NPR chief executive John Lansing says he intends to retire at the end of 2023. His four-year tenure will be defined by his handling of the extreme challenges of the pandemic, a racial reckoning, and headwinds in the podcasting industry that led to severe layoffs.
"I haven't accomplished everything I wanted to accomplish, but I feel good about the time I had here," Lansing says in an interview.
John Lansing |
Despite some bitterness and recrimination among newsroom staff over the layoffs, including sharp questions about executives' strategy in podcasting, the top official of NPR's largest union has consistently praised Lansing's leadership.
During Lansing's tenure, NPR's journalists reported on the pandemic from all over the globe even as the network grappled with how to broadcast live during it; it covered crises challenging the state of the nation's democracy, severe economic turbulence, mass protests around the country, and war in Ukraine. NPR won its first Pulitzer Prize in 2021 among other leading journalism recognitions.
"Our work has never been more important. Our shows and journalists are world-class and are serving the American public with the most professional, contextual and truth information when it has never been more important in our country," Lansing says. "I couldn't be more proud."
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