Consider This from NPR - The man who changed TV news
Episode Date: May 6, 2026When the U.S. and Israel bomb Iran and start a war, we know about it moments after it’s started — sometimes even moments before. When Russian tanks cross the border into Ukraine, we watch as it�...�s happening. This access to immediacy — our ability to be there as history is unfolding — much of that is possible, thanks to the vision of CNN founder Ted Turner.Turner transformed the media industry and revolutionized television news when he launched the Cable News Network — CNN — in 1980. It was the country’s first 24-hour news channel. Turner died Wednesday. He was 87. NPR’s Ailsa Chang speaks with CNN Chief International Anchor Christiane Amanpour about Turner’s legacy.For sponsor-free episodes of Consider This, sign up for Consider This+ via Apple Podcasts or at plus.npr.org. Email us at considerthis@npr.org. This episode was produced by Erika Ryan and Karen Zamora, with audio engineering by Ted Mebane.It was edited by Courtney Dorning.Our executive producer is Sami Yenigun.See pcm.adswizz.com for information about our collection and use of personal data for sponsorship and to manage your podcast sponsorship preferences.NPR Privacy Policy
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It's consider this where every day we go deep on one big news story.
And today, the legacy of the man who changed the way we get the news.
If Alexander the Great could conquer the known world, why couldn't I start CNN?
That is CNN founder Ted Turner, speaking to Oprah Winfrey.
Turner transformed the media industry and revolutionized television news when he launched the cable news network or CNN in 1980.
It was the country's first 24-hour news channel.
You can do so much more in 24 hours than you can in 24 minutes.
Turner died Wednesday at the age of 87.
Consider this. Ted Turner changed the way we consume the news.
How did he do it? And where are we now?
From NPR, I'm Elsa Chang.
It's Consider This from NPR.
When the U.S. and Israel bomb Iran and start a war, we know about it moments after it started, sometimes even moments before. When Russian tanks cross the border into Ukraine, we watch as it is happening. And when after five decades, the U.S. returns to the moon, that feat is beamed all around the world. This access to immediacy, our ability to be there as history is unfolding, much of that is possible. Much of that is possible.
thanks to the vision of CNN founder Ted Turner. He was affectionately known as the mouth of the South,
and he transformed the way the world got its news when he founded the 24-7 News Network in 1980.
And one person who played a key role in that legacy as well is CNN chief international anchor, Christiana Amampur.
She started at CNN as a desk assistant back in 1983. Welcome, Christian.
Wow, Elsa, thank you. And the way you put it, really brings back so many memories. I can imagine. Well, as I mentioned, you began at CNN almost at the very beginning of the network. What was it like back then to be there? What was Ted Turner like back then?
It was amazing. I joined three years after the start. So I've been there 43 years. CNN is in my DNA. But who knew? You know, a lot of us, people of my generation who joined as desk assistants or video assistance or
whatever the VJs, video journalists and the like, we literally used to say to ourselves,
well, we're all just undergrads. None of us have gone to graduate school, but this is our
graduate school on the job, and we're going to get all the experience we need to go off to the big leagues.
And so it was this unbelievable gathering of ego, passionate, mission-driven, young journalists who had the rarest of rarest things.
And that was a boss who we worshipped and admired.
I mean, it is not too much to say that he was the commander and we were the foot soldiers.
And when Ted Turner said something, we saluted and said, yes, sir, and did it because we knew that this was somebody who guided us correctly, guided the world correctly.
And with his information revolution, decided to do something to the benefit of the world.
It wasn't what we see now with the cynicism and the destructive elements that we can see in so much of today's mass media.
It actually was born to try to really kind of save mankind.
How about for you personally, how did Turner's vision of the world and of journalism's role in it influence your own approach to your own work as someone who has helped explain so many world events to audiences for decades?
It was fundamental.
I absolutely could not believe my luck when I ended up as a, as I say, an undergrad desk assistant in Atlanta.
I'd come from England.
Before that, come from Iran.
So Iran is what turned me into wanting to be a journalist.
And I landed in Atlanta, of all places, at the mouth of the South's chicken noodle news
to try to become a foreign correspondent.
And that's the vision I had.
And I could see it being emulated all around me.
It was being done.
We became the preeminent international news gatherers because of CNN's vision.
And because he insisted, because of Ted Turner's vision, who insisted,
did that we cover all sides of every story. During the first Gulf War, which launched CNN as an
international behemoth, Ted said that we had to be in Baghdad as well, which was on the receiving end
of all the firepower from the United States that was a raid in Saudi Arabia to try to get Saddam
out of Kuwait. And he said, we have to be behind enemy lines. We have to cover all sides of the story.
And so he made it voluntary. On a personal level, though, I mean, he was known for having this huge
personality. Some people might call it brash. He could certainly rob a lot of people the wrong way.
Was that part of his charm, Cristiano? Or did it sometimes interfere with his mission and the way he
related to people at work? You see, I don't think so. Ted was a very different person. He was an
individual, and I just loved it. Every time he says something controversial, I'm thinking, wow,
he's got such cahones. You know, and he's dashing and he's handsome and he's swashbuckling,
and he's with us. He lived, you know, in Atlanta, but often he stayed in his sort of office apartment above the studio, above the newsroom for whatever reasons. And he would come down in the crack of dawn morning to get his crappy coffee from the break room right near the news desk and everything. And he would be in his pajamas and his robe and we'd go, whoa, what is happening? And it would be like, you know, parting of the Red Sea would all stand back and Ted would, you know, sashay through the newsroom.
But Ted was with us.
Yeah.
You know, so much has been said about the immediacy that CNN brought to broadcast news,
giving audiences a chance to feel like they are there as something is happening.
But do you think that there have been costs to that?
Does that expectation of trying to be fast and on all the time, can that sometimes take away from the journalistic mission, too?
Look, I think that's a valid question to ask throughout the decades that followed the launch of CNN.
And there have been many, many iterations.
of trying to tow the actual journalistic line.
Not just at CNN, but in many, many other places.
I always say that he's the one who started 24-7 for all the right reasons,
including to break down the barriers when he sent it internationally
between authoritarian states and their people.
Those with a satellite dish or with the ability to, you know, connect
could see a whole different worldview.
So it was super important.
But I do agree that there has been,
subsequently, too much of a focus on the titillating, on the sensational, on lots of things that
have degraded our public square and our public discourse, and therefore our civil society and our civic
community. And I think Ted was always super conscious of that. You know, when he did the, he ordered
the cameras to be 24-7 on little Jessica in the well, that was, you know, practically at the beginning
of CNN, that was to bring a community together as well as being excellent for ratings. It brought
people together. The whole country was on the edge of their seat, hoping that this little girl
would be pulled out alive. And by and large, it wasn't political. It was about policy. It was about
the actual events. It was about facts. It was about reporting the story. It was about being
eyes and ears. And those are the days that I miss. CNN, chief international anchor,
Christian Amampur. Thank you so much for sharing your reflections about Ted Turner with us.
It was my pleasure and my privilege.
This episode was produced by Eric O'Ryan and Karen Zamora with audio engineering by Ted Mebain.
It was edited by Courtney Dorney.
Our executive producer is Sammy Yenigan.
It's Consider This from NPR.
I'm Elsa Chang.
