WASHINGTON 鈥 Journalists, viewers, friends and fans are sharing their memories of longtime NBC Washington anchor Jim Vance who died Saturday at 75 after a battle with cancer.
Jim Vance brought warmth and dignity to every newscast. A DC news legend and a cherished member of our NBC family. We'll miss you Jim.
— Lester Holt (@LesterHoltNBC)
Ride on, Jim Vance, ride on. Our great NBC4 anchor & community leader has died. Keep him in your hearts.
— Tom Sherwood (@tomsherwood)
Last year and I had a chance to interview Jim Vance about his life and career.
— Mark Segraves (@SegravesNBC4)
My friend. My mentor. I will miss you. Sad day. News4 Anchor Jim Vance Dies at 75.
— Shomari Stone (@shomaristone)
Our thoughts & prayers are w/ his family. Jim Vance was a steady voice who shared the news - good or bad - with grace. This is a loss for DC
— MurielBowser (@MurielBowser)
NBC Washington reporter Mark Segraves said Vance personified Washington. 鈥淚f I had to pick one person to represent Washington, not Capitol Hill, but our neighborhood, our hometown, our communities, good and bad, it would be Vance.鈥
That鈥檚 how many of his colleagues called him, Vance. 鈥淣obody called him Jim,鈥 said NBC Washington reporter Tom Sherwood.
Voice for the voiceless
Gordon Peterson, retired Washington anchor and friend of Vance’s, said people in the D.C. community thought of Vance as a friend and a neighbor.
People looked to Vance as a leader and a voice for people who aren鈥檛 in the center of power, not lobbyists, but 鈥減eople who lived in the neighborhood and communities of Washington,鈥 said ABC News鈥 Jack Cloherty.
Cloherty and Segraves described Vance as a 鈥渧oice for the voiceless.鈥
鈥淗e didn鈥檛 hold back. Whether it was the president of the United States, the mayor of D.C., his boss; if he saw something that wasn鈥檛 right 鈥 he would say something. He would do it on air, in his commentary. He would do it in person,鈥 Segraves said.
Peterson remembers that Vance didn鈥檛 like the word Redskins for the Washington Team. 鈥淗e made that pretty clear,鈥 Peterson said.
What you see is what you got
Movie critic Arch Campbell who worked with Vance at NBC Washington remembers the advice Vance got from NBC and ABC anchor David Brinkley: Be yourself. Campbell said that Vance never did what the consultants told him to do. 鈥淭hey said, 鈥楥ut your hair.鈥 He grew an Afro. He always spoke truth to power.鈥
Sherwood recalled walking to cover a political convention with Vance, who was stopped frequently by fans and friends who wanted to speak with him. When Sherwood reminded Vance that they couldn鈥檛 be late for work, Vance replied 鈥淚 know,鈥 then returned to his conversation.
Meteorologist Bob Ryan said that with Vance, 鈥淲hat you see is what you got. The trust and integrity, it came through.鈥 But along with that, some of the pain also came through, said Bob Ryan.
In 2015, in an interview with colleague and co-anchor Doreen Gentzler. 鈥淗e had his own personal troubles 鈥 but he was open about it,鈥 Sherwood said.
蜜桃视频app鈥檚 Kate Ryan said Vance has that cool, as well as professional style. 鈥淗e had that thing where you reach out from behind the television screen and got you. He didn鈥檛 have to try. He just had it,鈥 Kate Ryan said.
鈥淪o many anchors on TV, if you look around the country, when they laugh at something they sound kind of insincere 鈥 but when Jim Vance laughed on TV, it would disrupt the show because if he were truly amused, he would laugh and they’d have to refigure the show because he鈥檇 eat up so much time laughing,鈥 Sherwood said.
Vance鈥檚 laughter is something Campbell will always remember 鈥 that and Vance saying 鈥淢y man.鈥 Segraves said he will always remember when Vance would be so moved over a story and go off-script and start on one of his rants. He will also remember Vance鈥檚 impeccable impersonation of NBC Washington reporter Pat Collins.
The National Association of Black Journalists released a statement commemorating Vance’s career. Dorothy Tucker, NABJ Board Vice-President of Broadcast said Vance was not only respected locally, but nationally too.
“He was the consummate journalist we all admired and longed to emulate. He will be missed,” Tucker said in the statement. NABJ inducted Vance into the Association’s Hall of Fame in 2007.
Kate Ryan said that Vance, who came to D.C. in 1969, a year after the riots had just ripped the city apart, was a voice that had not been heard from in broadcasting. 鈥淧eople forget that African American broadcasters were not common in those days,鈥 and Vance bridged a gap in the diverse city.
Inspiration to journalists and viewers
When he graduated from the University of Maryland in 2012, Czarlite Ricasa said Vance was the keynote speaker. Vance’s speech to the graduates stayed with Ricasa years after the ceremony, Ricasa told 蜜桃视频app in an email.
“Mr. Vance was kind enough to mingle with all of us after the ceremony. I am sad to learn of Mr. Vance’s death. He was truly a hometown hero and his [inspirational] words and actions will live with all of us for ages,” Ricasa said.
Segraves said that Vance took helping younger generations of reporters seriously. 鈥淗e was a mentor to me,鈥 he said.
Vance viewer Richard Mazzochi said he watched Vance every evening. 鈥淚 had the pleasure of meeting him a couple of times and talking with him about how much he enjoyed being the biggest celebrity in Washington D.C. Jim Vance was the best at what he did … and I will never forget him,” Mazzochi said in an email to 蜜桃视频app.
The Washington Post鈥檚 Paul Farhi said that Vance, along with Gentzler, was 鈥渢he landmark. They were stability.鈥 Vance recognized that TV news has changed over time and that the audiences are scattering and getting smaller. 鈥淵ou鈥檙e never going to have one figure like him as the consensus popular choice.鈥
Listen to journalists and colleagues as they remember Jim Vance:
