John Dickerson

John Dickerson is co-anchor of "CBS Evening News" and anchor of "CBS Evening News Plus." He is also a Contributing Writer to The Atlantic and is co-host of the Slate Political Gabfest.

  • 04/29/2023: The Magic of Music

    My cocktail chatter from the recent Gabfest:

    My chatter is on the magical properties of music. To me, musicians are the closest we have to actual Wizards. They can conjure a feeling and then make another human soul have that feeling or launch another feeling. Writing does this too, of course, but it’s rare when a line of a book can stop you on a street the way a song that comes on shuffle can.

    The magic is not in what the music tells you so much as the place it creates for you to feel something deeply. What it comes to mean to you might even shock the author of the actual song. I recited John Prine’s,  Mexican Home, at a tribute to him when he was alive and John was in the audience and he was polite enough not to say to me afterwards “All that stuff you found in that song, I didn’t know I put it there!”

    I listened to a version of that song about 100 times before that event. He sang it on a live album with a musician named Josh Ritter and it’s a beautiful duet. And that introduced me to Josh’s music. Josh has a song that he wrote that has one of those lines that I’ve been talking about. It’s a song called “Only a River.” Bob Weir of the Grateful Dead sang it on his album Blue Mountain.

    The line is “Only a River going to make things right.” And I know exactly what that means, though I couldn’t tell you what Josh Ritter thinks it means or what it should mean for you. That song is in my regular rotation.

    What has always interested me about this magic of song is that the connection between songwriter and listener says at a basic level: you are not alone. This thing you’re feeling, I feel it too, though as I say, you may be feeling different things than the author of the song felt. But at bottom you feel less lonesome.

    On the other hand, the process of creating a song is often so lonesome. You can write a song alone, in a dorm room or in the stairwell of your dorm, and you are all alone. And then who knows if anybody likes the song and that accentuates the lonesomeness of putting these lyrics that feel true to you out in the world.

    But!

    Then a song goes out into the world and it travels on its own life and it makes those connections with listeners. It works that magic and 25 years later on the other side of the world from the dorm in which you wrote that song the people of Nagoya, Japan can have that song sung to them by Bob Dylan. Which is exactly what happened to Josh Ritter’s song Only A River. Dylan had never sung it before and it was a beautiful version because Dylan has finally stopped shouting which makes his shows lovely.

    Someone posted to Josh Ritter on Twitter that Dylan had sung his song and Ritter told this story of writing it alone in his dorm 25 years earlier and then he said this:

    “To all my friends out there making art: it’s not always this easy seeing the ripples your work makes, but take the story of my little song, Only a River, as comfort. Art travels. Voices carry. Your art is out there in the world, making its home in many places, many hearts.

    I was moved by this because I believe it so deeply. I posted Josh’s song “Only A River” on Twitter. I don’t know him, but I wanted the world to know about the song and he replied. He’s been a gabfest lifer, which was a mighty fine thing to learn.

    And Josh happens to have a new album out tomorrow. It’s called Spectral Lines. Go pick it up.

  • More Notions

  • 03/25/2023: A satisfying GPT exchange

    A lot of the coverage of change GPT has been about the learning and development of artificial intelligence. What I wonder is how we, as humans, are going to slowly learn and acculturate to the kinds of exchanges with ChatGPT and its cousins. What I’m thinking about is the psychological closeness that will accrue in […]
  • 03/24/2023: Chat GPT on the difference between how to think about important issues.

    There is a gap in American public conversation between what gets covered and what is objectively important. Presidential campaigns exacerbate this gap. I asked Chat GPT to list the important stories and then I asked Chat GPT to list the stories about issues that impact the greatest number of Americans, which is a rough proxy […]
  • 03/24/2023: This is how we beat the robots

    I’m not kidding. When artificial intelligence becomes so good at copying human behavior, we will need to get really good at head fakes. Remember this simple rule: head fakes beat deep fakes. This is how we will beat Chat GPT. https://t.co/CZoZUpjYBk — John Dickerson (@jdickerson) March 24, 2023
  • 03/24/2023: We Have Three Questions on Prime Time

    https://johndickerson.com/wp-content/uploads/2023/03/CN-PT-JOHN-DICKERSON-_17_16x9_JD_SOCIAL-DELIVERABLE.mp4
  • 03/23/2023: Beethoven's Grit and Gut

    You’ve probably seen the stories about how scientists used strands of Beethoven’s hair to examine his DNA. They did so in the hopes of trying to learn more about the cluster of illnesses that troubled the composer throughout his life. He was a mess. I knew that he was afflicted–most notably by a loss of […]
  • 03/22/2023: Historical Shade and political anti-intellectualism

    Governor Ron DeSantis gave this response to Donald Trump’s nickname “Ron Sanctimonious” in a recent interview: “I don’t know how to spell the sanctimonious one. I don’t really know what it means, but I kinda like it, it’s long, it’s got a lot of vowels. We’ll go with that, that’s fine.” The nickname thing is […]
  • 03/22/2023: John McPhee on reading out loud.

    From The Paris Review. INTERVIEWER Is reading your work aloud still important? MCPHEE Certainly the aural part of writing is a big, big thing to me. I can’t stand a sentence until it sounds right, and I’ll go over it again and again. Once the sentence rolls along in a certain way, that’s sentence A. […]
  • 03/21/2023: How Imprint helps me beat the morning and makes the day richer

    For those of you who have read my Atlantic essay on recapturing my day, you know about my daily fight to beat the morning. I have found an extremely useful tool: The Imprint app. I have developped a pretty good routine for keeeping focus while at my desk (thank you Calk Neport, Marshall Goldsmith, David […]
  • 03/18/2023: Writing: The leaving out

    I’ve written a lot in this space about the space in which art takes place. In the writing I’m working on now I’m working on that puzzle. How to say what you need to say, and how to evoke and how to carry along a reader without giving them too much. I don’t want to […]
  • 03/15/2023: Faith and Hope

    At the end of 2020 I wrote about that pandemic year so I wouldn’t forget what it was like. I wrote about hope and Thomas Merton: “By hope…the abstract and impersonal become …intimate conviction,” wrote the Trappist monk Thomas Merton. “What I believe in faith, I possess and make my own by hope.” Hope in […]