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Ron Nessen
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Ronald Harold Nessen (May 25, 1934 – March 12, 2025) was an American government official and journalist who served as the 15th White House Press Secretary for President Gerald Ford from 1974 to 1977. He replaced Jerald terHorst, who resigned in the wake of President Ford's pardon of former president Richard Nixon.
Key Information
Early life
[edit]Nessen was born in Rockville, Maryland, on May 25, 1934, the son of Ida Edith (Kaufman) and Frederick Edward Nessen, who owned a variety store.[1][2] He grew up in the Shepherd Park area of Washington, D.C., and was educated at Calvin Coolidge High School before going on to graduate from American University.[1]
Career
[edit]This section needs expansion with: his work in the Ford administration. You can help by adding missing information. (March 2025) |

Nessen began his career as a journalist, starting at Maryland's Montgomery County Sentinel before moving onto United Press and NBC News.[1] Serving as a war correspondent for NBC News during the Vietnam War, he was seriously wounded by grenade fragments while on patrol outside Pleiku in the Central Highlands in July 1966. He was with cameraman Peter Boultwood when he was wounded.[3][4] On the day of Ford's succession to the presidency, August 9, 1974, he provided commentary.[citation needed] That evening he was on the NBC Nightly News; in that piece, Nessen reported on the appointment of Jerald terHorst, the man whom he would succeed one month later, serving until the end of the Ford administration in January 1977.[citation needed]
On April 17, 1976, Nessen was the first political figure to host Saturday Night Live, doing so in the midst of the election race. He had encountered Al Franken when campaigning in New Hampshire and the suggestion came about hosting the show. While President Ford did not want to host the show, he suggested Nessen could host. Ford did contribute pre-recorded bits, most notably opening the show with the "Live from New York, it's Saturday night!" tagline. Nessen later labeled his appearance as a "failure", and the President later stated to him that the show was a mixed bag of funny and distasteful (reportedly, cast members stated they included offensive items specifically because they knew Ford was watching).[5][4][6] On a previous episode, Nessen was portrayed by Buck Henry.[7]
Nessen also served as host of WTTG's long-running news program "Panorama" and later headed the news department at the Mutual Broadcasting System, adding oversight of NBC Radio News under its corporate successor Westwood One.[citation needed]
Nessen was a member of the Peabody Awards Board of Jurors from 1996 to 2003, and served as Chair in 2003.[8]
Personal life and death
[edit]Nessen married Sandra Frey in 1954; they had two children, one of whom died at age five, and later divorced.[1] In 1967, he married Young Hi Song, with whom he had a son before divorcing in 1981.[1] A 1988 marriage to fellow journalist Johanna Neuman also ended in divorce.[1]
Nessen died in Bethesda, Maryland, on March 12, 2025, at the age of 90.[1]
Works
[edit]- It Sure Looks Different from the Inside. Playboy Press. 1978. ISBN 978-0-87223-500-7.
- The First Lady. Playboy Press. 1979. ISBN 978-0-87223-537-3.
- The Hour. Morrow. 1984. ISBN 978-0-688-01918-1.
- Death with Honors. Tom Doherty Associates, LLC. 21 October 1999. ISBN 978-0-8125-7791-4.
- Press Corpse. Tom Doherty Associates, LLC. May 1997. ISBN 978-0-8125-6793-9.
- Knight and Day. Forge. 1995. ISBN 978-0-312-85588-8.
References
[edit]- ^ a b c d e f g McFadden, Robert D. (March 13, 2025). "Ron Nessen, Ford's White House Press Secretary, Dies at 90". The New York Times. Retrieved March 13, 2025.
- ^ "Archived copy" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 2025-03-18.
{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link) - ^ Steinman, Ron, Inside Television's First War: A Saigon Journal (University of Missouri Press, 2002), via books.google.com. Retrieved 2016-01-14.
- ^ a b "NBC's Ron Nessen wounded while on patrol with Charlie Company of 101st Airborne" Archived 2016-03-22 at the Wayback Machine, nbcuniversalarchives.com. Retrieved 2015-08-06.
- ^ "Saturday Night Live Season 1 Episode 17: Ron Nessen ...", tv.com. Retrieved 2016-01-14.
- ^ "Ron Nessen on Hosting Saturday Night Live 40 Years Ago". 10 October 2016.
- ^ "Hosting SNL Was One of Ron Nessen's Greatest Regrets". 14 March 2025.
- ^ "July 1, 1996 – June 30, 1997 ... July 1, 2003 – June 30, 2004 Peabody Board Members" Archived May 18, 2015, at the Wayback Machine, peabodyawards.com. Retrieved 2016-01-14.
External links
[edit]Ron Nessen
View on GrokipediaRonald Harold Nessen (May 25, 1934 – March 12, 2025) was an American journalist and government official who served as White House Press Secretary under President Gerald Ford from 1974 to 1977.[1][2]
Prior to his appointment, Nessen worked as a reporter and editor for United Press International from 1956 to 1962, then as an award-winning television correspondent for NBC News, covering events such as the Vietnam War—where he completed five reporting tours—and the Civil Rights Movement.[1][3][4]
He received the George Foster Peabody Award for his Civil Rights coverage and the George Polk Memorial Award from the Overseas Press Club for his overseas reporting.[4]
Appointed after J. F. terHorst's resignation over Ford's pardon of Richard Nixon, Nessen, the first television newsman in the role, pledged transparency in the post-Watergate era but encountered ongoing tensions with the White House press corps.[5][2]
A defining and controversial moment came in April 1976 when he hosted Saturday Night Live, prompting debate over the appropriateness of a press secretary engaging in political satire.[2][6]
After leaving office, Nessen worked as a writer, lecturer, and public affairs consultant, including as managing editor of the Nostalgia TV Cable Network.[7][4]
Early life and education
Family background and upbringing
Ronald Harold Nessen was born on May 25, 1934, in Washington, D.C., to Frederick Nessen and Ida (Kaufman) Nessen.[5] His father owned a variety store in the city, supporting the family through small-scale retail operations.[5][8] Nessen's mother served as the bookkeeper for the store.[8] The family's circumstances reflected the modest socioeconomic conditions common among small business owners in the capital during the post-Great Depression recovery period and World War II years, with Nessen's early childhood coinciding with the New Deal era's economic stabilization efforts and wartime rationing impacts on local commerce.[5] Raised in Washington, D.C., Nessen experienced an environment defined by the presence of federal institutions, though his upbringing centered on the practical demands of his parents' enterprise rather than direct political involvement.[9]Academic background
Nessen attended American University in Washington, D.C., from 1954 to 1959, where he earned a Bachelor of Arts degree in history.[7][9] He supported himself financially during this period by working part-time jobs while attending classes in the evenings.[7] For his senior thesis on Abraham Lincoln, Nessen received a prize awarded by the university.[9] Nessen pursued no postgraduate education.[7]Journalism career
Work at United Press International
Nessen began his professional journalism career at United Press International (UPI) in Washington, D.C., in 1956, following a brief stint at the Montgomery County Sentinel, where an editor at UPI recruited him after reviewing his coverage of local issues.[4][9] He served as both a reporter and editor until 1962, focusing on domestic news in a wire service environment that demanded rapid, factual dispatches under tight deadlines.[10][11] This role sharpened Nessen's abilities in concise writing and editing, skills critical for synthesizing complex political and governmental events into brief, accurate bulletins distributed nationwide via telegraph and teletype.[12] UPI's competitive structure against rivals like the Associated Press emphasized speed and precision, providing foundational training in objective reporting amid the era's expanding national news demands.[4] In 1962, seeking broader opportunities in emerging broadcast media, Nessen transitioned to NBC News as a correspondent.[10][9]NBC News assignments and Vietnam coverage
Nessen joined NBC News in 1962 as a radio and television correspondent, initially covering domestic events including the Lyndon B. Johnson administration, civil rights issues, and the 1964 presidential campaign.[4][13] His assignments soon shifted to international fieldwork, with a focus on conflict zones that demanded on-the-ground reporting under hazardous conditions.[2] Beginning in 1965, Nessen undertook five tours in Vietnam as an NBC war correspondent, providing extensive coverage of U.S. military operations and the escalating conflict for American television audiences.[9][2] During one engagement, he sustained chest wounds from enemy fire, underscoring the physical risks inherent in frontline reporting.[13] His dispatches captured key aspects of the war's intensity, contributing to public understanding through vivid, eyewitness accounts rather than remote analysis.[4] For his Vietnam reporting, Nessen received the George Polk Memorial Award from the Overseas Press Club in 1966, shared with colleagues Vo Huynh and You Tran for their collaborative work on the ground.[14] He also earned the Edward R. Murrow Brotherhood Award, recognizing the journalistic integrity and impact of his coverage amid a polarized domestic debate over the war.[4][15] In addition to Vietnam, Nessen reported on the Apollo 11 mission's recovery operations aboard the USS Hornet on July 24, 1969, relaying real-time updates as astronauts Neil Armstrong, Buzz Aldrin, and Michael Collins returned from the Moon.[16] This assignment highlighted his versatility in covering high-stakes, technical events beyond combat zones.[17]White House correspondent role
Nessen joined NBC News in 1962 as a television and radio correspondent and was assigned as the network's White House correspondent from 1962 to 1965.[12] In this capacity, he reported on executive branch activities during the final months of President John F. Kennedy's administration and the early years of President Lyndon B. Johnson's presidency following Kennedy's assassination on November 22, 1963.[5] His coverage emphasized presidential decision-making and communications, including Johnson's initiatives on domestic policy.[3] Key assignments included reporting on civil rights developments, such as the administration's push for the Civil Rights Act of 1964, and the 1964 presidential campaign in which Johnson secured re-election against Barry Goldwater.[8] Nessen's dispatches provided NBC audiences with on-the-ground accounts of White House briefings and policy announcements, honing his understanding of how administrations managed media relations amid intensifying public and press examination of government actions.[7] This period coincided with the initial escalation of U.S. military involvement in Vietnam under Johnson, though Nessen's White House role focused primarily on Washington-based executive coverage rather than overseas reporting at that stage.[5] Throughout his tenure, Nessen adhered to standards of journalistic objectivity, navigating an environment where media outlets increasingly questioned official narratives on issues like the Gulf of Tonkin incident in August 1964, which justified further Vietnam commitments.[7] His work contributed to NBC's broader scrutiny of presidential claims, establishing a foundation of expertise in federal communications that distinguished him among contemporaries.[3]White House Press Secretary tenure
Appointment amid Watergate aftermath
Following President Richard Nixon's resignation on August 9, 1974, amid the Watergate scandal, Gerald Ford assumed the presidency and appointed Jerald terHorst, a longtime friend and Detroit News editor, as White House Press Secretary on August 10.[18] terHorst resigned on September 9, 1974, in protest after Ford issued a full pardon to Nixon on September 8 for any federal crimes committed during his presidency, citing the need for national healing but sparking accusations of a cover-up that further damaged public trust in the executive branch. [18] Ford selected Ron Nessen, an NBC News White House correspondent since 1968 with prior experience at United Press International and multiple Vietnam War reporting tours, to replace terHorst, announcing the appointment on September 20, 1974.[9] Nessen's journalistic credentials were emphasized as a means to restore credibility to White House communications, which had been undermined by the Nixon administration's secrecy and deception, including the misleading tactics of predecessor Ron Ziegler during Watergate.[10] [6] As the first television newsman to hold the role, Nessen represented a deliberate shift toward transparency to rebuild press and public confidence in the post-scandal environment.[10] [8] Upon accepting the position, Nessen pledged an "era of openness" in White House dealings with the media, explicitly distancing himself from Ziegler by stating he was "a Ron but not a Ziegler," signaling a commitment to factual communication over evasion.[19] This transition from adversarial journalism to government service positioned Nessen to bridge the gap between the press and the administration during a period of acute institutional distrust.[6]Key events and policy communications
Following his appointment on September 21, 1974, Nessen managed White House communications in the wake of President Gerald Ford's pardon of Richard Nixon, announced on September 8, 1974, by briefing reporters on the administration's focus on national reconciliation over prolonged legal proceedings.[20] In November 1974, he disseminated details of the Vladivostok Summit outcomes, where Ford and Soviet leader Leonid Brezhnev established equal ceilings of 2,400 strategic nuclear delivery vehicles and 1,320 multiple independently targetable reentry vehicles for SALT II negotiations.[21] Nessen coordinated press releases and briefings on the Helsinki Accords, signed on August 1, 1975, which included commitments to human rights monitoring alongside security and economic cooperation among 35 European nations, the United States, and Canada. During Ford's December 1-5, 1975, visit to China, Nessen oversaw media logistics and statements reinforcing U.S. policy toward normalization of relations with the People's Republic while maintaining ties to Taiwan.[22] On domestic fronts, Nessen communicated Ford's responses to the 1974-1975 recession, including the shift from anti-inflation measures like the WIN (Whip Inflation Now) campaign to stimulative policies such as the $22.8 billion tax cut enacted in March 1975, aimed at boosting employment amid unemployment peaking at 8.9 percent.[20] He also briefed on energy policies addressing the ongoing crisis from the 1973 oil embargo, including Ford's signing of the Energy Policy and Conservation Act on December 22, 1975, which authorized strategic petroleum reserves and rolled back domestic crude oil prices to encourage conservation and production.[23] In a bid to counter public perceptions of Ford's stiffness during the 1976 election campaign, Nessen hosted Saturday Night Live on April 17, 1976, the first White House official to do so, featuring sketches that highlighted the administration's lighter side alongside policy nods.[24]Media relations and adversarial press environment
Nessen entered the role amid a post-Watergate atmosphere of intense media skepticism toward the executive branch, fueled by revelations of deception under President Nixon that had eroded public trust in government institutions.[25] To counteract this, he committed to restoring White House credibility through transparency, pledging openness and distinguishing his tenure from the secrecy of prior spokesmen like Ron Ziegler.[6] This approach involved conducting daily briefings for the press corps, providing regular opportunities for direct questioning and emphasizing factual responses over evasion.[19][12] Relations with reporters remained strained, as the press corps—shaped by Watergate's legacy—approached the Ford administration with inherent distrust, often prioritizing adversarial framing that highlighted perceived shortcomings in Republican governance.[5] Nessen responded by prioritizing candor and verifiable facts, avoiding outright falsehoods that had marred Nixon-era communications, though critics in the media occasionally viewed his defenses as evasive or insufficiently yielding to their narratives.[26] He publicly challenged reporter cynicism, arguing it impeded mutual openness, while maintaining that honest suspicion was essential to journalism.[26] Press corps opinions of Nessen were mixed: some praised his straightforwardness and efforts to foster access, crediting him with advancing a more honest dialogue than predecessors, while others faulted him for perceived policy advocacy over pure information dissemination.[6] Peers within the administration and journalism recognized his integrity, noting he upheld a reputation for honesty amid the era's tensions, without facing charges of deliberate misrepresentation.[19] This dynamic reflected broader post-Watergate media-government frictions, where institutional biases skeptical of executive power complicated transparency initiatives.[5]Controversies and criticisms
Nessen faced accusations from White House correspondents of shading or selectively presenting facts during key briefings, particularly on foreign policy matters. Following the November 24, 1974, Vladivostok Summit between President Ford and Soviet leader Leonid Brezhnev, Nessen described American reporters as having been "dazzled" by the arms limitation framework agreement, a characterization that provoked outrage among the press corps for implying undue credulity toward the tentative deal, which later unraveled amid unresolved verification issues.[5][27] Similarly, during Ford's December 1975 trip to China, Nessen was criticized for allegedly misrepresenting the substance of a private conversation between Ford and Vice Premier Deng Xiaoping, with reporters viewing it as a deliberate effort to obscure details on bilateral tensions, exacerbating perceptions of opacity in an already skeptical post-Watergate media environment.[28][29] In response to such charges, Nessen maintained that he never knowingly lied or covered up information, emphasizing his September 20, 1974, pledge upon appointment to avoid the deceptions associated with his predecessor, Jerald terHorst, and earlier Nixon aides.[30] He later affirmed in reflections that while he occasionally delayed disclosures to align with administration strategy, he upheld truthfulness, a stance some journalists conceded differentiated his tenure from prior eras of systematic evasion, though adversarial reporting—fueled by lingering distrust of executive communications—often framed omissions as equivalent to falsehoods.[31][32] A separate point of contention arose from Nessen's hosting of the April 17, 1976, episode of Saturday Night Live, an unprecedented move intended to humanize Ford and counter Chevy Chase's recurring physical comedy skits portraying the president as clumsy. The decision drew immediate backlash for compromising the press secretary's impartiality, with critics arguing it blurred official duties and entertainment, potentially undermining White House credibility amid ongoing media caricatures; Ford's son Jack Ford expressed personal fury, and the president reportedly voiced displeasure, while Nessen himself later deemed it a misstep that amplified rather than mitigated negative perceptions.[2][33][34]Post-White House activities
Writing and publications
In 1978, Nessen published It Sure Looks Different from the Inside, a 367-page memoir published by Playboy Press that detailed his 29-month tenure as White House press secretary under President Gerald Ford.[35][36] The book provided an insider account of White House operations, including the logistical and communicative challenges of the role, and contrasted the perspective from within the administration against external journalistic perceptions.[37] It addressed the post-Watergate environment of heightened media skepticism toward executive communications, where Nessen described efforts to restore public trust amid ongoing scrutiny of presidential actions like the pardon of Richard Nixon.[5][38] Nessen emphasized the inherent tensions between press ideals of transparency and the government's need to manage information flow, portraying the press secretary position as far more constrained and adversarial than outsiders might assume.[37] The memoir included anecdotes from daily briefings and policy announcements, illustrating how post-Watergate dynamics amplified adversarial media relations and complicated straightforward policy messaging.[36] While the book garnered a modest average rating of 3.67 out of 5 from limited reader assessments, Nessen later reflected on it in his 2011 memoir as a "quickie book" produced without sufficient introspection or analysis.[36][38] In 2011, Nessen released Making the News, Taking the News: From NBC to the Ford White House, published by Wesleyan University Press, which offered a more comprehensive retrospective on his career transition from NBC correspondent to press secretary.[39] This 243-page work expanded on themes of media-government interplay, drawing from his Vietnam reporting and White House experiences to examine how journalistic practices intersected with political realities in the 1960s and 1970s.[40] It included eyewitness accounts of key events and critiqued the evolving adversarial nature of press coverage post-Watergate, positioning the Ford era as an attempt to navigate inherited institutional distrust.[38]Broadcasting and advisory roles
Following his White House tenure, Nessen resumed roles in broadcasting, serving as vice president for news programming at the Mutual Broadcasting System from 1984 to 1992, where he oversaw news operations for the radio network.[2] [5] In this capacity, he directed content strategies amid the competitive landscape of syndicated radio news.[2] Nessen contributed to recognizing broadcasting excellence by serving eight years on the Board of Jurors for the George Foster Peabody Awards, from 1996 to 2003, including one year as chairman in 2003–2004.[1] The Peabody Awards honor distinguished achievement in electronic media, and Nessen's board service involved evaluating submissions for journalistic integrity and innovation.[1] His participation helped uphold standards for ethical reporting in an era of expanding cable and digital outlets.[1] In advisory capacities, Nessen joined the Brookings Institution in 1999 as vice president for communications, directing public affairs, media relations, and internal-external communications programs until at least the early 2000s.[41] [2] He later held the role of journalist-in-residence there, providing insights on presidential communications drawn from his experiences.[1] [41] These positions enabled commentary on government-media dynamics, emphasizing transparency in policy dissemination.[1]
