How does one say farewell to a giant?
Meigs: People must honor Tim Russert by going foward
Russert remembered |
A look back at the memorial for Tim Russert June 22: ‘Meet the Press’ takes a look back at the week’s memorial serve in honor of Tim Russert. |
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Tim was brilliant in a street-smart way. Watching him working an issue on "Meet the Press" was magic. First came the opening question backed up with an on-screen quotation from something the respondent had said. Never caught up in the pursuit, Tim always listened to the answer. The appropriate, spontaneous second question followed. The method made bobbing and weaving by the guest, obvious. Tim surgically exposed skullduggery without being mean-spirited and always kept his balance. After three hours of coverage of the most uninspiring primary, he remained sharp, insightful, never sardonic.
Tim had the passion. His enthusiasm for the news, his preparation, and the force of his gut instinct made those of us who worked with him on air better in our supporting roles. He also made the most complex and knotty issues understandable. He had the gift of pulling the essential reality from a jumble of emotion and half-baked facts.
A kind and generous man, Tim demonstrated one of the hallmark traits of an inspirational leader. He made time for those of us learning the business. When you worked with him, he made you look good. A student of human nature, he knew how to inspire the troops with a personal touch or a moment of his time.
How does one say farewell to a giant? One can’t because the memory will not pass. You honor a Tim Russert by trying as we go forward to make the same footprints he would make were he with us.
Gen. Montgomery C. Meigs appeared as a guest on Meet the Press three times.
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