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1999

6 x 9 in.
288 pp., 31 b&w photos

ISBN: 978-0-292-75228-3
$30.00, paperback
33% website discount: $20.10
Print-on-demand title; expedited shipping not available

 
 

 

 
 
     

Women in Television News Revisited
Into the Twenty-first Century

By Judith Marlane
Foreword by Howard Rosenberg

 

Table of Contents and Excerpt

available through Questia

 

Women in television news have made great strides in the past twenty-five years. No longer limited to being the token pretty face on the nightly newscast, women have taken their places as working journalists in newsrooms, on the campaign trail, in war zones, and in the highest echelons of network news management. Barbara Walters and Connie Chung have even occupied the coveted network anchor's chair, if only briefly.

In this book, 70 of the foremost women in television news reflect on their professional successes, the personal and professional sacrifices that often bought those successes, and the barriers that still confront women in the news business. Weaving their interviews into a compelling text, Judith Marlane covers a wide range of issues, including looks versus ability and experience, sexual harassment, the resistance to women news anchors, the difficulties of balancing work and family life, women's and men's salaries, and the willingness of women to help other women in the business.

This book builds from Marlane's 1976 work, Women in Television News. Interviews with many of the same women highlight the gains that women have made in broadcast journalism. Simultaneously, Marlane has expanded her range of informants to include fifteen of America's most famous male anchors and correspondents to gather their assessments of the role of women in broadcasting today.

Judith Marlane is Professor and Chair of the Radio-Television-Film Department at California State University, Northridge. An experienced television writer-producer-broadcaster, she heads her own media consulting firm in Los Angeles.


 Of Related Interest Cronkite, Conversations with Cronkite
Hogarth, Realer than Reel
Spencer Mitchell, Danger Pay
Timberg, Television Talk

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