Howard Fineman, the longtime Washington scribe who mastered a large number of various mediums over the course of a number of distinguished many years in journalism, died Tuesday night at 75 after a two-year-long battle with pancreatic most cancers. The information was announced by his spouse, Amy Nathan.
Howard was possible a well-known determine to you all. Not solely was he a ubiquitous presence on MSNBC and a prolific author for Newsweek journal throughout its golden age, however he additionally performed a distinguished function at HuffPost, having served as the positioning’s international editor for a time.
World is an efficient option to describe Howard. He had a gravitational pull about him. He was a person in perpetual movement, reporting and writing and pundit-ing — seemingly unhappy except he was contributing to the day’s dialog.
“I’ve gone from the guide typewriter to Twitter,” he informed me of his profession after we spoke for this piece. “I’ve performed every thing however skywriting.”
Stricken with terminal most cancers, he mentioned he’d attempt it in his remaining time. It was a joke, in fact. However at that second, it wasn’t exhausting to examine him up within the aircraft. There have been few tales he wouldn’t chase.
I first met Howard as a researcher for his e-book, “The 13 American Arguments.” It was a lofty challenge, making an attempt to distill roughly 250 years of historical past into an arbitrary variety of neatly tailor-made, binary disputes. He would confide later that it was “classically overwrought.” Nonetheless, it was a best-seller.
From there, Howard performed an outsized function in my skilled life, serving to me get into the Columbia College Graduate Faculty of Journalism (the place he had additionally gone) and Newsweek’s internship program. He then joined me at HuffPost, the place I served as politics editor on the time.
Regardless of all that overlapping historical past, it was within the years after we each left HuffPost that we grew nearer. Bumping into him across the neighborhood or sitting over espresso, I developed an immense fondness for Howard. He was a mensch within the truest sense. He cherished mentoring youthful reporters, and we, in flip, grew hooked up to him.
I started to acknowledge that this one who I had, for thus lengthy, seen as an emblem of the D.C. institution was, in truth, discomforted by it. He wished to witness historical past, not be part of it. He had gone into journalism as a result of it let him scratch his curiosities and (like so many within the area) channel his insecurities. He had a virtuous view of the road of labor. I’m unsure he might have loved anything.
“I’m not the world’s most social individual by nature,” he informed me. “The way in which I might sq. being an outsider and being a part of the human race was by being in a newsroom.”
Howard was born on Nov. 17, 1948, in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. His mom was an English trainer, and his father was a shoe firm producer’s consultant. From an early age, it was clear the profession path he’d chart.
On election night time in 1956, he, an 8-year-old, transformed the den of his dwelling right into a makeshift newsroom the place he broadcast the outcomes to his mother and father and laid out piles of paper to seem like the playing cards the networks fed into their rudimentary computer systems.
“It was actually one of many nerdiest issues you can think about,” Howard recalled.
He attended Colgate College, the place he was the editor-in-chief of The Colgate Maroon, and graduated from the Columbia Journalism Faculty in 1973. From there, he went to The Courier-Journal in Louisville, Kentucky.
A Jewish child from Squirrel Hill could have appeared like an odd match for bourbon nation. However the paper could be the religious tent pole of his profession. Southern politics was unnerving — he lined a Klan rally in the course of the day as a result of his editor forbade him from doing so at night time — nevertheless it had its simple charms. A “porchfront fashion,” as he put it, that was ripe for “storytelling.”
“In some ways, that was one of the best,” he mentioned of his Louisville days. “The irony is for a lot of reporters again then who had been hungry to come back to Washington they didn’t notice how fortunate they had been. It was fantastic, and I cherished each minute of it.”
I all the time puzzled why Howard didn’t simply keep in Louisville, given the sentimentality he felt for his time there. However he flicked away such hypotheticals like pesky gnats. D.C. was his purpose. He noticed the town as “an imperium not in contrast to Rome,” the place “all of the vectors of energy within the nation intersect.” And he wished to be at that intersection.
In 1977, he joined the Courier-Journal’s Washington bureau and, inside three years, was at Newsweek. His trajectory continued from there: labor reporter, political correspondent, chief political correspondent, senior editor, after which deputy Washington bureau chief.
To chart that path required apparent ability, and Howard actually had that. Nevertheless it additionally required a bit {of professional} ferocity too. Colleagues described an depth to Howard that I noticed later in his profession. He wished to have one of the best Rolodex and one of the best assignments. He had a widely known aggressive streak that fed his work ethic. He labored late into the night time to follow for TV hits the following morning. And he litigated every thing — a byproduct of the regulation diploma he had earned taking night time courses on the Brandeis Faculty of Regulation on the College of Louisville.
“He was a power of nature,” recalled Jonathan Alter, his colleague for years at Newsweek. “He knew everyone in Washington. He not solely knew them however had a complicated tackle who they had been and what they had been doing. He was terribly politically shrewd.”
However Howard additionally benefited from bigger, tectonic modifications within the media business. Information magazines had been elevating their correspondents into bonafide must-reads. Broadcast information was turning to youthful on-air expertise. Watergate had given reporting ethical advantage and actual superstar.
“I went into Columbia desirous to be Teddy White and got here out desirous to be Woodward and Bernstein,” Howard informed me. “They’d saved, one may argue, the American constitutional authorities. And so they grew to become well-known additionally, let’s say that.”
Howard continued shifting with these tectonic shifts: turning into probably the most recognizable pundits on cable information after which becoming a member of the net journalism wave proper because it was peaking. However he had — what appeared to me, a minimum of — an advanced relationship with that idea of fame. I requested him as soon as if he had been motivated by it.
“If you happen to try this to me, I’m going to come back again from the grave and kill you,” he shot again. Minutes later, he acknowledged the attraction.
For Howard, the discomfort was not within the fame he had rightfully achieved however within the suggestion that he had moved on from his Pittsburgh roots and Louisville molding for one thing facile.
In our talks, he repeatedly described himself as an “outsider.” It was not misplaced on him that Newsweek was the scrappy underdog subsequent to the Time and that HuffPost was the renegade amongst its friends. He took satisfaction in these matches. And he was vital, too, of reporters who didn’t share his conviction that the occupation was not a part of energy however a examine on it.
“In Washington,” he mentioned, “we delude ourselves as journalists into considering we’re a part of the institution. We actually, finally, should not.”
It was for this that I got here to not simply respect Howard however love him. He was righteous about the precise issues and dogged in the precise methods. He had huge ideas and stunning depths. He had a price system in an business and city the place that may usually get misplaced. Of all of the items he wrote, the presidents he’d interviewed, and the locations he’d been, it was his reflection on the shooting on the Tree of Life synagogue — the place he’d been bar mitzvah-ed — that he considered his greatest work.
He by no means really left that den in his dwelling in Pittsburgh.
I’ll miss my pal. However, extra importantly, we in political journalism will miss the instance he set. Goodbye, Howard.