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Posted: 2022-12-31T02:44:41Z | Updated: 2022-12-31T02:44:41Z Barbara Walters, Pioneering Broadcast Journalist, Dies | HuffPost

Barbara Walters, Pioneering Broadcast Journalist, Dies

The ABC News icon and co-founder of "The View" was the first female anchor to make $1 million a year.
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Barbara Walters is seen on her last day of co-hosting the "Today" show in 1976.
Bettmann via Getty Images

Barbara Walters, an iconic broadcast journalist who broke down barriers for women in media, died Friday, according to ABC News. She was 93.

In a career that spanned more than five decades, Walters established herself as one of the most prominent and respected broadcasters on television. She made history when she became the co-host of “ABC Evening News” in 1976, marking the first time a woman co-hosted an evening news network on national television.

She was most known for her time as a co-host of ABC’s “20/20,” a role she held for 25 years. In that time, she interviewed some of the world’s most influential and controversial leaders, celebrities and political figures including former Cuban dictator Fidel Castro, actor Katharine Hepburn and pop icon Michael Jackson in often emotional and intense segments.

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Walters interviews former President Richard Nixon about his presidency on "20/20" in May 1985.
ABC Photo Archives via Getty Images

She has also interviewed every American president since Richard Nixon. (She interviewed Donald Trump and Melania Trump during his 2016 presidential campaign and interviewed Joe Biden in 2014 , when he was vice president.)

Walters went on to co-found the daytime talk show “The View,” which premiered in 1997 and featured a panel of female co-hosts. 

“It was a simple idea: four women of different generations and different personalities and different opinions sitting together and talking,” she said in a 2012 interview with Makers. “Not women trying to outdo each other, but being able to have these different discussions and arguments and liking each other.”

But to reach this level of success and set her status as a boundary-breaking journalist, she spent years fighting to be heard. She faced persistent sexism early in her career during a time when men dominated the news industry. 

I remember sending a memo to the president, then, of NBC News saying, Shouldnt we do something on the womens movement? And scrawled on the top of my memo, it said, Not enough interest.

- Barbara Walters

Walters began working in front of a camera at “Today” on NBC , at first covering lighter assignments — which she called “tea-pouring interviews” — and weather reports as the show’s “Today Girl.” She eventually was permitted to do research and writing for news shows, and became the program’s first female co-anchor in 1974.

“I remember sending a memo to the president, then, of NBC News saying, ‘Shouldn’t we do something on the women’s movement?’” she recalled in the Makers interview. “And scrawled on the top of my memo, it said, ‘Not enough interest.’”  

She left NBC News two years later to co-host “ABC Evening News” with Harry Reasoner, becoming the first female evening co-anchor in history.

“I was co-anchors with a man, Harry Reasoner, who couldn’t accept me,” Walters said of her ABC Evening News co-host in 2012.

“I would walk into that studio and Harry would be sitting with the stagehands and they’d all crack jokes and ignore me. No one would talk to me,” she added. “It was so lonely, and I was failing. And I read about it in every paper and magazine.” 

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Walters and co-anchor Harry Reasoner on Oct. 4, 1976, Walters' first night on the "ABC Evening News."
ASSOCIATED PRESS

At the time, Time magazine described Walter’s move to prime time as “the furthest advance of the women’s movement in television” in an article titled “Will the Morning Star Shine at Night?

Shine she did: When she moved to ABC , Walters became the first female news anchor to make a $1 million annual salary

“Overnight I became the million-dollar news baby, having been proffered a salary that, on the surface, was at least twice that of anyone else in the news business, including Walter Cronkite,” Walters wrote in her 2008 memoir , “Audition.” 

“Almost every television journalist, including Harry Reasoner, walked into his boss’s office, demanded a raise, and got it,” she wrote. “Well, you’re welcome.” 

We all recognize that had it not been for her, we would not have had a shoulder to stand on. We all now get to glide across that road that she literally laid brick by brick for us.

- Oprah Winfrey

Walters consistently secured some of the most highly sought-after subjects in news for “Today,” “ABC Evening News,” “20/20,” and later for “The View” and her annual special “Barbara Walters’ 10 Most Fascinating People.”

She famously sat down with Israeli Prime Minister Menachem Begin and Egyptian President Anwar Sadat for a joint interview  in 1977, as the two foreign leaders began talks for a historic peace deal.

Walters retired from on-air news in May 2014, but she returned for occasional specials in the years that followed, including to interview the Trumps during the 2016 election cycle. 

Walters won three Daytime Emmy awards (she was nominated for 31), one Primetime Emmy (out of 11 nominations) and seven News and Documentary Emmys.

Walters’ legacy of telling incisive, entertaining stories with compassion and poise inspired women to excel in an industry where they were once not welcome.

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Walters included Oprah Winfrey in her lineup for "Barbara Walters Presents: The 10 Most Fascinating People of 2014."
Ida Mae Astute via Getty Images

“I was 16 years old, saw her on television, got the inspiration to think, ‘Maybe I could do that,’” Oprah Winfrey told E! News in 2014 . “For the first year of my television career, [I] actually created this façade of pretending to be Barbara Walters and trying to sit and talk and act like her. ... We all recognize that had it not been for her, we would not have had a shoulder to stand on. We all now get to glide across that road that she literally laid brick by brick for us.”

Changing the way the news industry thought of women was important to Walters.  

“I have affected the way women are regarded, and that’s important to me,” she told Bloomberg Businessweek in August 2013. “If I have done stories and interviews that have in the past been done by men, and I opened the door a little bit, and now it’s taken for granted, that would be a legacy I could be proud of.”

Judah Robinson and Jackson Connor contributed to this report.

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Before You Go

Barbara Walters
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1972: Today Show anchor Barbara Walters. (credit:NBC via Getty Images)
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Co-anchor Barbara Walters. (credit:NBC NewsWire via Getty Images)
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4th Annual Women of the Year Awards: Host Barbara Walters in 1976. (credit:NBC via Getty Images)
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Barbara Walters shows million-dollar smile during last working day at NBC. (credit:New York Daily News Archive via Getty Images)
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NBC News' Barbara Walters in 1964. (credit:NBC NewsWire via Getty Images)
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American broadcast journalist Barbara Walters looks through the lens of an NBC News camera, New York, 1966. (credit:Rowland Scherman via Getty Images)
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Saturday Night Live with Howard Cosell, September 27, 1975. (credit:ABC Photo Archives via Getty Images)
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Barbara Walters, Joe Garagiola, on NBC News' 'Today' in January, 1968. (credit:NBC NewsWire via Getty Images)
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Television journalist Barbara Walters participates in Town Hall Los Angeles' Writers Bloc Q&A at her book signing for 'Audition: A Memoir' held at the Writers Guild Theater May 13, 2008 in Beverly Hills, California. (credit:Toby Canham via Getty Images)
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From London, Barbara Walters broadcasts from the Media Village outside of Buckingham Palace, 4/27/11, as ABC News takes viewers inside the Royal Wedding. (credit:Donna Svennevik via Getty Images)
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Barbara Walters departs 'Late Show with David Letterman' at Ed Sullivan Theater on May 20, 2015 in New York City. (credit:Taylor Hill via Getty Images)
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Barbara Walters during Barbara Walters Honored with a Star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame at 6801 Hollywood Boulevard in front of the Kodak Theatre in Hollywood. (credit:M. Tran via Getty Images)
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Diane Sawyer, Barbara Walters and Robin Roberts attend the 'Barbara Walters Building' ABC News Headquarters Dedication Ceremony on May 12, 2014 in New York City. (credit:Noam Galai via Getty Images)
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20/20 - ABC News kicks off its coverage of the Royal Wedding with a 'Special Edition of 20/20: William & Catherine: A Modern Fairytale' anchored by Barbara Walters. (credit:Rob Wallace via Getty Images)
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Barbara Walters attends a signing for her book 'Audition' at Temple Judea on May 20, 2008 in Coral Gables, Florida. (credit:Gustavo Caballero via Getty Images)