Journalists Remember Legendary Washington Post Editor Ben Bradlee
Journalism lost a legend on Tuesday with the death of the great Ben Bradlee at the age of 93.
The iconic newsman, who oversaw the Washington Post's Pulitzer Prize-winning coverage of the Watergate scandal, which led to the resignation of President Richard M. Nixon, was the driving force behind the paper's reinvention and rise to the top. Bradlee's decision to publish the Pentagon Papers against the plea of top government officials in 1971 resulted in the Supreme Court ruling that allowed newspapers to continue to publish leaked documents. He brought life, power and change to newspaper.
Bradlee had been described as "gruff, charming and tenacious." Former New York Times executive editor Jill Abramson characterized him as "luminescent." Former Post owner Donald E. Graham called him "the best American newspaper editor of his time."
"That paper wasnt any good before he got there," New Yorker editor and former Post reporter David Remnick wrote after news of his death broke Tuesday. "It wasnt even the best paper in Washington. It became the second best paper in the country. He gave it its ambition."
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