"My function is, as objectively and accurately as I can, to present reality to people out there, and doing that as quickly as we do is quite difficult enough, thank you." -- Ted Koppel
Edward James "Ted" Koppel (born February 8, 1940) is an English-born American broadcast journalist, best known as the anchor for Nightline from the program's inception in 1980 until his retirement in late 2005. After leaving Nightline, Koppel worked as managing editor for the Discovery Channel before resigning in 2008. Koppel is currently a senior news analyst for National Public Radio and contributing analyst to BBC World News America.
"Emotions get in the way but they don't pay me to start crying at the loss of 269 lives. They pay me to put some perspective on the situation.""History is a tool used by politicians to justify their intentions.""I have been an unabashed fan of NPR for many years, and have stolen untold excellent ideas from its programming.""I have the necessary lack of tact.""I think we're glazing eyes all across America.""In the days of Caesar, kings had fools and jesters. Now network presidents have anchormen.""More than four thousand programs produced and consumed. Some of them were pretty good, a great many of them were forgettable; but a handful may even be worth a book.""My level of cynicism about the reasons that took us to war against Iraq remain just as well-developed as they were before I went.""Our society finds truth too strong a medicine to digest undiluted. In its purest form, truth is not a polite tap on the shoulder. It is a howling reproach.""People shouldn't expect the mass media to do investigative stories. That job belongs to the 'fringe' media.""The responsibility that I feel is to do as good a job as a journalist as I can possibly do.""There is no more respected or influential forum in the field of journalism than the New York Times. I look forward, with great anticipation, to contributing to its op-ed page.""There is something very very special, universal and easily identifiable among all Jews; it is beyond territory, it is something we all have in common.""To call something an 'enhanced interrogation technique' doesn't alter the fact that we thought it was torture when the Japanese used it on American prisoners, we thought it was torture when the North Koreans used it, we thought it was torture when the Soviets used it. You know, it's almost the moral equivalent of saying that rape is an enhanced seduction technique."
Koppel, an only child, was born in Nelson, Lancashire, England, after his German Jewish parents fled Germany due to the rise of Adolf Hitler and Nazism. Koppel, at 13, immigrated to the United States in 1953 with his family. His mother, Alice, was a singer and pianist, and his father, Edwin, was a tire factory owner. He graduated from Syracuse University with a Bachelor of Science Degree, from Stanford University with a Master of Arts Degree in Mass Communications Research and Political Science, and from University of Southern California with a Doctor of Laws Degree. Koppel returns to Syracuse University regularly as a guest speaker. He was a member of the student-run WAER and keeps in touch with the student media at Syracuse. He is a member of the Pi Kappa Alpha Fraternity.
In 1963, he became a naturalized U.S. citizen, and married Grace Anne Dorney.
Koppel is multilingual and speaks German, Russian, and French in addition to his native English.
Koppel is an old friend of Henry Kissinger. Both Kissinger and Koppel moved to the United States as children. As Secretary of State, Kissinger once offered Koppel a job as his spokesman, but Koppel declined. Along with former Secretary of State Alexander Haig, Kissinger was the most frequent guest on Nightline. In an interview, Koppel commented, "Henry Kissinger is, plain and simply, the best secretary of state we have had in 20, maybe 30 years — certainly one of the two or three great secretaries of state of our century," and added, "I’m proud to be a friend of Henry Kissinger. He is an extraordinary man. This country has lost a lot by not having him in a position of influence and authority".
Ted and Grace Anne have four children: Andrea (a former journalist), Deirdre, Andrew, and Tara. Andrew Koppel was found dead in a New York City apartment on May 31, 2010, reportedly after a day-long drinking binge.
Koppel had a brief stint as a teacher before being hired as a copyboy at WMCA Radio in New York. In June 1963, he became the youngest correspondent ever hired by ABC Radio News, working on the daily Flair Reports program. In 1966, Koppel worked for ABC Television as a war correspondent during the Vietnam War. Koppel returned in 1968 to cover the campaign of Richard Nixon, before becoming Hong Kong bureau chief, and US State Department correspondent, where Koppel formed a good friendship with Henry Kissinger.
Accusations of bias
Koppel was suggested as being a conduit for the government's point of view. In the late 1980s, the media watchdog group Fairness and Accuracy in Reporting (FAIR) conducted a 40-month study of 865 editions of Nightline and concluded, "On shows about international affairs, U.S. government policymakers and ex-officials dominated the Nightline guest list. American critics of foreign policy were almost invisible." In 1987, Newsweek opined, "The anchor who makes viewers feel that he is challenging the powers that be on their behalf is in fact the quintessential establishment journalist". Koppel responded to this by saying, "We are governed by the president and his cabinet and their people. And they are the ones who are responsible for our foreign policy, and they are the ones I want to talk to".
Departure from Nightline
On November 22, 2005, Koppel stepped down from Nightline after 25 years with the program and left ABC after 42 years with the network. His final Nightline broadcast did not feature clips highlighting memorable interviews and famous moments from his tenure as host, as is typical when an anchor retires. Instead, the show replayed the highly acclaimed episode of Nightline with Koppel's 1995 interviews with retired Brandeis University sociology professor Morrie Schwartz, who was dying of amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS, more commonly known as Lou Gehrig's disease). For this broadcast, Koppel interviewed sports journalist Mitch Albom, who had been a student of Schwartz. Albom talked about how the Nightline interviews led and inspired him into contacting Schwartz personally, and then visiting him weekly. These visits became the basis for the popular book Tuesdays with Morrie, chronicling lessons about life learned from Schwartz.
After the show's last commercial break, Koppel made his final remarks prior to signing off:
Following Nightline Koppel has taken on a number of roles which span various formats of news media:
He signed up as an opposite editorial-contributing columnist, effective January 29, 2006, for New York Times.
Starting in June 2006, he has provided commentary to Morning Edition, All Things Considered, and Day to Day on National Public Radio, joining NPR's other two Senior News Analysts, Cokie Roberts and Daniel Schorr. As such, he participated in the annual NPR Fourth of July reading of the Declaration of Independence in 2007.
Koppel makes occasional guest appearances on The Daily Show appearing in extreme close-up as a disembodied head, acting as Jon Stewart's journalistic conscience, sometimes as the replacement for the so-called "Giant Head of Brian Williams" projected on the screen behind Stewart. Koppel has jokingly insisted that "this is the actual size of [Koppel's] head"
Koppel has worked for BBC News as a "contributing analyst" covering the 2008 Democratic National Convention.
Discovery Channel
Following his departure from Nightline Koppel formed a three-year partnership with Discovery Communications as managing editor of the Discovery Channel. While at Discovery Koppel produced several lengthy documentaries on a variety of subjects including a 2008 four-hour miniseries on China, which Koppel "ranks with some of the work that [he is] most proud of over the years."The four-part documentary, called The People's Republic of Capitalism, is an extensive look at the fast-changing country. It takes a look at the role of Chinese consumers in the growing -but yet communist- economy.
Koppel and Discovery Communications parted ways in November, 2008, terminating their contract six months early, prompting rumors that Koppel would be hired for NBC's Meet the Press. Koppel has stated that he is not interested in the job.
"Network news programming continues to be dominated by faces from another era. (Koppel made his reputation in the late seventies by covering the Iranian hostage crisis every night; in the eighties, he was talked about...seriously...as secretary of State.) These faces (along with Koppel, Jennings, Brokaw, Rather, Barbara Walters, Mike Wallace, Morley Safer) are the networks' brand identifiers. They all made their reputations in a three-network world. This means...drumbeat...they are more famous than anyone has ever been and more famous than anyone will ever be. They are both obsolete (all of them with an increasingly bewildered look...the Georgie Jessels of our age) and yet at the same time necessary. No one will ever be as recognizable as they are...the hum will never be so steady without them," wrote media critic, Michael Wolff, in a 2002 profile of Koppel in New York Magazine.
References in pop culture
Koppel is referenced in Gilmore Girls in episode 9 of season 4 entitled "Ted Koppel's Big Night Out"
Koppel is referenced in Rent ("Smile for Ted Koppel, Officer Martin").
Koppel is referenced in The Simpsons in Episode 1F14 ("Homer Loves Flanders"), when, after Ned Flanders is shown waking up in the middle of the night with the stunning realization that he hates Homer Simpson, Homer similarly wakes up suddenly and says, "Marge, I think I hate Ted Koppel. No, wait. I find him informative and witty."
Also on The Simpsons, in the episode You Kent Always Say What You Want, Kent Brockman interviews Homer on Smartline, a parody of Nightline. Later in the episode, Kent says "The press and the government are in bed together in an embrace so intimate and wrong, they could spoon on a twin mattress and still have room for Ted Koppel."
On The Simpsons, in the episode Bad Man, at the end, when Godfrey Jones from Rock Bottom accepts that the media sometimes make mistakes, a list of corrections scrolls very fast across the TV screen. If slowed down, one can see that one of the corrections is "Ted Koppel is a robot."
Koppel is referenced in the song "Redefine" by Incubus, from their album S.C.I.E.N.C.E.: “It's in your nature, you can paint whatever picture you like. No matter what Ted Koppel says on channel 4 tonight.”
Koppel is also spoofed in an episode of MADtv and it is said that he resembles MAD Magazine's Mascot, Alfred E. Neuman
Koppel has been parodied on Saturday Night Live by Joe Piscopo, Dana Carvey, and Darrell Hammond.
Koppel is in the book Tuesdays With Morrie by Mitch Albom.
In season one of Reba, Reba says "Hi I'm Ted Koppel".
Koppel is also spoofed on "The Jamie Foxx Show" with Jamie Foxx as Tyrone Koppel.
Koppel is referenced in the song "Mighty Healthy" by Ghostface Killah, from his album "Supreme Clientele": "Hit mic like Ted Koppel"
Koppel is pictured on both the front and back covers of McSweeney's Quarterly Concern #5 "Ted Koppel's Very Very Special Thing".
Koppel was parodied on the Warner Brothers cartoon Animaniacs. The character's name is "Fred Floppel," voiced by Frank Welker.
Koppel was mentioned on Dan Warren's album entitled "Make Room For Dada".
In Muppets from Space at the end of Miss Piggy second scene with Josh Charles, she runs off screen and comes back on and said "Oh, come on, please, Do you think Ted Koppel never gets excited?"
Koppel is fictionally portrayed by actor Ron Fassler in the 2009 superhero film Watchmen.
Chris Rock has gone on record to say that Ted Koppel "ain't never took shit from [Chris Rock]".