NPR Names Veteran Media Executive John Lansing As Its New CEO

John Lansing, the chief executive officer and director of the U.S. Agency for Global Media, will become NPR’s CEO in mid-October.
U.S. Agency for Global Media
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U.S. Agency for Global Media
NPR has a new CEO. John Lansing, a veteran government broadcast and cable television executive, has been selected by NPR’s corporate board to succeed its current chief, Jarl Mohn.
Lansing, who is 62, is currently the chief executive of the government agency that oversees Voice of America, Radio and Television Martí and Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty, among others. He made his mark in his current job with stirring defenses of journalism, free from government interference.
Lansing will start in his new position in mid-October. He will be the 11th permanent president or chief executive in the radio network’s nearly 50-year history.
In an interview, Lansing said he wants to build on NPR’s successes in broadcast news and entertainment to become even more dominant in podcasting and more prevalent in streaming.
“When I think of NPR and I think of the member stations collectively, I think really of journalism as a public service, not tied to a profit motive,” Lansing told NPR News. He defined NPR’s mission as “serving the public with information and an excellence and quality about it that makes it ‘must see’ on a variety of platforms.”
A number of executives will report directly to Lansing, including Nancy Barnes, senior vice president for news and editorial director, who joined NPR last November and oversees the network’s newsroom.
Four years ago, Lansing was named by President Barack Obama to be the first chief executive of the broadcasting outfit that was renamed the U.S. Agency for Global Media. Lansing has won plaudits from journalists for his rousing defense of a free press even while serving in the Trump administration, which has been notably hostile to traditional notions of the role of journalism in civic life.
He took over a troubled organization beset by infighting and bureaucratic inefficiency. He is credited with restoring morale, in part by naming a noted journalist as head of the Voice of America: Amanda Bennett is a former top news executive at the Philadelphia Inquirer who previously held senior newsroom jobs at Bloomberg News and The Wall Street Journal.
Lansing said he took pride in maintaining conventional broadcasts while appealing to new audiences, reaching about 25% more people each week.
“What you really want to do is be connected to people that are consuming content on something they’re holding in their hand, and aren’t necessarily tied to a TV set on a wall or a radio in a living room,” Lansing said. “Your mobility becomes extremely important to be involved and connected to audiences that are mobile and that tend to be, frankly, younger and, as we think of it at USAGM, future leaders, who can influence the rise of free and open societies.”
Lansing’s tenure at the agency has not been without controversy.
He held off a push by House Republicans to spin off Voice of America into a nongovernmental broadcaster. Lansing also elevated to chief strategy officer a former U.S. State Department staffer who recently pleaded guilty to having defrauded the U.S. Agency for Global Media out of more than $40,000 in government money in 2018, according to federal prosecutors.
Lansing says the agency referred Haroon Ullah’s expenditures to auditors and investigators after travel assistants flagged them; according to the Justice Department statement, Ullah admitted submitting fraudulent receipts for hotel room reimbursements and fake medical claims to get government payments of upgrades in airline seat assignments, among other offenses.
Lansing previously held positions overseeing the Scripps Co.’s local television stations and then its national cable channels, which include the Food Network and HGTV, among others. For two years, he served as the president and CEO of a cable trade group called the Cable and Telecommunications Association for Marketing.
He will now lead the nation’s top audio producer and broadcaster.
“In terms of mission, understanding of media, the depth of experience, his strategic leadership, his commitment to people and culture, I would say those were really the key things that we were looking for,” said Goli Sheikholeslami, vice chairwoman of the NPR board of directors and CEO of Chicago Public Media.
“The challenges he will face at NPR are not dissimilar to challenges across the media landscape as a whole,” said Sheikholeslami, who will soon take up the CEO job at New York Public Radio.
NPR stands stronger than it did at the outset of Mohn’s five-year term in 2014. The network had run deficits in six of the seven previous years; under Mohn, it has achieved a slight surplus for each year during his tenure, even as the annual budget grew by more than 40%.
NPR draws more than 28 million listeners each week and 40 million unique monthly visitors to its website — both represent a rise of several million over those five years. NPR has also been the nation’s leading producer of podcasts since Podtrac started measuring audiences. NPR maintains 17 national bureaus and 17 bureaus abroad. The network has won acclaim for its coverage of wars and disasters, yet suffered its own crisis and tragedy in 2016 when its David Gilkey and Zabihullah Tamanna were killed while on assignment in southern Afghanistan. Mohn placed an emphasis on fostering a more collaborative dynamic with the public radio stations that NPR serves and was given credit for making progress on that score.
Yet Lansing also takes over an institution riven by a scandal that hit its top reaches, with a chief news executive toppled over #MeToo complaints of inappropriate conduct toward female subordinates and colleagues. Mohn fired head of news Michael Oreskes on Halloween 2017. A later report commissioned by the NPR board found that questions had been raised about Oreskes’ behavior even before his hiring and that concerns were raised throughout his tenure; the repeated and formal warnings by top executives (including Mohn) to Oreskes to stop the unwanted attention he paid to female colleagues proved ineffective.
NPR’s president of operations, Loren Mayor, was the leading internal candidate for the chief executive position. While serving as chief operating officer, she took on a greater role during two of Mohn’s medical leaves and in the aftermath of the sexual harassment scandal. She also has led initiatives to reform hiring practices and to sweep far more temporary positions into permanent slots, often working closely with the network’s chief unions to do so.
Mayor is said to be staying on at the network as a top executive and deputy to Lansing, retaining the enhanced portfolio she took on after Mohn’s health crises. Both Lansing and Sheikholeslami say he is adamant about pressing forward with reforms to the workplace culture at NPR that Mayor has already started to put in place.
NPR faces financial pressures from two fronts.
The network’s fight for listeners’ time has become more feverish. Others have waded into the podcast fray with a vengeance. The streaming platform Spotify paid nearly a quarter-billion dollars to buy the podcast producer Gimlet, founded by former staffers of NPR and other public radio outlets. And The New York Times has won praise and new fans through its weekday podcast The Daily, with in-depth interviews of reporters and newsmakers.
The other is the fight for donors. Mohn had promised to attract major contributions to NPR before the end of his tenure; to date he has not landed the major eight- and nine-figure donations his stated aspirations suggested.
“Jarl would be the first to say that it is the area where he feels that his work was not complete,” Sheikholeslami said. “The combination of his health issues plus the situation with Mike Oreskes did derail his plans.”
That said, Mohn set higher annual expectations for the network in fundraising and agreed to be co-chairman of its 50th-anniversary capital campaign. He has previously announced he would be staying on as president emeritus to help the network raise major gifts, and along with his wife, Pamela Mohn, he personally committed $10 million to the network.
Unlike some predecessors, Lansing doesn’t face a particularly fraught political landscape. Government support for the public radio system isn’t in any immediate jeopardy. NPR takes only a few million dollars a year from federal sources for its programs. While member stations on average receive about 10% of their funding from the federal government, fees from the stations make up a significant part of the NPR budget.
Lansing has earned an advanced degree in political agility. At the U.S. Agency for Global Media, Lansing championed a free press even as leaders of many nations move against it.
“Governments around the world are increasingly cracking down on the free flow of information; silencing dialogue and dissent; and distorting reality,” Lansing said in a speech he delivered in May to the Media for Democracy Forum. “The result, I believe, is a war on truth.”
He continued: “Citizens in countries from Russia to China, from Iran to North Korea, have been victimized for decades. But now we’re seeing authoritarian regimes expanding around the globe, with media repression in places like Turkey and Venezuela, Cambodia and Vietnam.”
Trump has notably praised authoritarian figures, including the leaders of North Korea, the Philippines, Russia and Turkey and has waged his own fight against journalists.
While they do not broadcast within the U.S., the Voice of America and the other media outfits Lansing has overseen typically adhere to traditional concepts of factual, nonideological journalism, with the frequent exception of Radio Martí — historically an anti-Castro and anti-Cuban communist outlet. The roots of the VOA involved providing truthful reports to people under Nazi and Axis power rule during World War II. The varied broadcasters also offered jazz and other music to appeal to people under communist regimes using a soft form of diplomacy. Their editorial independence is enshrined in federal law, though it sometimes came under attack.
Now Lansing says he wants to draw on the intellectual and creative impulses of his new staffers as he leads a domestic journalistic powerhouse with an international reputation and reach.
“I want to hear the ideas that are bubbling underneath right now and what people are excited about, what they’re looking forward to developing,” Lansing said Thursday. “And I want to look for areas that I can provide leadership to bring resources together as needed strategically to find the right priorities that make the most sense for growing NPR this year and then into the future.“
Disclosure: This story was reported by NPR media correspondent David Folkenflik under guidance from NPR chief business editor Pallavi Gogoi. Under standard procedures for reporting on NPR matters, NPR’s corporate and news executives were not allowed to review the report until it was posted.
Women’s Soccer Stars Concerned About Trauma From Repetitive Head Impact
As research into head injuries expands to include women’s soccer, some of the sport’s former stars are calling attention to the health fallout from heading the ball multiple times.
MARY LOUISE KELLY, HOST:
With a new NFL season starting tonight, concerns about head injuries in football are expected to ramp up again, and now the discussion is expanding to women’s soccer. After the Women’s World Cup, researchers are preparing to study how a lifetime of head impacts could affect women, including heading the ball. NPR’s Tom Goldman reports.
TOM GOLDMAN, BYLINE: Using the head to redirect a soccer ball or to score a goal – that’s an integral part of the game, especially as players become more skilled. But in an era of increased concussion awareness, heading is fraught with potential risk, and the science exploring that risk hasn’t been inclusive.
ROBERT STERN: We really have needed to expand this research to include women.
GOLDMAN: Dr. Robert Stern studies chronic traumatic encephalopathy – that’s the degenerative brain disease known as CTE. He and others at Boston University have focused a lot of their attention on CTEs linked to head trauma in men who play tackle football. But next month he’ll start working with former female soccer players, some well-known, on a study called SHINE – it stands for soccer head impacts and neurological effects.
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UNIDENTIFIED ANNOUNCER: The shot saved, rebound – score. Michelle Akers’ first goal. And the U.S. goes on top, 1-0.
GOLDMAN: Former national team star Michelle Akers, now 53, was the catalyst for Stern’s study. She’s concerned about her peers and wonders whether certain mental lapses are early signs of soccer-induced brain problems, including CTE. Akers and former U.S. teammate Brandi Chastain spoke on CBS about their involvement in the study. Akers said she now regrets what she estimates to be at least 50 headers per game during her career.
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MICHELLE AKERS: I would not be heading a million balls like that. There is no way on earth I would do that again.
GOLDMAN: Robert Stern says prior research shows a relationship between the amount of heading and cognitive and even chemical changes in the brain, enough so that, in 2015, the U.S. Soccer Federation banned heading for kids 10 and younger.
DAN PINGREY: So how do we head the ball? We look with what?
UNIDENTIFIED CHILDREN: Our eyes.
PINGREY: OK?
GOLDMAN: Youth coach Dan Pingrey has led his Seattle United club team through its first year of heading. By the time they start playing games this fall, most of the girls will be 11, meaning no more ban. At a practice on the University of Washington campus, Pingree runs a refresher drill.
PINGREY: Upper body straight. Don’t bend your head. Nice and easy. Right to the forehead. Good. Don’t bend over, Ella. Don’t bend over, Ella.
GOLDMAN: What Pingrey doesn’t want to see is heads wobbling. Neurologists say girls can be more prone to concussion because they sometimes have weaker neck muscles that cause the head to flop and the brain to shake. Pingrey also trains his kids to keep their elbows out, creating a protective buffer to help prevent smacking skulls when someone else is flying in to head the same ball.
UNIDENTIFIED CHILD #1: Up.
UNIDENTIFIED CHILD #2: Ella.
UNIDENTIFIED CHILD #3: I got this.
GOLDMAN: Shahram Salemy daughter Hannah plays on the Seattle United team. He says the new study isn’t creating extra concern among parents. He hasn’t sensed the kind of concussion hysteria that’s gripped some parents of young boys playing football.
SHAHRAM SALEMY: I will say that I know parents who have kids that are older – they’re teenagers – and what I hear from them is more of a concern about ACL injuries and knee injuries more than head injuries. We just don’t see a whole lot of that at – maybe it’s just the age of the kids.
GOLDMAN: In 2017, research by the American Academy of Orthopedic Surgeons found high school soccer-playing girls did have a significantly higher rate of concussions, even more than boys who play football. The study points to headers as part of the problem. That’s where Dr. Stern now is turning his attention, with an open mind.
STERN: I’m one of the people who does the bulk of this research, and I’m not really sure exactly what leads to CTE and how it’s manifest and what the risk factors are.
GOLDMAN: But, Stern stresses, repetitive head impacts of any kind, even ones that don’t cause concussions, are not good. And he hopes the 20 women signed up for his soccer study will help science inch closer to understanding the risks of playing the games we love.
Tom Goldman, NPR News.
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Copyright © 2019 NPR. All rights reserved. Visit our website terms of use and permissions pages at www.npr.org for further information.
NPR transcripts are created on a rush deadline by Verb8tm, Inc., an NPR contractor, and produced using a proprietary transcription process developed with NPR. This text may not be in its final form and may be updated or revised in the future. Accuracy and availability may vary. The authoritative record of NPR’s programming is the audio record.
Treatment Limitations For Physicians With Opioid Addictions
Opioid addiction can happen to anyone, and that includes doctors and nurses. But unlike the general population, they are often barred from medications like methadone, the gold standard of treatment.
MARY LOUISE KELLY, HOST:
When doctors and nurses become addicted to opioids and they get caught, they have to follow strict treatment guidelines to get their licenses back. Often that means they’re not allowed to use the so-called gold standard of treatment – medications such as methadone and Suboxone. NPR’s Selena Simmons-Duffin has more.
SELENA SIMMONS-DUFFIN, BYLINE: Here’s how this played out for Dr. Peter Grinspoon. He got addicted to Vicodin in med school and still had an opiate addiction five years into practice as a primary care physician. Then, back in February 2005, he got in trouble.
PETER GRINSPOON: In my addicted mind frame, I was writing prescriptions for a nanny who had since returned back to another country. And it didn’t take the pharmacist long to figure out that I was not a 19-year-old nanny from New Zealand.
SIMMONS-DUFFIN: One day during lunch, he says the state police and the DEA showed up at his medical office.
GRINSPOON: I start going, oh, I’m glad you’re here. You know, how can I help you? And they’re like, Doc, cut the crap. We know you’re writing bad scripts.
SIMMONS-DUFFIN: He was fingerprinted the next day, charged with three felony counts of fraudulently obtaining a controlled substance. And he got referred to his state’s physician health program or PHP. They work with state licensing boards. If you follow the treatment and monitoring plan they set up for you, they’ll recommend to the board that you get your medical license back.
GRINSPOON: The PHPs basically say, do whatever we say, or we won’t give you a letter that will help you get back to work. So they put a gun to your head.
SIMMONS-DUFFIN: And, Grinspoon says, they gave him very little choice. To avoid a criminal record, he needed to spend 90 days at an inpatient center in Virginia.
GRINSPOON: Why would you send this Jewish atheist to a Christian rehab place in Virginia? Didn’t make any sense. I was just sitting there listening to people recite the Lord’s Prayer and hold hands. They took me cold turkey off all my medications. It was completely insane.
SIMMONS-DUFFIN: He says medication-assisted treatment with Suboxone or methadone was off the table for him. Those medications are similar to opioids and work by suppressing cravings to the abused drug. Physician health programs, he says, effectively banned the use of these medications in the treatment plans they set up for physicians like him.
GRINSPOON: Why on earth would you deny physicians who are under so much stress and who have a higher access – they have free refills – and they have a higher addiction rate, why would you deny them the one life-saving treatment for this deadly disease that’s killing more people in this country every year than died in the entire Vietnam War?
SIMMONS-DUFFIN: Grinspoon recovered despite what he called several awful rehabs. Today, he’s a licensed primary care doctor and teaches at Harvard Medical School. He also wrote a book about his experience with addiction called “Free Refills.” Now, this was over a decade ago, but Dr. Sarah Wakeman – also at Harvard – says most physician health programs still don’t promote medication and treatment for addiction.
SARAH WAKEMAN: The sort of general standard of care is to send people to abstinence-based residential treatment programs that don’t offer medication treatment.
SIMMONS-DUFFIN: She just co-authored a piece in The New England Journal of Medicine which called this, quote, “bad medicine, bad policy and discriminatory.”
WAKEMAN: I think the underlying issue is stigma and the sort of misunderstanding of the role of medication and this idea that a non-medication-based approach is somehow better than someone taking the medication to control their illness.
SIMMONS-DUFFIN: So what do the institutions getting blamed here – physician health programs – have to say about all this? Dr. Christopher Bundy runs Washington state’s PHP and the federation of all the state PHPs. He says it’s true that these medications aren’t often used, but that’s not because of stigma or ideology.
CHRISTOPHER BUNDY: Proceeding with caution is understandable and warranted.
SIMMONS-DUFFIN: He says medication may be the gold standard of treatment in the general population, but there should be an asterisk when it comes to so-called safety sensitive workers, not just health care providers, also pilots, for instance. He says the concern is that these medications can affect cognition. So the idea of people caring for patients while taking something like buprenorphine makes some people nervous.
BUNDY: We only need one bad outcome involving a physician with substance use disorder who’s back to work, then immediately the PHP is under the microscope.
SIMMONS-DUFFIN: He says then the criticism would be, how could you let that doctor work on a medication that could have played a role in that bad outcome? He doesn’t know of a case where that’s happened. Wakeman and her co-authors also argue there isn’t clear evidence that these medications do impair cognition. Still, that fear could be what’s driving the reluctance here. Bill Kinkel is currently navigating all of this. He lives outside Philadelphia.
BILL KINKLE: I’m a nurse, and I’m also a person in sustained recovery from opioid use disorder.
SIMMONS-DUFFIN: He’ll be eligible to practice nursing again next fall after three years of documented sobriety. And he’s public about being in recovery. He even has a podcast. When he was addicted, he said he was under a strong impression he wouldn’t be able to go back to nursing if he was in a medication-assisted treatment program. So he went to abstinence-based rehabs over and over again. And over and over again, as soon as the rehab ended, he relapsed.
KINKLE: A lot of those I overdosed. And had my wife not found me on the floor and been able to take care of me, I very well may have died. And all that possibly could have been mitigated had I gotten either buprenorphine or methadone.
SIMMONS-DUFFIN: He doesn’t fault the PHPs or the licensing boards for these policies even though he thinks they put his life at risk. He thinks stigma against those with addiction is so ingrained in our culture, there’s no one institution to blame. What’s important is that this changes, he says, and health professionals have access to all possible tools in recovery.
Selena Simmons-Duffin, NPR News.
Copyright © 2019 NPR. All rights reserved. Visit our website terms of use and permissions pages at www.npr.org for further information.
NPR transcripts are created on a rush deadline by Verb8tm, Inc., an NPR contractor, and produced using a proprietary transcription process developed with NPR. This text may not be in its final form and may be updated or revised in the future. Accuracy and availability may vary. The authoritative record of NPR’s programming is the audio record.