Gordon Smith Will Step Down From NAB in December
The Gordon Smith era at the National Association of Broadcasters will end soon, and the Curtis LeGeyt era will begin.
Smith, the president/CEO of NAB, announced he’ll “transition to an advisory and advocacy role” effective Dec. 31. That role will last until at least the end of 2024.
Chief Operating Officer Curtis LeGeyt has been named the next president and CEO effective Jan. 1, 2022.
Curtis LeGeytIn 2017, the NAB announced a contract extension for Smith’s contract through 2023, so the timing of the change is something of a surprise.
“It has been my great honor to give the lion’s roar for broadcasters – those who run into the storm, those who stand firm in chaos to hear the voice of the people, those who hold to account the powerful — and to stand with those of the fourth estate who have the hearts of public servants,” Smith stated in a press release. He also posted a video message.
Smith joined NAB as president and CEO in November 2009, succeeding David Rehr. A Republican with a business background, he was a two-term U.S. senator from Oregon who had a reputation as a political moderate and pragmatist, a reputation that he retained in his time at NAB.
LeGeyt has moved up the NAB’s lobbying and policy structure since 2011. Prior to assuming his current role as COO about a year ago, he served for five years as NAB’s executive vice president, Government Relations.
With a new Democratic administration in Washington, it probably doesn’t hurt that LeGeyt’s roots are on that side of the aisle.
Before joining NAB, LeGeyt was senior counsel to then-Senate Judiciary Chairman Patrick Leahy (D-Vt.), and he has donated to various Democratic candidates, according to online sites that cover campaign finance. Some in broadcasting had speculated that former broadcaster and member of Congress Greg Walden, another Republican from Oregon, might succeed Smith.
NAB Joint Board of Directors Chairman Jordan Wertlieb, president of Hearst Television, called Gordon Smith “the ultimate statesman, bringing people together from both sides of the aisle to discuss ideas, find common ground and lead NAB to success on countless fronts.”
Wertlieb said Smith will hold a special advisory role through 2024, including lobbying.
When he was in the Senate, Smith served on the Senate Commerce Committee, Energy and Natural Resources Committee, the Finance Committee and the Foreign Relations Committee. Smith has credited his work on Commerce and as chairman of a Senate High Tech Task Force as fostering his interest in new media and new technology issues.
He also worked as an entrepreneur and attorney, directing his family company, Weston, Ore.-based Smith Frozen Foods.
Smith has written publicly about mental health and his family’s experience with suicide.
Smith had a health scare in August of 2020 from which he quickly recovered.
Issues with which the NAB has dealt during Smith’s tenure include the regulatory burdens on broadcasters when compared to “new tech” platforms; navigating the nation’s digital TV migration; lobbying against proposals to place new performance royalties on radio stations; and efforts to advocate for radio’s place in the dashboard.
The new incoming leader LeGeyt has led NAB’s legislative advocacy efforts.
NAB said his work included the permanent reauthorization of the Satellite Television Extension and Localism Act Reauthorization (STELAR), inclusion of $1 billion in RAY BAUM’s Act to reimburse stations impacted by the spectrum auction repack, and successful passage of the Music Modernization Act.
A list of all past NAB presidents is at bottom.
SMITH SAMPLER
Here is a sample of Radio World coverage of Gordon Smith’s tenure:
Thumbs Up for Gordon Smith (2011)
Q&A: NAB President/CEO Gordon Smith (2016)
NAB Re-ups Gordon Smith as President/CEO (2017)
Smith Salutes Broadcasters: “Right Now You Are in the Darkest Valley” (May 2020)
Gordon Smith Says Biden Won (Nov. 2020)
PAST NAB LEADERS
Here is a list of NAB’s leaders over the years:
Eugene F. McDonald 1923–1925 (founding president)
Frank W. Elliot 1925–1926
Earle C. Anthony 1926–1928
William S Hedges 1928–1930
Walter J. Damm 1930–1931
Harry Shaw 1931–1932
J. T. Ward 1932–1933
Alfred J. McCosker 1933–1935
Leo J. Fitzpatrick 1935–1936
Charles W. Myers 1936–1937
Neville Miller 1938–1944
J. Harold Ryan 1944–1945
Justin Miller 1945–1951
Harold Fellows 1951–1960
Leroy Collins 1961–1964
Vincent T. Wasilewski 1965–1982
Eddie Fritts 1982–2006
David Rehr 2006–2009
Gordon Smith 2009–2021
Curtis LeGeyt, to start Jan. 2022
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