


He was born into a broadcasting family, so it was in his blood. The Canadian-American then landed an anchor job at Canadian Television after a news reporting job for a radio station. Jennings dropped out of high school and started doing his own morning radio show at age 9. He knew he’d lived a good life,” his family’s statement read. “Peter died with his family around him, without pain and in peace. Unfortunately, the diagnosis came too late, and he lost his fight on Augin New York. Jennings started “aggressive chemotherapy treatment the following week,” according to ABC. “I wonder if other men and women ask their doctors right away, ‘OK doc, when does the hair go?’ At any rate, that’s it for now on World News Tonight. The journalist concluded with some honesty and lighthearted humor over concerns about his hair, which many cancer patients can relate to. Related: Chemotherapy Side Effects – Hair Loss “That’s not intended as false modesty, but even I was taken aback by how far and how fast news travels.” He noted that he would continue to do the broadcast on good days, “my voice won’t always be like this.” Jennings said he was a little surprised at the kindness he experienced about his diagnosis. The National Cancer Institute says that we are survivors from the moment of diagnosis.” “I’ve been reminding my colleagues today, who have all been incredibly supportive, that almost 10 million Americans are already living with cancer and I have a lot to learn from them,” he said. Jennings said that he had been floored by the support from his fans and co-workers, while also acknowledging the people battling the disease. Related: If You Smoke a Pack a Day, Lung Cancer Screening Should Start at Age 50 & Be Free, Say New Federal Recommendations “Yes, I was a smoker until about 20 years ago, and I was weak, and smoked over 9/11 … but whatever the reason, the news does slow you down a bit.” “As some of you now know, I have learned in the last couple of days that I have lung cancer,” he said, then started speaking quickly, perhaps caught up in the emotion and anxiety of addressing this tough topic for the first time. On April 5, 2005, a raspy Jennings delivered some of his most difficult news to date. Related: 10 Public Figures Whose Lung Cancer Diagnosis Helped Get the Disease Much-Needed Attention The authoritative-yet-smooth and reassuring voice on ABC World News Tonight was a voice that many Americans grew up with, a beloved household name that families trusted to deliver them the world news each and every night for 22 years. Late ABC news anchor Peter Jennings stunned the nation when he announced his lung cancer diagnosis 16 years ago, and sadly died just four months later at 67 years old.

A leading expert says how crucial it is to be prepared with questions following a lung cancer diagnosis, and how past and present smokers should get screened via CT scan which can detect a potential cancer earlier.Jennings admitted that he was a past smoker, and showed empathy for the millions of Americans battling cancer.Late ABC news anchor Peter Jennings stunned the nation when he announced his lung cancer diagnosis 16 years ago, and sadly died just four months later at 67 years old.“It moves me knowing the lasting impact something horrible like that has,” he said. His own experience resonates every time he reports on a crime in Chicago, Krashesky said. With his mother struggling to raise four children alone, Krashesky was enrolled as a 4-year-old at the Milton Hershey School, a private Pennsylvania boarding school for orphans and impoverished children founded and endowed by the chocolate magnate. “So I never knew my dad, and obviously my family, they became the victims of violent crime.” “At the age of four months, my father was murdered in a robbery in Philadelphia,” Krashesky said. While Krashesky spent nearly all of his career in Chicago, he started as a news reporter and weathercaster for brief stints at WBNG-TV in Binghamton, New York and KTBC-TV in Austin, Texas, before arriving at ABC 7 as a fresh-faced 21-year-old.īut Krashesky had a challenging path to adulthood, his life fundamentally shaped by a family tragedy that has stayed with him throughout his career, informing and imbuing his reporting with an empathy born of his own loss.
