Barbara Walters
September 25, 1929 - December 30, 2022












Those who know Cowsill history remember that The Cowsills first big break was being on the Today Show hosted by Barbara Walters and Hugh Downs. Susan once told the story of being chided by Barbara for behavior on the set.



New York Times writes:
Barbara Walters, a First Among TV Newswomen, Is Dead at 93
Barbara Walters, who broke barriers for women as the first female co-host of the "Today" show and the first female anchor of a network evening news program, and who as an interviewer of celebrities became one herself, helping to blur the line between news and entertainment, died on Friday. She was 93.

Her death was reported by ABC News, where she was a longtime anchor and a creator of the talk show "The View." Her publicist, Cindi Berger, said in an interview that Ms. Walters died at her home in Manhattan surrounded by loved ones. She did not give a cause.

Ms. Walters spent more than 50 years in front of the camera and, until she was 84, continued to appear on "The View." In one-on-one interviews, she was best known for delving, with genteel insistence, into the private lives and emotional states of movie stars, heads of state and other high-profile subjects.

Ms. Walters first made her mark on the "Today" show on NBC, where she began appearing regularly on camera in 1964; she was officially named co-host a decade later. Her success kicked open the door for future network anchors like Jane Pauley, Katie Couric and Diane Sawyer.

Ms. Walters began at NBC as a writer in 1961, the token woman in the "Today" writers' room. When she left NBC for ABC in 1976 to be a co-anchor of the evening news with Harry Reasoner, she became known as the "million-dollar baby" because of her five-year, $5 million contract.

The move to the co-anchor's chair made her not only the highest-profile female journalist in television history, but also the highest-paid news anchor, male or female, and her arrival signaled something of a cultural shift: the moment when news anchors began to be seen less as infallible authority figures, in the Walter Cronkite mold, and more as celebrities. A disgruntled Mr. Reasoner privately dismissed her hiring as a gimmick.

Gimmick or not, the ABC experiment failed. Chemistry between the co-anchors was nonexistent, ratings remained low, and in 1978 Mr. Reasoner left for CBS, his original television home, and Ms. Walters's role changed from co-anchor to contributor as the network instituted an all-male multiple-anchor format. Shortly after that she began contributing reports to ABC's newsmagazine show "20/20." In 1984 she became the show's permanent co-host alongside Hugh Downs, her old "Today" colleague.

But it was her "Barbara Walters Specials" more than anything else that made her a star, enshrining her as an indefatigable chronicler of the rich, the powerful and the infamous. The specials, which began in 1976, made Ms. Walters as famous, or nearly as famous, as the people she interviewed.

. . .

By the end of her career, Ms. Walters saw herself as a guardian of old-school journalistic values. She complained that for her final "20/20" interview as co-host, in 2004, ABC News chose Mary Kay Letourneau, a schoolteacher who went to jail for having an affair with a student, over President George W. Bush.

Ms. Walters ended her autobiography on a reflective note, saying that in the age of internet news, cellphone videos and blog journalism it would be difficult for any one journalist to have the kind of career she had. "If I was, perhaps, atop of the game," she wrote, "I also had the advantage of being ahead of the game."

On May 12, 2014, four days before her last day on "The View," the ABC News building on the Upper West Side of Manhattan was renamed the Barbara Walters Building.

"I'm not going to cry," Ms. Walters said at the ceremony. "I make other people cry, but I'm not going to cry."




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