Growing up I spent an inordinate amount of time watching PBS. Mister Rogers, Sesame Street, Zoom were the starter kit. Benny Hill and Monty Python provided special moments for the later nights. McLaughlin Group and the MacNeil/Lehrer News hour were the big boy shows I ultimately glommed on to. McLaughlin Group was humorous angst and seemed a decent way for folks to disagree and yet still get along (be in the same room each week). MacNeil/Lehrer was the real deal. It wasn't for everyone because it was literally just facts and interviews. Neither provided an opinion which sometimes led to a segment ending and your left with your own thoughts on what just happened? Who is right and wrong? Lehrer, in particular, was like watching my old man deliver the news. Few words, each counted, fair...hear both sides, detailed. No frills people. Just the facts. He's been out of the game for a little while which is too bad. He moderated some of every presidential debate from 1988-2012. Saw this quote and wish more people valued the same:
“I have an old-fashioned view that news is not a commodity,” Mr. Lehrer told The American Journalism Review in 2001. “News is information that’s required in a democratic society, and Thomas Jefferson said a democracy is dependent on an informed citizenry. That sounds corny, but I don’t care whether it sounds corny or not. It’s the truth.”
https://www.nytimes.com/2020/01/23/business/media/jim-lehrer-dead.html85, same as the old man. Travel well. You earned it.
edit..gotta include the PBS obit
https://www.pbs.org/newshour/nation/remembering-jim-lehrerJim Lehrer’s Rules
1. Do nothing I cannot defend.
2. Cover, write and present every story with the care I would want if the story were about me.
3. Assume there is at least one other side or version to every story.
4. Assume the viewer is as smart and caring and good a person as I am.
5. Assume the same about all people on whom I report.
6. Assume personal lives are a private matter until a legitimate turn in the story absolutely mandates otherwise.
7. Carefully separate opinion and analysis from straight news stories and clearly label everything
8. Do not use anonymous sources or blind quotes except on rare and monumental occasions. No one should be allowed to attack another anonymously.
9. “I am not in the entertainment business.”