He holds the country together with a straight face and a steady gaze. But what happens when the man trusted to steady millions starts to tremble alone? When the lights cool, the applause dies, and the questions he fires at the world ricochet inward, sharper, unforgiving? When the anchor becomes the stor…
He never auditioned to be a symbol, yet his face has become the quiet metronome of national anxiety. Night after night, he lends his voice to other people’s worst days, then walks out into a darkness that does not clap, does not comment, simply waits. The same discipline that steadies his delivery also walls off his doubt, until the questions he asks on-air return in the mirror with no commercial break to soften them.