Barbara Walters… The Stormy Arrival In 1976 And Her Smooth Departure Tomorrow …
Barbara Walters…
The Stormy Arrival In 1976 And Her Smooth Departure Tomorrow
On Monday, the ABC News building was re named “The Barbara Walters Building” and these photos are in the lobby of 47 West 66 Street. The ABC News building is among several buildings that make up the ABC complex along 66th Street, between Columbus Ave. and Central Park West, which is also known as Peter Jennings Way, named for the longtime ‘World News Tonight’ anchor who passed away in 2005.
The renaming caps Walters’ 53-year career in broadcast journalism, and honors her as the first woman to anchor a network morning show. She was also the first woman to anchor an evening newscast. Can you believe she helped create ‘The View’ 18 years ago. She’ll formally retire on the show tomorrow.
When Walters came over from NBC’s ‘Today’ show, she was a co anchor of the evening news with Harry Reasoner. That did not sit well with a lot of people and Reasoner was one of them. Here’s the story.
For five years, most of them with Howard K. Smith at his side, Harry Reasoner sat in his anchor chair at ABC handing down good news and bad with the self assurance of Mount Rushmore. But on April 20, 1976, Rushmore registered a 6.0 on the Richter scale when ABC wooed Barbara Walters away from NBC’s ‘Today’ and signed her as an anchor with a record $1-million-a-year contract.
That fall, as she took her seat next to Reasoner (Howard K. Smith had already assumed the role of commentator), she became the first woman ever to deliver the evening news from the main desk. Rushmore was rattled.
Although Reasoner publicly maintained that he didn’t mind Walters ”as a person and as a woman,” he privately voiced his displeasure with her to the ABC brass. The network boosted his salary from $200,000 to $500,000 — the same amount Walters was receiving for her anchor duties (the other $500,000 was for her work on specials). But the tensions wouldn’t go away. ”You know, Harry,” she quipped in one especially embarrassing exchange, ”Kissinger didn’t do too badly as a sex symbol in Washington.” Her counterpart just glared: ”Well, you would know more about that than I would.”
If Reasoner was tough on her, the rest of the media were downright rude — and more than a little sexist. Larry Flynt offered her another million if she would pose nude for Hustler. TIME, sniffing at the tour she gave of her own apartment on her first prime-time special, labeled the 45-year-old journalist 1976’s ”Most Appalling Argument for Feminism.” And Gilda Radner made ”Baba Wawa’s” mild speech impediment a joke on Saturday Night Live.
After two years of low ratings, Reasoner and Walters both left their desks in 1978 and the broadcast changed to a multianchor format. But by then Walters had proved herself more than just a million-dollar baby. She had deftly moderated the final Ford-Carter debate in 1976 and had scored a coup by interviewing Fidel Castro the following year. And in the Barbara Walters Specials she and ABC found a show that continues to be a huge ratings winner. For the specials and her weekly duties on the highly rated 20/20, Walters received an annual salary somewhere around Dan Rather’s — about $3 million.
Although Walters is leaving the day to day part behind, ABC says she’ll will remain an executive producer with ‘The View’ and will make special ABC News appearances as events warrant.
[…] they aren’t perfect: Harry Reasoner was not a “affordable” cohost when she joined him on the anchor desk in 1976the primary lady to anchor a night newscast. The tales of their clashes on air and off are […]
[…] if they aren’t ideal: Harry Reasoner was not a “reasonable” cohost when she joined him on the anchor desk in 1976, the first woman to anchor an evening newscast. The stories of their clashes on air and off are […]
[…] aren’t ideally suited: Harry Reasoner was not a “cheap” cohost when she joined him on the anchor desk in 1976the primary girl to anchor a night newscast. The tales of their clashes on air and off are […]
[…] if they aren’t ideal: Harry Reasoner was not a “reasonable” cohost when she joined him on the anchor desk in 1976, the first woman to anchor an evening newscast. The stories of their clashes on air and off are […]
[…] if they aren’t ideal: Harry Reasoner was not a “reasonable” cohost when she joined him on the anchor desk in 1976, the first woman to anchor an evening newscast. The stories of their clashes on air and off are […]
[…] if they aren’t ideal: Harry Reasoner was not a “reasonable” cohost when she joined him on the anchor desk in 1976, the first woman to anchor an evening newscast. The stories of their clashes on air and off are […]
I respect her for what she accomplished in a male-dominated business, especially at that time. Her interview subjects, however, always know that Barbara will throw them softballs, and never put them on the spot. That is why they will always give interviews exclusively to her. I always enjoyed Gilda Radner’s impressions of her – she was pretty much spot on. I am, however, proud that Barbara is still around, and will still be on television in some capacity. It is still very much a male dominated industry, and she opened and continues to open doors for other women. Glenn in the Bronx, NY.