After turning down two job offers in the advertising and public relations industries in England, he started working as a freelance reporter for
BBC Northern Ireland in Belfast for ten months in 1967. He also chaired a sixth formers' interview programme in Northern Ireland. Lewis established ITN's Northern Bureau in Manchester, leading it until 1978. Lewis visited more than 30 countries on assignment for ITN. Lewis was a co-presenter of ITN's United Kingdom general election coverage in
1979 and
1983 and its budget coverage from 1981 to 1984. Lewis was moved by the BBC to be the lead newsreader of the ''
Nine O'Clock News'' weekday nightly bulletin from October 1987, and began sharing presenting duties of the programme with fellow newsreader
Michael Buerk when it switched to a one-presenter format in October 1988. He created a modicum of controversy in 1993 when he claimed that television should feature more "good news". Lewis subsequently stated that he had been "misunderstood" on the matter. From late January 1994 he switched roles with
Peter Sissons thus becoming a lead presenter of the ''
Six O'Clock News for three days a week. Lewis rejected an offer to present BBC Breakfast News'' but reportedly threatened his resignation from the corporation because he wanted to remain on prime time television. Lewis also made multiple documentaries on various topics for the BBC, From 1996 to 1998, Lewis presented the prime-time BBC1 real-life crime programme
Crimebeat. He broke the news of the outbreak of the
Gulf War to the British public in 1991. On 26 April 1999, he presented the ''Six O'Clock News'' bulletin with
Jennie Bond on the day his co-presenter
Jill Dando was murdered outside her home in West London. Lewis resigned from the BBC in May of that year after it attempted to move him from the job he had lost at the ''Six O'Clock News
to another position within the corporation; he turned down an offer to work at BBC World News, saying that he did not want to leave "the best job in broadcasting." In 2000, Lewis presented Dateline Jerusalem
, From 2000 to 2002, he presented the ITV debate programme Ultimate Questions'', which discussed current moral issues. Lewis returned to television news in September 2005 to broadcast a special edition of the
ITV Evening News with
Mary Nightingale as part of the ITN's 50th anniversary celebrations. He had a cameo role as a newscaster in the 1999
James Bond film
The World Is Not Enough, and was featured in archive footage in the 2006 film
The Queen. ==Other business==