Peter Jennings (born July 29, 1938, Toronto, Ontario, Canada—died August 7, 2005, New York, New York, U.S.) was a Canadian-born American television journalist whose easygoing and detached manner, calm delivery, and knowledgeable air earned his audience’s respect and trust and, from the mid-1980s to the mid-1990s, took ABC’s World News Tonight to the top of the ratings. One of the big three TV news anchors—along with Tom Brokaw at NBC and Dan Rather at CBS—he reported on the major news events of his era, from the world’s news hot spots as well as from behind the anchor desk, and became one of the most familiar faces on American TV.
Jennings dropped out of high school to train as a radio news reporter. In 1964 he moved to New York City to be a correspondent for ABC. The following year Jennings became the youngest national anchorman in the history of American networks. He became a foreign correspondent in 1968, and over the next 10 years, he not only reported on such events as the hostage crisis at the 1972 Summer Olympics in Munich but also established American TV’s first news bureau in the Middle East, in Beirut. In 1978 Jennings again was made an anchorman, as a member of the three-man team of World News Tonight. He became the show’s sole anchor and senior editor in 1983 and returned to New York. Jennings received many awards, including 16 Emmys. In 2003, while retaining his Canadian citizenship, he became a U.S. citizen. In April 2005, in what was to be his final broadcast, Jennings revealed that he had lung cancer.