Exclusive: Law & Order: Svu star Tamara Tunie is to narrate a documentary about the domestic assault on the Capitol complex for PBS.
Tunie, who also stars in Netflix’s Cowboy Bebop, will lead Preserving Democracy: Pursuing a More Perfect Union.
The two-hour doc, which will air on January 6 2022 on The Wnet Group’s PBS station Thirteen, will examine the pursuit of democracy, within the U.S. and others, on the anniversary of the 2021 Capitol riot.
It will chronicle the history of the democratic system from its origins to the present and address political divisiveness and threats to democracy around the world, considering global progress as well as regression and offering reflections on lessons learned.
It comes a year after the insurrection, which stands out as one of the most shocking moments in American history. Incited by a sitting president, the riot caused the deaths of five people; 140 Metropolitan Police Department...
Tunie, who also stars in Netflix’s Cowboy Bebop, will lead Preserving Democracy: Pursuing a More Perfect Union.
The two-hour doc, which will air on January 6 2022 on The Wnet Group’s PBS station Thirteen, will examine the pursuit of democracy, within the U.S. and others, on the anniversary of the 2021 Capitol riot.
It will chronicle the history of the democratic system from its origins to the present and address political divisiveness and threats to democracy around the world, considering global progress as well as regression and offering reflections on lessons learned.
It comes a year after the insurrection, which stands out as one of the most shocking moments in American history. Incited by a sitting president, the riot caused the deaths of five people; 140 Metropolitan Police Department...
- 12/1/2021
- by Peter White
- Deadline Film + TV
All Arts unveiled the fall lineup for “The First Twenty,” a new content initiative exploring how the first two decades of the 21st century have impacted American art and culture.
“The First Twenty” includes three new specials. Premiering on Sept. 7 is “Afterwards” by playwright Enda Walsh. Jeremy Dennis’ “Ma’s House” premieres on Oct. 11 in honor of Indigenous Peoples’ Day. “Twenty Years of Asian American Playwriting” by Ralph Peña and the Ma-Yi Theater Company will air in November. All three will stream on the All Arts app and website, and premiere in the New York Metro area on the All Arts TV channel.
“Our mission with ‘The First Twenty’ initiative is to contemplate and investigate contemporary society and its challenges through alternative lenses,” said James King, artistic director of All Arts. “We are inviting artists from traditionally underserved communities to create exciting new content that illuminates their unique cultures and perspectives.
“The First Twenty” includes three new specials. Premiering on Sept. 7 is “Afterwards” by playwright Enda Walsh. Jeremy Dennis’ “Ma’s House” premieres on Oct. 11 in honor of Indigenous Peoples’ Day. “Twenty Years of Asian American Playwriting” by Ralph Peña and the Ma-Yi Theater Company will air in November. All three will stream on the All Arts app and website, and premiere in the New York Metro area on the All Arts TV channel.
“Our mission with ‘The First Twenty’ initiative is to contemplate and investigate contemporary society and its challenges through alternative lenses,” said James King, artistic director of All Arts. “We are inviting artists from traditionally underserved communities to create exciting new content that illuminates their unique cultures and perspectives.
- 8/26/2021
- by Selome Hailu
- Variety Film + TV
In today’s TV news roundup, Variety obtained an exclusive clip of Lauren Daigle performing in BYUtv’s holiday special “Christmas Under the Stars,” and CBS announced a premiere date for “The Equalizer.”
Dates
Netflix will release its upcoming drama series “Firefly Lane” Feb. 3. The 10-episode hour-long show follows the unlikely duo of the bold Tully and shy Kate who are bonded by a tragedy at age 14. The show, based on the novel of the same name by New York Times bestseller Kristin Hannah, who serves as co-executive producer, the series follows the women as they experience 30 years of ups and downs, some of which threaten their friendship. Katherine Heigl and Sarah Chalke star as the adult versions of Tully and Kate, respectively. Watch a teaser below.
CBS’ new drama “The Equalizer,” starring Queen Latifah, will air following CBS Sports’ broadcast of “Super Bowl Lv” on Feb. 7. “The Equalizer” is...
Dates
Netflix will release its upcoming drama series “Firefly Lane” Feb. 3. The 10-episode hour-long show follows the unlikely duo of the bold Tully and shy Kate who are bonded by a tragedy at age 14. The show, based on the novel of the same name by New York Times bestseller Kristin Hannah, who serves as co-executive producer, the series follows the women as they experience 30 years of ups and downs, some of which threaten their friendship. Katherine Heigl and Sarah Chalke star as the adult versions of Tully and Kate, respectively. Watch a teaser below.
CBS’ new drama “The Equalizer,” starring Queen Latifah, will air following CBS Sports’ broadcast of “Super Bowl Lv” on Feb. 7. “The Equalizer” is...
- 12/3/2020
- by Natalie Oganesyan
- Variety Film + TV
PBS’ 50th year is also its 14th with Paula Kerger at its helm. She is now the longest-serving top executive in PBS’ history — and has guided it through a period of accelerated change.
“I don’t think I have words to express how much I feel that Paula’s been the perfect leader for the perfect time for PBS,” says the documentarian Ken Burns. “I have in my long tenure there dating back to the early ’80s been through many, many presidents, and she is far and away the best chief executive that we’ve ever had.”
Kerger entered public broadcasting through the nonprofit sector, joining New York’s Wnet in 1993 as head of development — not a programming role, but a fundraising one. She was shortly thereafter named general manager of the station. Kerger had no prior media experience. But she had been successful in firming Wnet’s financial footing...
“I don’t think I have words to express how much I feel that Paula’s been the perfect leader for the perfect time for PBS,” says the documentarian Ken Burns. “I have in my long tenure there dating back to the early ’80s been through many, many presidents, and she is far and away the best chief executive that we’ve ever had.”
Kerger entered public broadcasting through the nonprofit sector, joining New York’s Wnet in 1993 as head of development — not a programming role, but a fundraising one. She was shortly thereafter named general manager of the station. Kerger had no prior media experience. But she had been successful in firming Wnet’s financial footing...
- 7/16/2020
- by Daniel Holloway
- Variety Film + TV
“All right. I am told there is a tie.”
— Presenter N.J. Burkett, president of the New York chapter of NATAS, at the 2014 News & Documentary Emmy Awards
For decades, the biggest names in television news were honored at the annual News & Documentary Emmy Awards through a voting system that was designed to generate a bewildering number of ties.
Since the awards were launched in 1980, more than 280 categories ended in ties, including some crazy ones in the early years. At the inaugural awards in 1980, there were two nine-way ties and an eight-way tie. In 1981, a category ended in a 21-way tie. By 1985, a total of 24 awards – nearly half of all the those presented – ended in ties. During the 1990s, there were 124 ties, averaging more than 12 a year.
Records provided to Deadline by the National Academy of Television Arts & Sciences reveal that since 1980, only four of 39 shows didn’t include at least one...
— Presenter N.J. Burkett, president of the New York chapter of NATAS, at the 2014 News & Documentary Emmy Awards
For decades, the biggest names in television news were honored at the annual News & Documentary Emmy Awards through a voting system that was designed to generate a bewildering number of ties.
Since the awards were launched in 1980, more than 280 categories ended in ties, including some crazy ones in the early years. At the inaugural awards in 1980, there were two nine-way ties and an eight-way tie. In 1981, a category ended in a 21-way tie. By 1985, a total of 24 awards – nearly half of all the those presented – ended in ties. During the 1990s, there were 124 ties, averaging more than 12 a year.
Records provided to Deadline by the National Academy of Television Arts & Sciences reveal that since 1980, only four of 39 shows didn’t include at least one...
- 9/25/2019
- by David Robb
- Deadline Film + TV
Wnet, the parent company of New York PBS stations Thirteen and WLIW21 and operator of Njtv, is launching a free, 24-hour broadcast and streaming channel dedicated to dance, film, literature, music, theater and other art forms.
All Arts, which will go live on January 28, will feature an eclectic mix of new, original shows produced by WLIW21, as well as acquired programs from around the world and archival programs mined from Wnet’s 50-year history of arts broadcasting.
Select programming is already available on the web as well as via Facebook, Twitter, and Instagram. At launch, the streaming service will be found on iOS and Android smartphones and tablets, as well as Roku, Apple TV and Amazon Fire TV.
Shows that will air on All Arts include Broadway Sandwich, which follows Broadway stars on their breaks, bringing viewers behind the scenes of major shows. The first episode features Hamilton and Kinky Boots.
All Arts, which will go live on January 28, will feature an eclectic mix of new, original shows produced by WLIW21, as well as acquired programs from around the world and archival programs mined from Wnet’s 50-year history of arts broadcasting.
Select programming is already available on the web as well as via Facebook, Twitter, and Instagram. At launch, the streaming service will be found on iOS and Android smartphones and tablets, as well as Roku, Apple TV and Amazon Fire TV.
Shows that will air on All Arts include Broadway Sandwich, which follows Broadway stars on their breaks, bringing viewers behind the scenes of major shows. The first episode features Hamilton and Kinky Boots.
- 1/24/2019
- by Dade Hayes
- Deadline Film + TV
Exclusive: PBS is bringing back an iconic property after nearly two decades. The pubcaster said today that a new version of Firing Line, the William F. Buckley-hosted public-affairs show it aired from 1966-99, will premiere in June. The new host is political strategist and commentator Margaret Hoover.
Produced by Wnet/Thirteen, the weekly series will bring together the brightest minds and freshest voices from across the political spectrum to engage in a contest of ideas about important issues confronting our nation, PBS said. Firing Line with Margaret Hoover will launch at 10 Am Saturday, June 2, on New York’s Thirteen, which will air the first three episodes before the series bows on PBS stations nationwide.
The pubcaster said the show will maintain the character of the original Buckley-fronted series, providing a platform that is diligent in its commitment to a balanced exchange of opinion. The series, PBS notes, comes at...
Produced by Wnet/Thirteen, the weekly series will bring together the brightest minds and freshest voices from across the political spectrum to engage in a contest of ideas about important issues confronting our nation, PBS said. Firing Line with Margaret Hoover will launch at 10 Am Saturday, June 2, on New York’s Thirteen, which will air the first three episodes before the series bows on PBS stations nationwide.
The pubcaster said the show will maintain the character of the original Buckley-fronted series, providing a platform that is diligent in its commitment to a balanced exchange of opinion. The series, PBS notes, comes at...
- 4/26/2018
- by Erik Pedersen
- Deadline Film + TV
Theater Close-Up -- the unique collaboration between Thirteen and the large community of New York City area Off-Broadway and regional theaters - continues with John Strand's The Originalist, captured live on-stage at Arena Stage in Washington, D.C., Monday, March 13 at 9 p.m. on Thirteen, with an encore presentation on Sunday, March 19 at 340 a.m. The play will also air Sunday, March 26 at 10 p.m. on WLIW21. The play, directed on the stage by Molly Smith, will be available for streaming for two weeks after the broadcast.L to R Edward Gero as Supreme Court Justice Antonin Scalia and Kerry Warren as Cat in The Originalist at Arena Stage at the Mead Center for American Theater. Credit C. Stanley Photography. Four-time Helen Hayes Award winner Edward Gero Red returned to Arena Stage as one of America's most brilliant and polarizing figures Supreme Court Justice Antonin Scalia. When bright, liberal, Harvard...
- 3/1/2017
- by TV News Desk
- BroadwayWorld.com
Gayle King, Lin-Manuel Miranda, Alex Horwitz and Ron Chernow Photo: Anne-Katrin Titze
The RadicalMedia and PBS Great Performances documentary, Hamilton's America, had its world première in the 54th New York Film Festival as a Special Events selection along with Ang Lee's Billy Lynn's Long Halftime Walk, Lonny Price's The Best Worst Thing That Ever Could Have Happened on a Stephen Sondheim - Harold Prince Broadway production, and Jim Jarmusch's Iggy Pop and The Stooges doc Gimme Danger.
Lin-Manuel Miranda on President Barack Obama attending Hamilton: "He didn't see me in it. He saw Javier Muñoz …" Photo: Anne-Katrin Titze
The premiere of Hamilton's America on Monday at the 3400-seat auditorium of the United Palace in Washington Heights, was introduced by PBS CEO and President Paula Kreger and President and CEO of Wnet New York Public Media, Neal Shapiro.
David Horn, executive producer of Great Performances introduced the post-screening panel,...
The RadicalMedia and PBS Great Performances documentary, Hamilton's America, had its world première in the 54th New York Film Festival as a Special Events selection along with Ang Lee's Billy Lynn's Long Halftime Walk, Lonny Price's The Best Worst Thing That Ever Could Have Happened on a Stephen Sondheim - Harold Prince Broadway production, and Jim Jarmusch's Iggy Pop and The Stooges doc Gimme Danger.
Lin-Manuel Miranda on President Barack Obama attending Hamilton: "He didn't see me in it. He saw Javier Muñoz …" Photo: Anne-Katrin Titze
The premiere of Hamilton's America on Monday at the 3400-seat auditorium of the United Palace in Washington Heights, was introduced by PBS CEO and President Paula Kreger and President and CEO of Wnet New York Public Media, Neal Shapiro.
David Horn, executive producer of Great Performances introduced the post-screening panel,...
- 10/19/2016
- by Anne-Katrin Titze
- eyeforfilm.co.uk
Wnet, parent company of public media outlets Thirteen, WLIW21 and operator of Njtv, will broadcast "12-12-12" The Concert for Sandy Relief--a fundraising event to aid the victims of Hurricane Sandy--on December 12 at 8:00 p.m. From Wnet All three public television stations will broadcast the concert, which will also be carried widely on U.S. cable channels and streamed online nationally and internationally. Wnet had to petition the FCC for special permission to air the concert, as public stations by law may not raise funds for any other non-profit cause. "We've been serving the tri-state community for 50 years, and Sandy did enormous damage to our friends, neighbors and viewers," said Neal Shapiro, President and CEO of Wnet, "We typically...
- 12/11/2012
- by April MacIntyre
- Monsters and Critics
Tody at the PBS Press Tour in the Beverly Hilton, it was announced that the free concert offered by internationally acclaimed tenor Andrea Bocelli will take place on Central Park's Great Lawn, Thursday, September 15, 2011, and will be recorded in high definition by Thirteen.s Great Performances. Accompanied by the New York Philharmonic, under the direction of music director Alan Gilbert, the Westminster Symphonic Choir, conducted by Joe Miller, with special guest artists to be announced, the gala event is a special gift to New York City. "Bringing artists of this magnitude to audiences is core to our mission at Thirteen," said Neal Shapiro, Wnet CEO and president, of the Bocelli event. "This free concert in New York City's...
- 8/1/2011
- by April MacIntyre
- Monsters and Critics
NEW YORK -- NBC News veteran Steve Capus has been appointed president of the peacock's news division. The move allows Capus to take off the "acting" from the job he had been doing since September, when his predecessor, Neal Shapiro, announced his long-expected resignation (HR 9/7). Capus will report to Jeff Zucker. In picking Capus, NBC is going with a producer and executive with a proven track record at a time when the network news business is changing rapidly. Capus was widely praised in his time as acting president, shoring up a news division that, while still No. 1, had been losing ground in the morning and evening news. Before he was promoted to senior vp of NBC News, Capus had been executive producer of the NBC Nightly News, first with Tom Brokaw and then with Brian Williams.
- 11/29/2005
- The Hollywood Reporter - Movie News
NEW YORK -- A week after Neal Shapiro left his post, NBC News has tapped a veteran executive to the second-in-command job. Cheryl Gould will move back across the Hudson River to become senior vp NBC News, the company said Thursday. Gould has been vp at CNBC and NBC News, responsible for weekend and primetime development for the business-news channel. She'll report to Steve Capus, who was senior vp at NBC News before becoming acting president last week upon Shapiro's departure. Gould will work with Capus on day-to-day management, the company said.
- 9/16/2005
- The Hollywood Reporter - Movie News
NBC News president Neal Shapiro resigned Tuesday, a move anticipated months ago amid increased competition for the division's morning franchise Today. NBC Universal Television Group president Jeff Zucker named Steve Capus, who was promoted to senior vp of the division in June, as acting president. Shapiro told staffers in a memo that he would step down Friday, ensuring he will have a role in shaping NBC's coverage of the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina. "I also found myself missing the opportunity for the kind of creativity I've had in previous jobs," he said in the memo as his motivation for leaving.
NBC News president Neal Shapiro resigned Tuesday, a move anticipated months ago amid increased competition for the division's morning franchise Today. NBC Universal Television Group president Jeff Zucker named Steve Capus, who was promoted to senior vp of the division in June, as acting president. Shapiro told staffers in a memo that he would step down Friday, ensuring he will have a role in shaping NBC's coverage of the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina. "I also found myself missing the opportunity for the kind of creativity I've had in previous jobs," he said in the memo as his motivation for leaving.
NBC News president Neal Shapiro resigned Tuesday, a move anticipated months ago amid increased competition for the division's morning franchise Today. NBC Universal Television Group president Jeff Zucker named Steve Capus, who was promoted to senior vp of the division in June, as acting president. Shapiro told staffers in a memo that he would step down Friday, ensuring he will have a role in shaping NBC's coverage of the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina. "I also found myself missing the opportunity for the kind of creativity I've had in previous jobs," he said in the memo as his motivation for leaving.
NEW YORK -- NBC News made a pair of key staff changes Monday, promoting Nightly News executive producer Steve Capus to the No. 2 spot in the division and naming his deputy John Reiss to replace him. Capus becomes senior vp at NBC News, responsible for NBC Nightly News as well as the coverage of breaking news and general newsgathering. He also will be the last word in ethics, style and standards for NBC News. He replaces Bill Wheatley, who retired in April. The announcement was made Monday by NBC News president Neal Shapiro, whose own future at the network has been clouded in rumors that he might soon be departing.
NEW YORK -- A month and a half before retiring from NBC News, Bill Wheatley is being promoted to executive vp. Wheatley, who announced this month that he will leave NBC after a 30-year career, has been senior vp since 1993. But to honor Wheatley's contributions, NBC News president Neal Shapiro said Thursday that he will promote him, effective immediately. "There is absolutely no way we could let Bill leave NBC News without recognizing the tremendous impact he has had over the past three decades," Shapiro said.
- 4/29/2005
- The Hollywood Reporter - Movie News
NEW YORK -- Jim Bell, an NBC veteran who has been a key player in coordinating the peacock's extensive Olympics coverage during the past 15 years, was formally named the new executive producer of Today, NBC executives confirmed Wednesday. Bell said his experience producing the Olympics and other sports for NBC will serve him well in his new job, where he's tasked with keeping the morning show on top at a time when it is facing tougher competition from ABC's Good Morning America. "It's live television, it's reacting to things as they happen," Bell said in an interview. "There are a lot of similarities" between producing sports and a morning show like Today. He steps into the job vacated by Tom Touchet, who was ousted Tuesday after more than two years in the top job (HR 4/20). Bell's promotion was one of two announced Wednesday by NBC News; MSNBC primetime chief Phil Griffin has been tapped as senior vp at NBC News. Bell and Griffin will report to NBC News president Neal Shapiro.
- 4/21/2005
- The Hollywood Reporter - Movie News
NEW YORK -- Jim Bell, an NBC veteran who has been a key player in coordinating the peacock's extensive Olympics coverage during the past 15 years, was formally named the new executive producer of Today, NBC executives confirmed Wednesday (HR 4/20). Bell said his experience producing the Olympics and other sports for NBC will serve him well in his new job, where he's tasked with keeping the morning show on top at a time when it is facing tougher competition from ABC's Good Morning America. "It's live television, it's reacting to things as they happen," Bell said in an interview. "There are a lot of similiarities" between producing sports and a morning show like Today. He steps into the job vacated by Tom Touchet, who was ousted Tuesday afternoon after more than two years in the top job. Bell's promotion was one of two announced Wednesday by NBC News; MSNBC primetime chief Phil Griffin has been tapped as senior vp of NBC News. Both Bell and Griffin will report to NBC News president Neal Shapiro.
- 4/20/2005
- The Hollywood Reporter - Movie News
NEW YORK -- Former NBC Nightly News executive producer Jeff Gralnick will get a new job at NBC: advising NBC News on Internet and new technology. His new job title is Internet and technology consultant, reporting to NBC News president Neal Shapiro. He'll advise Shapiro and MSNBC chief Rick Kaplan, the network said. "As our business plan sharpens the focus on growth and new business initiatives, technology and the Internet has become an increasingly important platform for us," Shapiro said in a statement. Gralnick, who was with NBC Nightly News from 1993-96, is a 45-year veteran of TV journalism. He rejoined NBC as a consultant in 2002. He also worked for 25 years at ABC News, executive produced World News Tonight and launched ABCNews.com.
- 12/23/2004
- The Hollywood Reporter - Movie News
NBC News Prods. and NBC Enterprises have teamed to produce a half-hour weekly series for first-run syndication, Your Total Health, targeted for a fall debut. The series, to be hosted by Dateline NBC correspondent Hoda Kotb, will center on news and innovations in medicine and health. Each episode of Health will include a cut-in segment designed to allow stations the option of inserting a locally produced report. The series was announced Monday by NBC News president Neal Shapiro and NBC Enterprises president Ed Wilson.
- 3/30/2004
- The Hollywood Reporter - Movie News
NEW YORK -- Newly anointed MSNBC president Rick Kaplan began his second act in cable news by saying he has learned from his mistakes the first time around. NBC News on Tuesday officially named the ABC News and CNN veteran to MSNBC's top slot as division president Neal Shapiro looked to his former ABC colleague to pull the 8-year-old sibling of top-rated NBC out of third place. Kaplan spent 18 years as an ABC News executive before leaving in 1997 to run CNN U.S., an ill-fated move that resulted in his departure three years later. ABC News president David Westin resurrected Kaplan's career in February 2003, tapping him to help oversee the network's war effort and then naming him senior vp in June. He had been playing a large role in overseeing ABC's election coverage but had been working without a contract, sources said.
- 2/18/2004
- The Hollywood Reporter - Movie News
NEW YORK -- ABC News senior vp Rick Kaplan will replace MSNBC president Erik Sorenson, according to knowledgeable sources who said NBC will make the move public today. Kaplan will likely report to NBC News president Neal Shapiro, who has overseen MSNBC during the past year. MSNBC's poor ratings also have fueled speculation about Shapiro's future as well, especially with Jeff Zucker, president of the NBC Entertainment, News and Cable Group, about to add news to his portfolio with the closing of the Vivendi Universal deal. Sorenson, who joined MSNBC in July 1999, was unable to pull the network out of third place in the cable news wars, a standing that has embarrassed NBC honchos. Kaplan, a 30-year news veteran, had his own unhappy cable experience when was president of CNN U.S. from 1997-2000 after working for ABC News for 18 years. He was fired after his plans to make CNN a destination viewing spot -- through shows like NewsStand -- failed. He also took heat for clashing with CNN icon Lou Dobbs, who left the network shortly before Kaplan. ABC rehired Kaplan in February 2003 to help run its war coverage and in June named him to oversee Nightline, World News Tonight and Sunday's This Week. An MSNBC spokesman declined comment late Monday.
- 2/17/2004
- The Hollywood Reporter - Movie News
NEW YORK -- NBC News president Neal Shapiro took correspondent Ashleigh Banfield to the woodshed over the weekend for a speech she gave Thursday at Kansas State University. "She and we both agreed that she didn't intend to demean the work of her colleagues, and she will choose her words more carefully in the future," an NBC spokeswoman said. Other sources inside NBC said Banfield promised, in effect, not to do it again and to check her facts before making public statements in the future. Banfield had criticized NBC in the speech for closing its bureau in Kabul, Afghanistan, a statement that the network repudiated as untrue. Sources said Shapiro "bawled her out" for what were perceived as criticisms over the war coverage of all of the networks, including NBC and MSNBC. In her speech, Banfield said the networks had portrayed the Iraqi war as "glorious and wonderful" because they had failed to show the bloody horrors of the battles.
- 4/29/2003
- The Hollywood Reporter - Movie News
NEW YORK -- NBC News correspondent David Bloom died Sunday while stationed in Iraq after apparently suffering a pulmonary embolism, the network said, adding that his death was not combat-related. Bloom, 39, had been embedded with the Third Infantry Division, 2nd Battalion, 315 Mechanized Unit about 25 miles south of Baghdad when he suddenly collapsed. He was pronounced dead after being airlifted to a nearby field medical unit, NBC said. Bloom, who lived in the New York area with his wife, Melanie, and three daughters, was a hugely visible presence on television over the past month as he accompanied columns of military vehicles through the desert, often reporting through a state-of-the-art videophone that enabled him to report live while cameraman Craig White sent back clear pictures as his unit was on the move. He filed numerous reports for NBC, MSNBC and CNBC. In a statement, NBC News president Neal Shapiro said: "David Bloom was an extraordinary man and dedicated journalist; his courage, passion and unerring devotion to his craft was unparalleled. Over the past few weeks, we marveled as he demonstrated a tireless devotion to this story. At this incredibly difficult time, our thoughts and prayers are with David's family and all of our brave colleagues who remain overseas."...
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