Former NPR President and CEO Kevin Klose died Wednesday on the age of 85. Throughout his tenure, NPR acquired a multimillion-dollar reward from the late Joan Kroc that enabled the community to climate monetary crises.
Jacques Coughlin/Jacques Coughlin/NPR
conceal caption
toggle caption
Jacques Coughlin/Jacques Coughlin/NPR
Former NPR President and CEO Kevin Klose, a buoyant and transformative chief who helped to propel the general public broadcaster into the highest ranks of main U.S. networks, died Wednesday morning in his sleep from problems of Alzheimer’s illness. He was 85.
His dying was confirmed by WBUR CEO Margaret Low, a household pal and former chief of NPR’s information and programming divisions.
Klose demonstrated a eager and private understanding of the information mission at NPR’s core. His shock of white hair bobbed with pleasure as he spoke with reporters and editors within the corridors of the community’s Washington, D.C. headquarters. He would depart voicemails and hearth off emails in appreciation for particular tales. And he was a champion for the central function worldwide information performed in NPR’s identification.
“Lengthy earlier than it was on the ideas of everybody’s tongue, Kevin talked concerning the significance of high quality journalism in a wholesome democracy,” Low stated Wednesday.
The job encompassed monumental challenges. It required a imaginative and prescient and technique for the community, the talents to handle fractious inside divisions and relations with the lots of of independently owned public radio stations that air NPR’s reveals. It additionally demanded a drive to raise its journalism to the ranks of its business and better-financed friends, and a deft contact in elevating cash to maintain it within the black.
“There was a perception in some quarters that the job of president of NPR was too giant to deal with,” says the previous All Issues Thought of host Robert Siegel, “apart from the instance of Kevin Klose.”
The community expanded considerably beneath his management, a interval of calm after a historical past of turbulent inside struggles. Within the early Nineteen Eighties, the community stood on the verge of chapter and subsequent leaders have been pressured to take care of the aftershocks.
Klose shored up the management construction and established extra aggressive pay for the networks’ hosts. Klose additionally inspired creativity and experimentation searching for to succeed in new audiences. NPR launched Day to Day with Slate journal, The Tavis Smiley Present, and StoryCorps segments on Morning Version, amongst different ventures.
The reward that modified NPR
Klose might have left his biggest mark by making certain the community’s monetary solvency.
On the urging of a high fundraising official at KPBS, the general public broadcaster in San Diego, Klose spent years cultivating a relationship and, finally, a friendship with the late Joan B. Kroc, a philanthropist and the widow of McDonald’s magnate Ray Kroc.
Joan B. Kroc, proven together with her husband Ray Kroc, proprietor of the San Diego Padres and founding father of the McDonald’s hamburger chain, is greeted by the San Diego rooster at San Diego’s Jack Murphy Stadium in 1982.
Bettmann/Bettmann Archive/Bettmann
conceal caption
toggle caption
Bettmann/Bettmann Archive/Bettmann
Over a sequence of meals, conversations and presents, they spoke of a shared love of worldwide information, NPR, and the establishments that make up civil society. Requested by an adviser of Kroc, former McDonald’s govt Dick Starmann, to assume broadly about what he may do with some further funds, Klose defined what donors may obtain for $25,000. Starmann saved urging Klose to assume larger.
Kroc despatched Klose a vacation card one 12 months that included a test for the community for $500,000. He was touched and impressed, assuming that might be the load of her generosity.
As she declined in well being, Kroc held a celebratory lunch at her house in California. Klose gave her a lacquered Russian field, a memento of his time as a Moscow bureau chief at The Washington Submit earlier in his profession.
Kroc’s 2003 bequest was valued at greater than $200 million on the time. It led to a significant NPR presence in Southern California, new reporting positions, growth of international protection and an endowment that allowed NPR to climate a sequence of monetary crises and political storms.
NPR CEO Katherine Maher paid tribute to Klose in a word Wednesday to NPR workers. “Kevin was deeply idealistic concerning the function of public media in a democracy,” she wrote. “He referred to as impartial journalism ‘the primary accomplice of constructing democracy, and serving to it keep robust and very important.'”
The Putin interview
Klose arrived at NPR in December 1998 as its sixth everlasting president after a distinguished profession as a nationwide and international correspondent and a senior editor on the Submit. He additionally served because the president of Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty, the government-funded worldwide broadcaster that serves audiences in Russia and 27 nations, largely in Jap Europe, central Asia, and the Center East.
After NPR, Klose went on to grow to be dean of the Merrill Faculty of Journalism on the College of Maryland. He additionally returned to Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty for 2 years after a shaky stretch for the government-funded community.
Former NPR host Robert Siegel, proven on the Republican Nationwide Conference in 2008.
Dan Younger/NPR
conceal caption
toggle caption
Dan Younger/NPR
A romantic concerning the attraction of reporting, Klose was a clear-eyed realist concerning the stakes.
Among the many subjects he targeted on: the function of dissidents advocating for higher freedom beneath the repressive Soviet regime. Klose warned a dissident labor chief he might be topic to abuse by the state if he went on the report concerning the security and well being risks coal miners have been topic to there.
The labor chief, Alexei Nikitin, advised him that it was too necessary and advised Klose to report on it anyway, the journalist recounted in later writing and conversations. Nikitin was drugged and brutalized by his captors within the Soviet psychiatric prisons.
Klose drew upon that experience in 2000, when he organized for an hour-long, reside call-in present hosted by Siegel from NPR’s small New York bureau with the newly elected President Vladimir Putin. On the time, the long run autocrat was seen as a possible reformer.
“It was a delight to have somebody so educated within the management room signaling his approval at key moments of the interview,” Siegel recalled Wednesday.
Putin’s safety staffers complained concerning the high quality of the lads’s room serving the bureau. The community later established a brand new, vastly upgraded bureau with main studios in New York’s Bryant Park, thanks partially to the Kroc funds.
Klose’s household intends to create The Kevin Klose Memorial Fund for Impartial Journalism.
Disclosure: This story was written and reported by NPR Correspondent David Folkenflik and edited by NPR Deputy Enterprise Editor Emily Kopp and Managing Editor Vickie Walton-James. Beneath NPR’s protocol for reporting on itself, no company official or information govt reviewed this story earlier than it was posted publicly.
