JACKSONVILLE, Fla. ā Tom Wills is a husband, father, grandfather, and to thousands of people, their local news anchor.
But, to many journalists who have had the privilege of crossing paths with him, Tom is also the teacher and mentor whose lessons will never be forgotten.
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As Tom gets ready to retire after 49 years of dedicated service at the anchor desk, News4JAX gathered some of the great lessons that he has taught our staff over the years.
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While some may be specific to journalism, the lessons Tom has taught the News4JAX staff may be applied to any industry ā and can even go beyond the workplace.
Here are seven invaluable lessons that Tom has taught some of the News4JAX staff over the years, in their own words:
1. Donāt waste words
āWe can just say Jaguars, not the Jacksonville Jaguars. Same with the Jumbo Shrimp, the Icemen, the Sharks, the airport, the zoo etc. The audience knows what weāre referring to. Including āJacksonvilleā would be a waste of a word.
Speaking of wasting words, if I write a sentence in 10 words, see how it can be rewritten in seven words. If it can be rewritten in seven, try for five. Less is always more in a script.ā
Reagan Fink, producer
āOne of the best pieces of advice Tom has given me: āNo, is a complete sentence.ā Iāve heeded it often, and hear his voice in my head every time I do!ā
Joy Purdy, news anchor
2. āOur business is a trust businessā
āOur business is a trust business. People trust us to be factual, accurate and give them the right news. No person embodies this more than Tom.
It was probably my first month on the job and Tom came back into the sports department with the intro to a script and wanted to go over it to make sure he understood everything in it correctly. Weāre talking about a tease/toss-type of thing, not a rough draft to āWar and Peace.ā These are seldom the longest or more in-depth things we do. Itās basically a three- or four-sentence write-up, many times done in a hurry (or not at all, to many producersā dismay!)
Tom went through the whole thing, making sure he had the pronunciation correct, the facts correct and that he was presenting things accurately to the viewer. He made a couple notations on the paper, said āthank you,ā and went back to his desk. It seems so very simple and basic, but it is the foundation of our industry. Truth. Accuracy. Trust. Presentation. How is a viewer supposed to trust you when you canāt even pronounce the subjectās name right? Iāve seen this play out a hundred times since then and itās always stuck with me. Tom is always so detail-oriented and takes what he does (and what we do) to the highest level of professionalism there is.ā
Justin Barney, sports editor
āWhen Lynyrd Skynyrd went down, Eyewitness News sent Tom and a photographer to Mississippi to cover the plane crash, ever since, surviving band members hold Tom as a correspondent and dear friend. Just a couple of years ago I shot an interview with Tom and Ricky Medlock regarding the 45th year since the crash. After the interview, Ricky said to Tom āEveryone thanks you for telling our story and we really think of you as part of the band.ā
Mark Clanton, photojournalist
3. Respect your viewers
āThe main thing I have learned from Tom is the passion for keeping our community informed, and doing it with the utmost respect and integrity. I LOVE that lesson, and I love the legacy Tom Wills has given us at WJXT.ā
Kent Justice, news anchor
4. Donāt be afraid to ask questions
āTom the mentor ~
When I started with News4JAX in 2010, Iād already been in the broadcast news business 20 years. Could I still learn a thing or two from Tom Wills? Absolutely!
Itās been tremendous to sit next to Tom in our newsroom the past year. There were no formal instruction session, no seminars given. But itās true: more is caught, than taught.
Tom is never shy about asking key questions. He asks them to reporters, other news anchors, our producers, our managers. The goal, always, is to get the information right. To be accurate. To MAKE SURE weāve uncovered where the information comes from, if we have it verified by more than one source, that we work as a team and stay on the same page for each story.ā
Kent Justice, news anchor
āāWhat are we looking at in this cold open?ā is a question Tom used to ask me a lot. Some days, he still asks me. That question challenges me, because if he has to ask, what weāre looking at isnāt obvious enough.ā
Reagan Fink, news producer
5. Double-check every piece of information, and check again
āHis attention to accuracy. Lots of times, he asked me to review scripts, so, his words-- āwe donāt do violence to the facts.ā
Frank Powers, assignment manager
āOne of the many things Iāve learned from working with Tom is to never take anything for face value. I was working with a reporter on his story, and he wrote something that seemed odd to Tom. This information was in a script that I had approved. When Tom asked me about it, I said, āIām not sure but thatās what the reporter wrote.ā He said, āWell, if the reporter wrote that the sky was falling, you wouldnāt let that stand as fact. So, letās double-check this.ā And, of course, Tom was right, the reporter made a mistake. This was a good lesson for me, and one I havenāt forgotten.ā
Marilyn Vaca, digital director
āAs someone who grew up in Jacksonville, watching Channel 4, it was an honor when I started writing for Tomās evening newscasts, about six months into my time as an associate producer. Within a year of that, I was a producer who would sometimes fill in on the 6 p.m. newscast ā meaning, I was producing for Tom.
Any 6 p.m. producer quickly learns that Tom doesnāt just read over the scripts in the newscast, he reads them over closely, and you will be asked about them. And itās for a good reason: Tom carefully considers every word. He wants to make sure that what we are airing is accurate, fair, and clear to our viewers. If thereās something that sounds confusing, he is going to work with the producer to make it easier for our viewers to understand. If thereās something thatās ambiguous, heās going to make it precise. And itās not just the producers he works with on the stories: he will call reporters to ensure that what weāre saying leading up to their report is accurate and clear. If he makes changes, he will call the reporter to make sure heās not mischaracterizing the story. Over time, as a producer you learn to be precise in your writing, careful with word choices, and to understand what youāre writing.ā
Eric Wallace, executive producer
6. Always give your 100%
āI was a street reporter in 1995 when I started at Channel 4. Tom (and Deborah Gianoulis) would pitch to me on a live shot every weekday. Itās so surreal to now be sitting next to Tom on the anchor desk; a HUGE honor for me at News4Jax! Since joining the anchor team about a decade ago, Iāve watched Tom come to work every day, and give 100 percent ā no matter what is happening in his personal life. As the leader of our newsroom, he has set the bar high for excellence.ā
Joy Purdy, news anchor
āBy every metric that matters in TV News, Tom Wills is the best. A sentiment shared by colleagues for decades. Like Brinkley with America, Larry King with interviews and Winterling with forecasts, he is a giant. Serious, honest, and unflappable yet caring when the community needs comfort (Hurricane Matthew). Enjoy retirement, Tom. Weāll try and fill your spot on the news in a literal fashion but in a figurative senseā¦the voice of Jacksonville remains with you.ā
Scott Johnson, news reporter/anchor
āTom Wills is as warm, engaged, and sharp off-air as he is at the anchor desk.
Almost every day, Tom improves my scripts and sends them back to me to check that everything is accurate and also to make sure that a tweak to the anchor copy dosenāt leave me surprised or scrambling when Iām reporting live in the field.
Tomās crisp writing and thorough editing always make our newscasts better, and his consistent collaboration makes our team stronger.
He works hard, earning his legendary reputation day after day.
Tom is the real deal, a true class act. Iām going to miss working with him.ā
Anne Maxwell, news reporter
āOne of my favorite things about working with Tom is his dedication to reading every word in the 6 p.m. newscast. He reads every script I write, even ones written for Joy to read, and makes slight tweaks. I love that, because I feel like if Tom approves of each script, theyāre worthy of being on TV. Heās taught me to be accepting of feedback and changes, because the final product is always so much better.ā
Reagan Fink, news producer
7. Be kind to others
āI am so sad to see Tom Wills go! He always has a smile on his face when heās in the newsroom and lights up the studio with his awesome personality. Iāve learned so much from Tom over the past year Iāve worked with him. I remember my first time at the anchor desk with him while doing a sports story. It was such an honor to sit next to him I tried to play it cool on-air, but I had the biggest smile on my face because I was so excited lol. Tom is an exceptional writer and Iāve learned more about crafting sentences that are more engaging and intriguing to the audience. For that, I am grateful that he took the time to help me and teach me whenever I had questions.ā
Alessandra Pontbriand, sports anchor/reporter
āWhen I started here at Channel 4 26 years ago, I was both excited and intimidated to work with THE Tom Wills. As a Jacksonville native, I watched him as a teenager. From the moment I walked in the building, he was kind and honest. Any question I ever had in the field working on a story, I called Tom for clarity and advice. For years, I sent Tom my story scripts asking for any and all suggestions to make it better. It didnāt matter if he was off, if it was early or late at night, he would always call me and tell me what he thought. I will always be thankful to him for making me a better journalist.ā
Jen Waugh, news anchor
āI have been with News4Jax for nearly three years now, and while I have met so many amazing people in that time who have taught me so much, I donāt think Iāll ever meet another person in my career like Tom Wills. Tom is not only a dedicated journalist committed to getting answers and helping serve the community, he is an extremely kind and caring person. He comes into work early every day to respond to viewer emails before preparing for newscasts ā just so he can make sure that the needs of our community are being addressed. Tom also knows everybody in the newsroom by name ā again, going to show how much he cares for every person he interacts with.
While this retirement is well deserved, I will miss working with Tom in the newsroom. The evening newscasts wonāt be the same without him.
Happy Retirement, Tom!ā
Erin Seaton, news producer
āTom is a brilliant, measured, and respected journalist on the evening news daily. Anyone reading this will know that. They should also know that heās an amazing mentor. Heās a person who builds up others. He wants others to succeed. A man with this much success could easily have an ego. Instead, Tom is humble, kind, and compassionate. I grew up watching Tom. Then I had the privilege of working with him and learning from him. Few things were more rewarding after a long, difficult news day than getting a call from Tom after the shows to thank you. His positive and constructive feedback made a huge difference for younger journalists. He checked in on heart-wrenching stories and always asked about the families affected by these local tragedies. He led by example and earned great respect this way. Tom, Iām so thrilled you and Gina get to spend more time together and with your beloved family.ā
Vic Micolucci, former news reporter/anchor
This story cannot be written without hearing from Tom and the legacy that he hopes to leave behind in this newsroom.
So, what is the one thing that Tom wishes to be remembered for in the journalism industry?
āTell the truth, tell it clearly and tell it with fairness to all those involved,ā Tom wrote.
And itās not a degree or a perfect GPA that makes a perfect journalist. To Tom, it is ācuriosity, clear thinking, and compassion,ā that define a good journalist.
It is no secret that learning is a process that never ends. While learning may be acquired in different ways such as life experiences, school and books, one cannot deny that learning from other people may be one of the most impactful ways to learn ā as evidenced by what his coworkers said above.
Luckily, over 49 years at News4JAX, our staff was able to learn from one the best in the journalism industry ā an opportunity that none of us takes for granted.
Tomās time in this newsroom may be coming to an end, but one thing is for sure: his lessons will remain.
Now, itās our job to make sure Tomās teachings live on for future generations of journalists.