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Women In Society Essay Research Paper Women (стр. 2 из 2)

Sally Quinn, CBS anchorwoman says

You’ve got to have self-confidence. If I didn’t

have an enormous amount of self-confidence, I

would have been destroyed by this whole

experience…You can’t learn to be a perfect

anchorwoman in one day, and I knew that I wasn’t

going to be perfect and that people were just

going to crucify me because I wasn’t perfect”

(Gelfman 1976, p. 75).

Michael Gartner, NBC News president, explains what is

important in television news anchoring. “You have to have

a special combination of person to be the focal point of a

successful show. You have to be a good journalist, and

you have to be able to deliver the message-which a print

person doesn’t have to do-in person, in somebody’s house”

(Fensch: Zoglin 1993, p. 281).

Barbara Walters is an exception to the rule that

older women do not succeed in television news. She is a

successful television newswoman who is well over the age

of 40. Even she had to take the hard road to make it to

the top, starting out as a secretary at a small

advertising agency, working in public relations and then

in public affairs for CBS. Walters recognizes the tough

times women in television news face. She says

You have to work harder. It’s been said before,

but it’s true. You are taken less seriously and

you are very often scorned by your own co-workers

…it’s a tougher job for a woman because a woman

has to be awfully good. She really does. A man

can be much more excused” (Gelfman 1976, p. 88).

Women are not rising to the top quickly in television

news, although there is slow improvement, and anchormen

say they are fine with the idea of women at the top.

Walter Cronkite says of a woman anchor in the future,

“Fine, why not? I think it likely…I think by the time

the next change comes, the next generation of anchor

people, I would think that the barrier would be down and

that women would have as good a chance as men” (Sanders

and Rock 1988, p. 198).

Yet there are still roadblocks standing in the way of

women striving to make it to the top. They begin at

low-level jobs, such as researchers and logistics persons

and hope to take the right paths to get to the top of the

ladder. Sanders writes, “For years there were few women

above the level of researcher. While that has changed,

the amount of frustration for those who do not move ahead

has driven many people out of the business altogether”

(Sanders and Rock 1988, p. 198-199).

Lesley Stahl of CBS News points out that anchorwomen

are most often workaholics, with a never-ending drive to

do their job. She says

It’s one reason we do succeed in this business.

We just give it everything…Maybe it’s because

our kind of personalities are attracted to this

industry, compulsive, deadline-oriented people

who keep pushing ourselves to see how much work

we can do. We love work…It’s not just a symptom

in the early stage, it goes on” (Sanders and Rock

1988, p. 81).

Society’s expectations of female news anchors is very

much like that of any woman in a powerful and successful

career. While the women must portray a glamorous, yet

friendly image, expectations of men in the business are

not near as high. Jon Katz says in his article

The men who anchor today look, dress, and act

almost precisely the same way they did 50 years

ago. They only have to reflect a single trait

to succeed-gravitas. They wouldn’t dream of

being intimate, glamorous, or coy. Nor would

anyone expect that of them” (Katz 1995, p. 162).

Katz goes on to say that men who make it in the

business usually never fail. He says of anchormen, “Old

anchors never fade away. And they can’t be killed by

mortal means” (Katz 1995, p. 164).

Sadly, forward movements aren’t apparent today by

women in television news. Forty years ago, a female

gaining the anchor position on the evening news was a leap

forward. Today “it feels more like a step backward, an

attempt to stuff accomplished, contemporary women into an

ill-fitting straightjacket” (Katz 1995, p. 164).

It is apparent that women news anchors face many more

struggles than men in the field. It takes a unique

individual to fight through those struggles and strive for

what they want most: to relay news throughout the world.

Equality with men is far from being reached, but a few

females have stood their ground and hopefully made a

difference for others that follow. If people open their

eyes and realize there are plenty of women who are just

as, if not more, competent than men at holding an anchor

position, women could gain respect within the field. For

now, the few women who find success and are willing to

endure the hardships that come along will likely survive

in the business, at least until age hinders their physical

appearance.