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(单词翻译:双击或拖选)
By Kerry Sheridan
Three major network television stations - NBC, CBS and ABC - have provided news and entertainment to American television viewers for decades. Each network broadcasts the evening news at 6:30 p.m., and for many American families, gathering1 around the television set to watch NBC anchor Tom Brokaw, CBS anchor Dan Rather, or ABC anchor Peter Jennings has become a tradition. But some media experts say that era may be coming to an end, with the retirement2 of NBC news anchor Tom Brokaw on December 1 after more than 40 years on the air, and the recent announcement by CBS anchor Dan Rather that he plans to step down early next year.
"Good evening! Live from the Berlin wall on the most historic night in this wall's history…" Tom Brokaw was the only Western news anchor to broadcast live at the Berlin Wall on November 9, 1989.
"We have a remarkable3 development here tonight at the Brandenburg gate. On the other side, East Germans have now come to the wall and many of them have been seen crawling up on the wall being helped across by West Germans from this side."
Television news historian Jeff Alan says much of the public relied on Mr. Brokaw for key news events because his passion for the news was clear to see.
"When he was standing4 at the Berlin wall, when that Berlin Wall came down, he felt it. He felt every bit of passion that those people were feeling, who had been living for years and years and years under that rule there, and it had a profound impact on his life. And you could tell in his reporting. You can see that he really, really lived the journalism5." (Mr. Alan said)
It was just one of many prominent news events Mr. Brokaw covered. A native of South Dakota, Mr. Brokaw started his career in 1962 in Omaha, Nebraska. He later covered news from both the West and East Coasts of the United States, serving as a reporter and anchor in Los Angeles, then as a White House reporter for NBC.
Mr. Brokaw began anchoring the NBC morning Today Show in 1976, and moved to the NBC Nightly News in 1982. His face and his voice have become instantly recognizable to millions of Americans.
"Well, when I was younger I always thought he was the best looking anchor!" she joked.
Gloria Lyndaker from North Carolina is touring New York City, and has stopped by the NBC studio at Rockefeller Center for a glimpse of the morning show celebrities6. She says she grew up watching Mr. Brokaw on the news.
"At first I didn't particularly like his style but then as I watched more and more, I really believed and could trust what he was saying. And I would rather watch him than a lot of others."
Mr. Brokaw has spent much of his career traveling around the world to bring news home to American viewers.
Mr. Brokaw also covered the Vietnam war, the Watergate scandal, and the spread of the AIDS epidemic7.
When Mr. Brokaw took over as the sole anchor of the NBC Nightly News in 1983, he led one of three network news broadcasts - the others were CBS and ABC - that were the most popular source of evening news for close to 29 million people, or about a third of the estimated television viewing audience according to Nielsen Media Research.
Mr. Alan, the news historian, wrote a book about the television news anchors that have shaped American media. He says the networks' place in the American home is not what it used to be.
"In 1982, when Tom Brokaw, Dan Rather and Peter Jennings took over those three chairs at the three networks and were doing nightly news broadcasts, there were no remote controls sold with every television set and there was no cable news other than CNN which was less than a year old at the time. So people had to literally8 get up, walk across the room, change the channel to turn on a different station."
Now, the public has more choices for news. Cable channels such as CNN, MSNBC and Fox News provide 24-hour news coverage9, and the Internet makes updated news accessible any time of day.
Analyst10 Bob Steele of the Poynter Institute, which focuses on educating future journalists, says the retirements11 of Mr. Brokaw and CBS anchor Dan Rather will be remembered as milestones12 in the history of television journalism.
"When you have two of the three traditional broadcast network anchors stepping down at approximately the same time, there is a kind of a benchmark moment. The audience has been diminishing for the particular broadcast networks in recent years. I don't think that has anything to do with Brokaw, Rather and Jennings as much as it has to do with the technological13 and marketplace changes: cable news as a very viable14 competitor and also the changing society in which we live. The opportunity for viewers to tune15 to not just several, not just dozens, but literally hundreds of different channels on television."
But ratings show that even as network news viewership is slightly down, it continues to draw a major part of the prime time television audience. For instance, CNN and Fox News combined draw about 2.7 million evening viewers. NBC, CBS and ABC combine to draw about 26 million viewers.
In an NBC broadcast commemorating16 his 40-year career in news, Mr. Brokaw recalled the major news events that shaped his life. One of the most recent was broadcasting live from New York the night of September 11, 2001.
"It is one of the darkest days in America as we realize that this country has been attacked in an act of terrorist war in the heart of the nation's capital in Washington, D.C., and also in New York City, and then a plane that was driven into the ground outside of Pittsburgh." (Mr. Brokaw said during a broadcast on that fateful day) "We believe that is the end of the attacks for now but no one is sure because we don't know who is responsible."
"My emotions were pretty close to the surface, and that day I remember thinking, 'Don't lose control.'"
Mr. Brokaw is the author of three bestselling books, and he says he plans to work on documentary projects for NBC after he retires.
I am Kerry Sheridan for Voice Of America in New York.
注释:
retirement 退休
announcement 宣布,公告
Brandenburg 布兰登堡
Nebraska 内布拉斯加州
Watergate scandal 水门事件丑闻
milestone 里程碑
benchmark 基准
1 gathering | |
n.集会,聚会,聚集 | |
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2 retirement | |
n.退休,退职 | |
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3 remarkable | |
adj.显著的,异常的,非凡的,值得注意的 | |
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4 standing | |
n.持续,地位;adj.永久的,不动的,直立的,不流动的 | |
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5 journalism | |
n.新闻工作,报业 | |
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6 celebrities | |
n.(尤指娱乐界的)名人( celebrity的名词复数 );名流;名声;名誉 | |
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7 epidemic | |
n.流行病;盛行;adj.流行性的,流传极广的 | |
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8 literally | |
adv.照字面意义,逐字地;确实 | |
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9 coverage | |
n.报导,保险范围,保险额,范围,覆盖 | |
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10 analyst | |
n.分析家,化验员;心理分析学家 | |
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11 retirements | |
退休( retirement的名词复数 ); 退职; 退役; 退休的实例 | |
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12 milestones | |
n.重要事件( milestone的名词复数 );重要阶段;转折点;里程碑 | |
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13 technological | |
adj.技术的;工艺的 | |
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14 viable | |
adj.可行的,切实可行的,能活下去的 | |
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15 tune | |
n.调子;和谐,协调;v.调音,调节,调整 | |
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16 commemorating | |
v.纪念,庆祝( commemorate的现在分词 ) | |
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