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Remembering Bob Simon

Longtime CBS News correspondent Bob Simon died in a car accident at 73.

Betty Medsger

February 13, 2015

Bob Simon recording a voice-over for 60 Minutes in 2010 (CBS News)

The death of CBS journalist Bob Simon in a car accident in New York last night is a tragic loss. As one of his colleagues put it, he was a person of “enormous courage and a sharp intolerance for injustice.”

Throughout his long career, he covered every imaginable story. His last 60 Minutes story was an interview with Selma director Ava DuVernay. He covered nearly every war that raged during his lifetime, beginning with Vietnam. In 1991, he, along with three CBS colleagues, was imprisoned in Iraq. He was beaten and tortured during that 40-day imprisonment.

He could be a gentle interviewer. He also could be tough. When Michael Oren, the Israeli ambassador to the United States tried to get CBS to kill a Simons’ 60 Minutes story in 2012, Simon confronted him about it during an interview.

When Bob Simon reported a story, said Anderson Cooper Thursday evening, you knew it was going to be “something special.” I felt the same way. I didn’t want to miss a single word of a Simon story. Cooper also made this eloquent tribute: “He was a warrior poet who loved life and loved people.”

Much has been said this week about the six-month suspension of NBC anchor Brian Williams and the permanent departure of Jon Stewart from The Daily Show. Comparisons were made, sometimes in an overreach for cuteness. Stewart was an anchor of supposed faux news. Williams was the anchor of a program that was supposed to report real news, but he got in trouble for reporting supposedly faux stories about himself.

The loss of Bob Simon inevitably suggests a different and profoundly sad comparison. Bob Simons’ emphasis always was on the story, not on himself. As the evidence seems to indicate, Williams at times has been the opposite. He placed himself in the center of stories about Iraq and New Orleans. Sadly, as time passed, he reached for more applause by recycling and apparently embellishing old stories about himself. 

Deep thanks to Bob Simon for a life well lived, a life spent reporting stories that informed and moved hearts and minds.

 

Betty MedsgerAs a Washington Post reporter in 1971, Betty Medsger wrote the first stories about the revelations in the stolen Media, Pennsylvania FBI files. In January 2014, Alfred A. Knopf published her book The Burglary: The Discovery of J. Edgar Hoover's Secret FBI, in which the burglars are revealed and the impact of their actions is told. 


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