Ahead of Father’s Day, “Morning Joe” co-hosts Joe Scarborough and Willie Geist reflected on their dads: men who understood the importance of time with their children and led not by their words but by example.
Fellow “Morning Joe” co-host Mika Brzezinski, who sat down with Scarborough and Geist, began by talking about her dad, the late Zbigniew Brzezinski, who served as President Jimmy Carter’s national security advisor. “It made me think to ask Joe and Willie about their dads,” she said. “… What about the moments when your father was really there for you?”
“It goes back to childhood — the very beginning,” Geist said. “And as you get older, you start to realize how important it was for your dad just to be there. We talk a lot in parenting about quality time. I just think about time.”
His father Bill Geist, who retired last year as a correspondent for “CBS Sunday Morning,” had a busy job but “was always home for baseball practice or basketball or whatever thing I had to do that night,” Geist said.
“As a kid, you have these snapshots, I think, in your mind of your own childhood,” he added. “And my dad is in all those snapshots.”
Because Geist, along with his co-hosts, wakes up at 4 a.m. for “Morning Joe,” he said people often wonder how he balances work with parenting.
“What I always say is, for the last 12 years with you guys, I have had for the most part evenings,” Geist explained. “I’ve been home for bath time, I’ve been home for story time, I’ve been home for dinner. And so I hope my kids will have those snapshots in their minds that I have of my own dad from my childhood.”
Scarborough agreed with Geist’s focus on time spent together.
“Like any kid, you overlook the obvious,” Scarborough said. “And I remember it came to me: I said, ‘wait, when was my dad there? Oh, wait a second – my dad was there all the time. My dad was there every Sunday when we went to church … every Little League baseball game.’”
George Scarborough was also there when his son decided to run for the House of Representatives seat for Florida’s 1st district — the seat held by eight-term incumbent Earl Hutto.
“My dad said, ‘Well, that’s great, Joey, but I’m voting for Earl,’” Scarborough recalled.
“Oh, no!” Brzezinski said.
“But after we got past that, my dad was actually my fiercest advocate,” Scarborough said.









