Barbara Walters, Lesley Stahl, and Connie Chung are the groundbreaking women who reported on the Watergate scandal for national television networks. Host Cynthia Bemis Abrams examines how their coverage shaped journalism history and how each woman leveraged new opportunities during a pivotal era of change.
Highlights:
Barbara Walters' rise from Washington bureau to Today Show co-anchor;
The role of Affirmative Action played in changing access to newsroom careers;
How Stahl and Chung built lasting success amid fierce competition; and
The larger impact of women's contributions to investigative journalism.
Emerging technologies like field cameras and satellites changed news coverage in the early 1970s, and created a new media landscape. Cynthia also discusses how the Watergate scandal, initially considered "a petty crime," became a defining moment in American journalism.