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The News Sorority: Diane Sawyer, Katie Couric, Christiane Amanpour-and the (Ongoing, Imperfect, Complicated) Triumph of Women in TV News Kindle Edition

3.9 out of 5 stars 111 customer reviews

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Length: 498 pages Word Wise: Enabled Enhanced Typesetting: Enabled
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Product Details

  • File Size: 12789 KB
  • Print Length: 498 pages
  • Page Numbers Source ISBN: 0143127772
  • Publisher: Penguin Books (September 30, 2014)
  • Publication Date: September 30, 2014
  • Sold by: Amazon Digital Services LLC
  • Language: English
  • ASIN: B00INIYFAC
  • Text-to-Speech: Enabled
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  • Word Wise: Enabled
  • Lending: Not Enabled
  • Enhanced Typesetting: Enabled
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #243,039 Paid in Kindle Store (See Top 100 Paid in Kindle Store)
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By Jesse Kornbluth on September 30, 2014
Format: Hardcover
If you want to pay me $15 million a year, I promise never to say a bad word about you. I will work until I drop. I will be a saint to my staff. And if our project fails, I will take all the blame.

That’s not how it works in television news, which is why there’s enough backbiting, envy and ambition in “The News Sorority: Diane Sawyer, Katie Couric, Christiane Amanpour — and the (Ongoing, Imperfect, Complicated) Triumph of Women in TV News” to fill almost 500 pages.

On one level, “The News Sorority” is a serious book, a valuable history of a transitional era in media that will be read and taught long after no one can remember why “anchor” doesn’t just apply to boats.

For now, though, it won’t be read that way, for “The News Sorority” is a dish fest — if you care what Katie and Diane and Christiane are really like, for God’s sake do not start reading on a Friday night, because you’ll miss Bill Maher and may just be finishing when John Oliver comes on.

How dishy? Like this:

When Diane scored an interview that Katie wanted, Katie asked, loudly: “I wonder who she blew this time.”

Diane, on wardrobe choices for women in broadcasting: “Always wear clothes in fabrics that men like to touch.”

Katie once told an executive she’d been fired — she hadn’t been — so could get a promotion to a job she wanted.

Diane’s such a slick politician that “she thinks she doesn’t leave fingerprints — but she leaves cat paw prints on people’s foreheads.”

Katie gave a Christmas party for her entourage that could be seen by lesser staffers at the lesser party.

Diane once had her then boyfriend Richard Holbrooke call a production assistant and reduce her to tears.

And Christiane? Where’s that dish? Scarce.
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Format: Kindle Edition Verified Purchase
The best thing about "The News Sorority" is its sober-eyed view of the stars' bad behavior, with author Sheila Weller rarely rationalizing it by charging gender bias or institutional sexism. (Awful deeds by female media or business leaders are so often excused with the cheap canard that if they were men, that would count as leadership, etc., but that doesn't happen here.) Drawing mainly on catty, no doubt score-settling swipes from 35 anonymous news biz sources, Weller paints Katie Couric as self-absorbed, lazy, and undisciplined; Christiane Amanpour as biased and self-righteous; and Diane Sawyer as devious and duplicitous -- a "no fingerprints" backstage assassin of all who threaten her. It does not add up to a pretty picture.

All three rose through the media world via combinations of talent, luck, drive, and politicking. Undoubtedly they had to work harder at first than men alongside. But by 2014 all three seemed in eclipse, mostly via self-sabotage as well as audience rejection. Couric, unwelcome back at NBC News, having failed as CBS Evening News anchor and as an ABC daytime talk host, was reduced to conducting online interviews at Yahoo!. Amanpour, who wanted to trade battlefields for cushy anchor stardom, struck out as host of the ABC News Washington-politics program "This Week" - a weird fit for any correspondent, of either gender, who came up via Bosnia and Baghdad. (She crept back to CNN, but only the international channel.) Sawyer, who campaigned ferociously for years to be ABC's "World News Tonight" anchor, finally got the prize in 2009 only to hand it over less than five years later, apparently not entirely voluntarily, to David Muir in 2014.
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Format: Hardcover Vine Customer Review of Free Product ( What's this? )
I just finished this book and may return to flesh out my reactions to this book later. I liked this book and thought it told the story of three network champs who managed to break the glass ceiling in regard to their careers.with accuracy. There were some similarities between the three. They were all extremely bright and obviously driven. They didn't take garbage from men or women and were willing to take chances to move up in pecking order despite barriers. They could be chameleons when the situation called for it; whatever appeared on the surface wasn't necessarily true. In the brutal environment of broadcast journalism, they might be considered manipulative/tough/conniving. However that actually seems more like the norm for network stars in general as I progressed through this book. My take on this is women have to be tough skinned, think smarter, and react quicker to survive in a crazy alter universe.
This book was not written with assistance from the trio. All is based on supposed reputable sources. I see this as a highly credible story and one that is fairly consistent with what I know about the industry as a whole. Had these ladies cooperated fully or even partially with this project I suspect this might have been a different and flawed book for obvious reasons. Journalists control the news and always control the story presented. As it stands, an awful lot of what is reported is corroborated by multiple sources. Authorized biographies based on my reading experiences are usually flat and celebrate people that are so perfect they can't exist in reality.
Author Sheila Weller has done extensive research in telling this story which comes off successfully as a three pronged unauthorized biography of the news mavens. I read her book Girls Like Us (GLU) and loved it.
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