There's a version of your life where you take the safe path. The familiar one. The one that makes sense on paper. And then there's the version where you say yes to something that sounds completely ridiculous, and that version turns out to be the one that teaches you the most.
David S. Bernknopf spent over 20 years at CNN, covering the world, building a career that became his whole identity. When new ownership came in and the culture shifted, he made a decision, quietly and quickly, the way journalists learn to do. He walked away. Then he moved to Alaska on a cold call from a stranger. He didn't know anyone there. He'd been once, for five days. But something about the absurdity of it felt right.
This is a conversation about what happens after the identity you've built for decades gets set aside. About the kind of loneliness that settles in slowly, that you normalize before you realize it isn't healthy. And about the two words from his adult kids, that would be a pretty cool thing, that quietly set him free.
What You'll Hear:
• How a 21-year-old chose CNN over a safe small-market job, and why his dad thought he was crazy
• What it felt like to walk away from a 20-year career that had become his whole identity
• The unexpected cold call that sent him to Alaska in his mid-60s
• The isolation and loneliness that surprised him, even though he thought he'd prepared
• How two years in Alaska made him more patient, and gave him his first fiction book
• Why his kids' permission slip mattered more than he expected it to
Guest Bio:
David S. Bernknopf is a veteran journalist and television news producer who spent more than two decades at CNN, where he rose to executive director of news planning. After leaving CNN, he continued his investigative journalism career in Washington, D.C., before accepting an unexpected job running the only investigative news unit in the state of Alaska. That two-year experience became the basis for his debut novel, Two Years on Another Planet, a fictionalized account of life, loneliness, and reinvention in the last frontier. He now lives in Colorado, consulting on documentaries and, as he puts it, living a project-oriented life.
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career identity loss, reinvention after 60, loneliness and isolation, saying yes to the unknown, life after CNN, moving to Alaska, writing your first book, permission to change, journalism and purpose, children as anchors
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