (Jim Nader?), and his nightly "predictions" of tomorrow's newspaper headlines. Aaron Brown is a classy thoughtful newsman, in the fold of Edward R. Murrow, and I for one will be TiVo-ing his new PBS programs. Seems like a perfect match. Last night I tuned to CNN and found Tony Snow blabbering. They allowed Aaron Brown to get away and hired Tony Snow? CNN has sold its soul.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:58 PM on 04/29/2008

Bravo, Aaron. PBS is the perfect venue for you--and me. I find Anderson Cooper unwatchable. So busy
jumping from story to story, Anderson rushes past them, somehow managing to miss than altogether.
"We're digging deeper," his mantra, never actually happens. Your thoughtful interviews are long gone.
You listened well, an art that eludes Anderson. Even your somewhat old-fashioned, albeit charming
"Rooster" segment on the morning papers was more engaging than Anderson's campy talk with the eyebrow-wiggling Erica Hill--so pedestrian and silly. As an old-school reporter (print), to this day I cannot understand how Anderson's "performance" in the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina was so
widely praised. His crying jag even led to "New York Magazine" proclaiming him the prototype of the
new (emotive) anchorman. When did reporters start crying publicly? What was so novel or revolutionary about Anderson scolding Senator Mary Landreu about her litany of people to thank so
she could get on with helping her constituents. Annoying as her spiel, typical of politicians, was did
it hold up the repair work? The Ninth Ward to this day is still largely unliveable. Welcome back, Aaron, and I look forward to your PBS reports. Patricia Burstein

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:29 PM on 04/29/2008

Good to see a great jounalist get back into the swing of things.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:36 AM on 04/29/2008

I liked his style and he was a real journalist. I remember when they threw him under the bus at CNN for that idiot. I stopped watching CNN right after that. What a joke Cable TV news is. Other than KOlbermann - there is nothing worth watching.

PBS Newshour is the best news we have to date.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:40 PM on 04/29/2008

This guy used to put me to sleep. I was never quite sure if he really understood what he was reading off the teleprompter.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:48 AM on 04/29/2008

aaron brown...i still dream that he will get his old job back at cnn. the 10pm slot with anderson cooper is full of pathetic, hipster faux news. cnn blew it when they fired brown in favor of cooper. style over substance.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:54 AM on 04/29/2008

Yippeeeeeee!! Aaron Brown. Now that's a journalist.

Most of these other folks are what we like to call "join-the-list."


Hooray for Aaron Brown. Bring some sanity and maturity to the the news. You should take over the News Hour.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:57 PM on 04/28/2008

Wonderful!
I guess I am among the minority who found Anderson Cooper shallow and unprepared. Better than the folks on Faux News, but that's not saying much.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:06 PM on 04/28/2008

I am part of your minority. I've never gotten the appeal of Anderson Cooper. O liked Aaron Brown, especially the bit about the newspaper headlines. He wasn't stingy w/ the print merdia.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:07 PM on 04/28/2008

Now our country needs for him to take over the Newshour

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:00 PM on 04/28/2008

Yes, it's now the Newshour Debate -- not real news.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:36 PM on 04/28/2008

Pushing someone like Aaron out and brining in a young wipper snapper who has no historic perspective, and easily spun is a reflection of the Republican Corporate Media and how beholden to the Republicans they are for Media Consolidation.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:51 PM on 04/28/2008

Welcome back, Aaron!
You've been sorely missed!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:50 PM on 04/28/2008

I have missed Aaron Brown so much. His broadcast was an oasis in a desert of nonsense that masquerades as broadcast news and analysis. He clearly has a fan base. I was so shocked when I saw AC in Aaron's usual time slot. I went online to find out, and finally saw what had happened. I couldn't imagine what had gotten into CNN's head. They let go of one of the brightest lights in TV news. Their loss is PBS's gain. I wish him a long and successful career there. I can't wait to plug him into my routine again.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:41 PM on 04/28/2008

I am delighted to know that Aaron Brown will be on TV again...can't wait to see him. His news hour was quiet and serene; so different from the other programs with the bombast and loud voices. He could always calm me down in the evening. Good for Aaron. They couldn't keep a good man down.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:37 PM on 04/28/2008

Mr. Brown's departure from CNN proved me to be a reverse bellwether: Anything or one I like will be taken away, in this case a dry, contemplative man yanked off the air in favor of poor Mr. Cooper, the National Feeler and ultimate Peter Principle exemplar.
Brown and Cooper were snapped up from the overnight ABC news show, where they both did very well with the late night house style: no jacket, (usually blue) shirtsleeves rolled, low-key, slightly wry attitude. There might still be a shirtsleeved anchor over there, for all I know.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:04 PM on 04/28/2008

What really gets me is how little attention a story like this gets on Huffpo. Everyone is out there blasting Hillary or chasing Obama's preacher for God's sake, while it's the media that is driving this country and deciding in what direction the country is going.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:14 PM on 04/28/2008

Is anyone Really waiting?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:14 PM on 04/28/2008

It took me a while to get used to Aaron, but then I got to really liking him. Towards the end of his tenure, the program had started to change, and I recall him signing off saying something like: "This is Aaron Brown AND THEY CALL IT nightly news!" (emphasis mine) -- But I knew what he meant. I hope he does well on PBS, but even that "ain't what it used to be."

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:07 PM on 04/28/2008

I'm so glad he'll be back. And at PBS where he'll be appreciated.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:01 PM on 04/28/2008

Aaron Brown had a tendency to be smug and arrogant, but he was still worlds better than Anderson Cooper. Seriously, who watches Anderson Cooper? He's terrible as an anchor. Just terrible.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:18 PM on 04/28/2008

I'm so glad to see him come back. We've been missing real journalist in the country for along time now.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:24 PM on 04/28/2008

From Seattle (my hometown) to CNN I've always respected this guy. He's one of the few true journalists that remain. CNN showed their true colors by putting up AC....former host of the MOLE...please, what a joke. Any respect I had for CNN was lost when they dumped AB...it lies in my media garbage dump along with ABC and Fox. MSNBC only retains a slight presence with KO.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:14 PM on 04/28/2008

Excellent news! I'm tired of the "voice of God" and the "voices of the locker room". I'd like an intellect to discuss the news of the day for an audience of intellects.

Yes ... I want an elitist broadcast ... Please!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:13 PM on 04/28/2008

I lived in Seattle when Aaron Brown was on air there. We always enjoyed his newscast, there's just something about his calm voice and assuring manner. Someone you felt you could trust. Then he was gone from local news, later to pop up on the national news.

Aaron, so glad you are going to be hosting "Wide Angle" as well as writing your own stories. Your style of journalism was lost on CNN, and I'm sure you will become a staple on PBS akin to Bill Moyers, Jim Lehrer, even Gwen Iffel (sp?) Congratulations, and I look forward to hearing your story on Venezuela. Maybe PBS could develop something for Martha Radditz so she can open our eyes to life in the Middle East (and I don't mean "American-style!)

Why do we hate Pres. Chavez so much anyway?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:12 PM on 04/28/2008

i too have been watching aaron brown since he was in seattle. he was the only one we watched during the 9/11 broadcasts, and watched whatever program he hosted. i missed him and will watch him faithfully on pbs ( since its always on 90% of the time here anyway).

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:50 PM on 04/28/2008

Love Aaron Brown. I thought he was the best thing on CNN. Then he left. So I turned CNN off. What do I care if somebody is Gloria Vanderbilt's son...

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:11 PM on 04/28/2008

I can't wait - I miss the days of Aaron Brown and Bernard Shaw - when news WAS just that - NEWS

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:05 PM on 04/28/2008

The return of Aaron Brown to the air is one of the best things to happen to American broadcast journalism in a long time. No, he isn't perfect. But he's head and shoulders above anybody currently at any of the Cable News operations, and most of the broadcast ones.

I can understand why his parting of the ways with CNN included a couple of years out of the spotlight. As a competitor, he'd have skimmed the cream of their audience, leaving only the bottom nine tenths who would opt for a Lindsay Lohan crotch shot over a lucid report on world affairs every time.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:58 PM on 04/28/2008
Page: 1 2 3 4 5 Next › Last » (5 pages total)
Comments are closed for this entry

You must be logged in to reply to this comment. Log in