But if you don't enjoy doing something, you'll be miserable no matter how much money you make.
I can't think of any other job in journalism where the newsmakers come to you.
They've asked me to do this temporarily. I don't know what temporarily means. Life is temporary.
I had - all my life, everybody who knew me thought that I would probably grow up to be a reporter, a newspaper reporter because we didn't have much television in those days.
Once we get them in the studio, you interview a person the same way you would interview another. You ask them a question. You let them answer. You try to listen closely and then ask a follow-up.
It's getting the right person that's the challenge.
But with 9/11, we found that people tended to come back to the networks and the people who had been our core viewers in the past came back and they have stayed with us.
But if you're going to go out on a military unit, you've got to allow yourself to be under the control of the commander because you really could put the troops in danger.
I used to be a print reporter.