Bellarmine News
John Lansing '09, former Scripps executive, is new CEO of NPR
September 6, 2019

Bellarmine alumnus and former trustee John Lansing, a veteran cable television and
government broadcast executive, is the new CEO of NPR. Lansing, 62, who is currently
chief executive officer of the government agency that oversees Voice of America, Radio
and Television Martí and Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty, among others, will start
his new position in mid-October, succeeding
Jarl Mohn. Lansing previously held positions as executive vice president and president
of Scripps Networks, overseeing HGTV, the Food Network, DIY Network, the Cooking Channel
and the Travel Channel, 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. NPR draws more than 28 million listeners each week and 40 million unique
monthly visitors to its website, according to NPR News. 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. “With his deep experience in journalism
and storytelling, John Lansing will be a tremendous leader at NPR,” said Bellarmine's
president, Dr. Susan M. Donovan. “We are thrilled for him. He is a wonderful ambassador
for Bellarmine, not
only because of his many professional accomplishments, but also because of the loyalty
he has shown to the university over the past three decades.” Lansing graduated from
Bellarmine University in 2009 after a journey that spanned nearly 30 years. He first
arrived on the campus in 1981 and worked at WAVE-3 while pursuing his degree. In 1985,
he left to take the position of news director at a television
station in Grand Rapids, Mich., just shy of finishing his degree. After two years
in Michigan he became assistant news director and news director at KARE-TV in Minneapolis,
then news director at WBBM-TV in Chicago. Following Chicago, Lansing held
leadership positions for stations in Cleveland and Detroit before joining the E.W.
Scripps Co. in 2000. In May 2008, Lansing decided to return to Bellarmine to finish
his degree, earning a bachelor's degree in communication in May 2009. In 2010, he
was named to the Bellarmine University Gallery of Distinguished Graduates. Lansing
has served as an advisor and fellow of Bellarmine’s Institute for Media, Culture &
Ethics. He also served on the Bellarmine Board of Trustees from 2010-17, including
a term as vice chair. He has also been a visiting faculty member at the
Poynter Institute for Media Studies in St. Petersburg, Fla., one of the nation's top
schools for professional journalists. "I'm very proud of my Bellarmine degree and
the hard work it represents," said Lansing. "It has been a great honor to be invited
back to my alma mater to serve multiple terms as a trustee, and to be recognized as
a distinguished Bellarmine graduate. I’m
probably more honored, though, that Bellarmine faculty members have invited me back
from time to time to speak to students, giving me an opportunity to influence future
leaders in media and communication." In an interview with NPR News, Lansing said he wants to build on the nearly 50-year-old radio network’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," he said. 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." Four years ago, President Barack Obama named Lansing to be the first
chief executive of the broadcasting outfit that was renamed the U.S. Agency for Global
Media. "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." Article by Carla Carlton, Director of Development Communications in Bellarmine's Division
of Enrollment, Marketing and Communication