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  • 25
    Jan
    2012
    9:10pm, EST

    'One more thing ...': George Lewis on 42 years at NBC News

    After 42 years with NBC News, George Lewis has retired. NBC's Brian Williams reports.

    George Lewis, NBC News correspondent writes

    “One more thing.”  It’s something the late Steve Jobs used to say as he was introducing Apple’s latest gadgets, always saving the big surprise for the end of his presentation.

    As I end 42 years at NBC News, they’ve asked me to write “one more thing” about my incredible journey — a career that’s taken me to all 50 states, 30-some countries and all of Earth’s continents with the exception of Antarctica.  (Going there is on my bucket list of places to see.)

    I’m often asked what’s the most memorable story of my career and, after thousands of stories, that’s difficult to answer.

    April 30, 1975: NBC's George Lewis reports on the fall of Saigon from the USS Blue Ridge as evacuation efforts are underway.

    It was certainly memorable when I got assigned to cover the U.S. Embassy hostage crisis in Tehran in 1979, a crisis that dragged on for 444 days as 52 Americans were held by Iranian extremists.

    At one point, correspondent Fred Francis, producer Walter Millis and I were ushered into the embassy for an exclusive interview with one of the hostages, William Gallegos. On the way in, Fred and I both harbored fears that we, too, would be added to the roster of hostages, but that didn’t happen.


    Instead, Gallegos gave us a compelling account of what life was like for the hostages, an interview that was aired in prime time back in the USA.

    George Lewis reports on the legacy of Steve Jobs.

    It was certainly memorable when, in the middle of the Tiananmen Square revolt of 1989, Chinese authorities let us set up our cameras near the balcony overlooking the square, a spot where, 40 years earlier, Chairman Mao had proclaimed the birth of a new, communist China. Looking down on the thousands and thousands of young people camped out there, I asked my colleague, Keith Miller, “Have you ever seen anything like this?”

    He allowed as how he hadn’t. A few weeks later, the government decided the demonstrators were a threat to the People’s Republic and ordered the tanks into the square to crush the revolt. We had worn out our welcome by that time and had to keep our cameras hidden in order to record the deadly crackdown.

    It was certainly memorable when, in 1993, we launched an NBC Nightly News series called “almost 2001” to explain the impending revolution in information technology. My producers and I discovered that NBC actually had Internet capability that had gone totally unused up to that point.

    Nightly News

    George Lewis on a story.

    “We’re going to ask viewers hooked up to the Internet to send us email,” I explained to one of the executives in New York.

    “What’s email?” he asked.

    “It’s a system that allows people to send and receive messages on the Internet,” I replied.

    “What’s the Internet?”

    The conversation seems silly now, but remember, this was 1993.

    April 18, 2006: The estimated 7.8 magnitude San Francisco earthquake struck without the faintest whisper of a warning 100 years ago today. NBC's George Lewis reports.

    “We’re going to use the series to explain this Internet thing,” I said, “and we’re going to invite people to take it for a spin.”

    Then we had to explain to anchor Stone Phillips how to tell people where to send their email.

    “You want them to send it to ‘nightly’ at — that’s the little ‘a’ with a circle around it — nbc-dot-com. ‘Dot’ is Internet speak for a period.”

    And with that, we launched the Peacock into the Internet age. Within moments of the airing of the first segment, our little email server was abuzz with responses from far and wide -- 8,000-plus by the time the series ended in Christmas week of 1993.  And we didn’t get any spam at all. It hadn’t been invented yet.

    Dec. 7, 2001: NBC's Tom Brokaw and George Lewis on the 60th anniversary of the attack on Pearl Harbor and the emotional connection with 9/11.

    It was certainly memorable when I climbed aboard an evacuation helicopter manned by U.S. Marines as South Vietnam fell to the communists in 1975. Vietnam had been my first assignment for NBC News, and I had returned to help write the final chapter. At that point, it was the biggest story I had covered since joining the network.

    ‘It's 105 degrees in Saigon and rising’; correspondent recalls final days before end of the Vietnam War

    I was brought back down to Earth rapidly when, a few weeks later, I was vacationing in San Diego and a toll taker at the Coronado Bridge quizzed me:

    “Aren’t you George Lewis?” the toll taker asked.

    “Yes I am,” I replied.

    “Didn’t you use to work here in local TV in San Diego?”

    “Yes, I did,” I said, my ego swelling.

    “What happened?” the guy asked. “Did you get out of the business?”

    “Uhhh ...,” I muttered, searching for a comeback, “I’ve been out of the country.”

    Moral of the story and advice to budding TV journalists: Never get too full of yourself, no matter how short or how long your career lasts.

    And one more thing. Since I can’t completely hang up my spurs, I’ll return in six months as a part-timer. Having a backstage pass to history is a lifelong addiction, I fear.

    Nightly News

    George Lewis on assignment in Vietnam during the early days of his career.

    13 comments

    Congratulations Mr. Lewis on a job well done. In recent years, if I was away from the TV during Nightly News, and I heard your voice, I knew something big was going down in California or the West Coast. Please return occasionally and let us know how retirement is going for you.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: tehran, vietnam, nbc-news, tiananmen-square, george-lewis
  • 7
    Dec
    2011
    6:27pm, EST

    Remembering Pearl Harbor

    By George Lewis
    NBC News

    This is my third trip to Pearl Harbor to cover the anniversary of the surprise attack on Dec. 7, 1941, and the place always gives me goose bumps. There is the graceful swaybacked architecture of the USS Arizona memorial, lying atop the remains of the sunken battleship. There are the old hangar buildings on Ford Island, still pockmarked by Japanese strafing. But most of all, there are the survivors, their ranks diminished by the passing years, and their compelling stories of living through a pivotal moment in American history.

    Most are men in their late 80s or early 90s, but the memories of that "day of infamy" are seared permanently in their minds.

    As Mal Middlesworth, who was a young Marine stationed on the USS San Francisco, put it, "I got to be standing there with a front row seat to one of the greatest spectacles of the 20th century."

    That day, 2,400 Americans lost their lives, almost half of them aboard the Arizona, hit by a 1,700-pound armor-piercing bomb that exploded the ship's ammunition magazine.

    Don Stratton, an Arizona survivor who was badly burned, said, "It was a terrible day. It just engulfed us in flames."

    Read more: Covering Pearl Harbor, decade to decade

    Of the 84,000 Americans in uniform on the Hawaiian Island of Oahu the day of the attack, between two and 3,000 are alive today, and their numbers dwindle with each passing year. That's the big difference I've noticed this time around. Whereas thousands of survivors made it to past observances, only about 120 made it this time. And most of them concede it will probably be their last hurrah.

    "It's sad," said Edward Wentzlaff, an Arizona survivor. "You can't lose all them kind of people, those friendships and not let it bother you."

    Two of the survivors who died earlier this year, Lee Soucy and Vernon Olsen, are being reunited with their shipmates, their ashes interred on this 70th anniversary beneath the waters of Pearl Harbor, where so many sailors and Marines went down with their ships.

    And now, the last remaining survivors look to future generations to keep the memories alive, making this anniversary one laden with sentiment and sadness.

    Comment

    Show more
    Explore related topics: pearl-harbor, george-lewis
  • 20
    Oct
    2011
    6:22pm, EDT

    Turning hard times into harmony

    By George Lewis, NBC News

    A Los Angeles woman received the Presidential Citizens Medal Thursday for her work with children from the city's gang-infested neighborhoods. NBC's George Lewis reports.

    Dr. Margaret Martin's enthusiasm and passion are infectious.  "We're saving kids' lives!" she proclaims.

    Because of her, 1,500 youngsters from the gang-infested neighborhoods of Los Angeles are off the streets and spending their spare time in youth orchestras sponsored by the Harmony Project, which she started a decade ago. Kids accepted into the program are given free musical tutoring and instruments, provided they sign a contract that they will finish school and not drop out. On Thursday, President Obama awarded a Presidential Citizen's Medal to Martin, one of 13 Americans to receive the 2011 award.

    "Our students learn discipline, persistence, confidence, accountability for the use of their time," Martin said, "and they learn to collaborate well with others in an ensemble."

    Those students agree. "The music really made me focus more in school and made me concentrate," said Harmony Project violinist Andrea Garcia during a break in a Saturday practice session, "it releases my stress and I don't get angry as much."

    Mizael Reyes, another violinist, chimed in. "I know that you have to put effort into music so I have to put effort into everything else if I want to accomplish anything," he said.

    The temptations for kids living in gang neighborhoods are being challenged - with success - by a program called Harmony Project. Here, students talk about the program and how its keeping them off the streets.

    Margaret Martin knows about hard times.  She said that as a young mother, she walked out of an abusive marriage and lived for a time in an empty office building. 

    Gesturing toward herself, Martin said, "This is the face of poverty in the United States."

    After she turned her own life around and earned a Ph.D. in public health, Martin resolved to give something back. And then something happened that inspired her.

    She started Harmony Project, she said, because she saw a group of gang members stop at a farmer's market in front of a child playing Brahms on a violin.

    That little kid was Martin's young son Max, trying to earn a few extra dollars as a sidewalk musician. At first she was scared that the gang members would try to harm him, but then she noticed they were entranced by the music and began digging into their pockets, putting money in Max's violin case.

    "In that moment," she said, "they were teaching me that they would rather be doing what that kid was doing than what they were doing but they never had the chance."

    Giving youngsters that chance is what drives the Harmony Project and its highly passionate, highly articulate founder.

    One woman's solution to keeping kids out of gangs... create harmony. Here's more of George Lewis's interview with Margaret Martin, founder of Harmony Project.

    "Kids will rise to the level of your expectations," Martin said.  "You just have to have great expectations, and they do.  They are precious resources."

    She has acquired a powerful ally in Gustavo Dudamel, the conductor of the Los Angeles Philharmonic, the product of the youth orchestra program in his native Venezuela.

    "We couldn't do what we do without the support of our partners," Martin said.

    Now, the woman who turned hard times into harmony hopes to replicate the project in other cities.  And she's having fun planning the expansion.

    "It IS a lot of fun," she said, "It's the best job ever!"

    18 comments

    In a time of trial and suffering for many, the Harmony Project is a knight in shining armor, an angel with peace and love. Or, just great!

    Show more
    Explore related topics: los-angeles, harmony-project, george-lewis

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