Furnell Chatman Honored

Updated 4:00 PM PDT, Wed, Jul 22, 2009

TWITTER FACEBOOK

Get Adobe Flash player

To view this video you must to have Flash Player 9.0 or later installed. Click to download the most recent version of Flash.

LOS ANGELES -- Retiring NBC4 reporter/anchor Furnell Chatman was honored Tuesday by members of the Los Angeles County Board of Supervisors, who hailed his dedication and professionalism.

Chatman, who has been with NBC4 for 40 years, said he plans to retire to his native New Orleans.

"He is a trail-blazer who indeed broke racial barriers," said Supervisor Mark Ridley-Thomas, who presented Chatman with an honorary scroll along with Supervisor Mike Antonovich.

Chatman is known for "professionalism on the air and reporting the news in a fair manner," Antonovich said. "You've been a very good role model for our young people and we're going to miss you very much."

L.A. Politicians Honor Chatman

L.A. Politicians Honor Chatman
WATCH

L.A. Politicians Honor Chatman

End of Era: Furnell Chatman Retires

End of Era: Furnell Chatman Retires
WATCH

End of Era: Furnell Chatman Retires

In thanking the board, Chatman joked, "So this is what it feels like to be on the other side of the camera."

He also offered an overview of the current state of journalism.

"Our business is drifting, it seems," he said. "I don't like it. I'd rather just tell it like it is and let the chips fall."

In his acceptance speech, Chatman urged the board to reopen troubled Martin Luther King-Harbor Hospital, saying Los Angeles residents desperately need the facility.

"There are people in this community who are hurting and in pain," the broadcaster said. "I implore you, please get this done."

Supervisor Zev Yaroslavsky also commended Chatman as a journalist "who has always been fair, even when it was at my own expense."

Los Angeles, the county supervisor said, "is losing a lot of quality journalists -- in print and broadcast -- and I'm not happy about that."

Chatman said that while he is moving back home to New Orleans, he will miss Los Angeles.

"I'm going to New Orleans, yes, but much of my heart will be right here in Los Angeles," he said.

First Published: Jan 13, 2009 1:43 PM PDT

TWITTER FACEBOOK

  • 0% furious 0
  • 0% sad 0
  • 0% bored 0
  • 0% thrilled 0
  • 0% intrigued 0
  • 0% laughing 0
processing
      No comments have been posted yet.

      You have 2000 characters left

      processing
      So My City

      You are posting in (change)

      550/550 characters

      (jpg, pngs, or gifs allowed)

      (jpg, pngs, or gifs allowed)
      *Tip: You can also post moments via email or Twitter.

      processing

      View Your Moment in

      Posted by | 1 second ago

      Don't Miss

      as_seen_on

      Mar 19, 2010

      Iron News Man - March 19, 2010

      Follow Ironman Chris Schauble's continuing marathon and triathlon journey!

      Read It

      as_seen_on

      Mar 18, 2010

      Iron News Man - March 18, 2010

      Follow Ironman Chris Schauble's continuing marathon and triathlon journey!

      Read It

      as_seen_on

      Mar 18, 2010

      Iron News Man - March 17, 2010

      “The thing always happens that you really believe in; and the belief in a thing makes it happen.” - Frank Lloyd Wright I am thrilled with the sunny race-day forecast from Meteorologist...

      Read It
      Loading...
      Birthdate:
      You must be at least 13 to sign up.
      Gender:
      invalid

      By clicking the button below, I accept the terms of use and privacy policy

      Already Signed Up? Login Below.

      processing

      Here's what we're posting:

      *Only used for verification. We do not store your password.
      processing