David Muir left his fans scrambling as they begged him to be careful amid his latest assignment, which saw him climb up the arm of the Statue of Liberty in New York City.Â
The journalist looked right at home in a shot posted to Instagram that saw him smiling as he surveyed New York Harbor from the vantage point. David didnât appear nervous at all, despite the staggering height.Â
âGetting ready to take you 305 feet up. We climbed up through Lady Libertyâs right arm to reach the torch. Friday night 10 p.m. ET @abc #America250,â he wrote in the caption, as his fans took to the comment section to share their concerns.
âBe careful tomorrow night,â one fan wrote, while another added: âMind your stepâŠâ and a third chimed in: âIt seems very dangerous.â
âBe careful, especially of winds!â said another, while a fifth declared: âI am so scared of heights even if I see it on a screen.â The Statue of Libertyâs torch has been closed since 1916. After the Black Tom explosion occurred in the same year, authorities blocked all access to the torch.Â
David opened up about the âterrifyingâ experience of walking up to the torch in an interview with USA Today, sharing that he knew he wasnât going back down. âHow many people are allowed up here?â he asked the ranger, who replied: âNobody.â
âClimbing the ladder itself was more terrifying than standing up on the platform,â David continued. âYou just hear the audio of me saying, âIâm not going back down.â Weâre not doing this twice.â
See David during his college years belowâŠ
The climb was well worth it, according to the World News Tonight anchor. âOnce youâre up there, you are just in complete awe of the beauty of New York Harbor, and you immediately think of the people who came into the harbor on those ships and thought, âIâm getting a chance at a new life.'â
David previously shared how his love for journalism began in his childhood home in New York. âI was a nerd who felt this gravitational pull to the news, starting back when I was 12 years old,â he told People.Â
âI remember being outside, playing with the rest of the kids in the neighborhood and being the only kid who would go inside when the local news came on, and then watching Peter Jennings, who I thought was sort of the James Bond of the evening news, the globetrotter.â
He then began writing letters to local newsrooms asking for internship opportunities. âI began interning, carrying all the equipment â and back then the equipment was huge and heavy â and Iâd jump into the back of the cruiser, and I was honestly the happiest kid,â he recalled.Â
âMost kids were looking forward to summer vacation, and I couldnât wait to get into the back seat of that cruiser all over again.â After graduating with a journalism degree from Ithaca College, he worked at local news stations before landing a spot on ABCâs World News Now in 2003.Â
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