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- <text id=89TT2004>
- <title>
- Aug. 07, 1989: Star Power:Diane Sawyer
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1989
- Cover Stories
- Aug. 07, 1989 Diane Sawyer:Is She Worth It?
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- VIDEO, Page 46
- COVER STORY: Star Power
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>Diane Sawyer, with a new prime-time show and a $1.6 million
- contract, is hot. But are celebrity anchors like her upstaging
- the news?
- </p>
- <p>By Richard Zoglin
- </p>
- <p> First there are the blond-haired good looks: striking but
- somehow wholesome, more high school prom queen than Hollywood
- glamour puss. Then there's the rich, honeyed voice: husky and
- authoritative, but free of the severe tone affected by some
- females in TV news. As a reader of the news, she is masterly:
- businesslike but warm, her eyes now wide with the drama of the
- day, now crinkling ever so slightly with concern. Diane Sawyer
- doesn't just deliver the news, she performs it.
- </p>
- <p> But there's more than mere show-biz flair here. Sawyer is
- a fully credentialed reporter who covered Three Mile Island and
- the Iran hostage crisis. Later she demonstrated smarts and
- interviewing skills as co-anchor of the CBS Morning News. As a
- member of the formidable 60 Minutes team since 1984, she has
- traveled from the garbage mounds of Cairo to the heart of the
- AIDS plague in Uganda, profiled the likes of Corazon Aquino and
- James Michener, and given then candidate George Bush perhaps his
- toughest TV grilling on the Iran-contra scandal. If she never
- seemed an indispensable cog in the powerful engine that is 60
- Minutes, she was no Tinkertoy either.
- </p>
- <p> Have a conversation with Sawyer, and you cannot help coming
- away impressed. Intelligent, articulate, polished--and a bit
- calculated. (She calls a reporter at home to amend her earlier
- list of favorite reading: add Doctorow's Billy Bathgate and
- Mann's Tonio Kroger to a shelf that already features Flaubert,
- Henry James and John Fowles.) In earnest, carefully molded
- sentences, she strives to dispel the notion that she is strictly
- a TV creation. "I really love what you learn every day in the
- business," she says. "I love the breathtaking way we walk into
- people's lives and ask them anything we want and then leave. For
- a moment you have available to you the whole universe of a
- person's life--the pain and the suffering and the joy and the
- struggle. You can learn from it and take it with you, and then
- come back the next day with somebody else. That's what I like
- to do."
- </p>
- <p> Is it any wonder that Sawyer, at 43, is the hottest
- newswoman in television? The sort of star news executives battle
- over, make promises to, open their wallets for? Last February,
- after more than ten years at CBS, she was hired away by ABC for
- a reported $1.6 million a year. The primary lure: the chance to
- join Sam Donaldson as co-anchor of Prime Time Live, the new
- weekly show that will debut this Thursday at 10 p.m. EDT. In
- addition, ABC dangled occasional fill-in anchor duty on World
- News Tonight and Nightline. The prospect of losing Sawyer so
- rattled CBS's bigwigs that they virtually handed her a blank
- check in an effort to keep her; then, when she was irretrievably
- gone, they ran out and hired another high-priced star, NBC's
- Connie Chung, to fill the gap and save some face.
- </p>
- <p> And yet the question nags: Is Sawyer really worth it?
- Indeed, are any of TV's high-profile news stars worth the money
- they are paid, the power bestowed upon them, the fuss made over
- them? At least a dozen network-news personalities currently earn
- more than a million dollars a year and vie for a few
- high-visibility showcases. Traditionally, these slots were
- limited to the morning and evening newscasts, but they are
- spreading into prime time as well. Along with Sawyer's program,
- this week will see the debut of another magazine show, NBC's
- Yesterday, Today & Tomorrow. Its hosts: Mary Alice Williams, a
- former CNN anchor hired by NBC to much fanfare in March; Chuck
- Scarborough, a popular local anchorman for New York City's
- WNBC-TV; and Maria Shriver, a Kennedy. CBS, meanwhile, is in the
- process of revamping its four-year-old magazine show West 57th
- around its newest star anchor, Chung.
- </p>
- <p> In the commerce of TV news, these personalities probably
- earn their pay. Stars draw viewers, and that means higher
- ratings and higher ad revenue for the network. TV's top-rated
- magazine show, 60 Minutes, earns an estimated $40 million a year
- for CBS; 20/20 brings in $15 million to $20 million annually for
- ABC. In a survey conducted for TIME by Yankelovich Clancy
- Shulman, 52% of TV viewers polled said they consider the anchor
- "very important" in choosing which network newscast to watch,
- though only 41% feel that anchors deserve to be paid a million
- dollars.
- </p>
- <p> The crucial question, however, is not whether news stars
- deserve the money but whether they deserve the stature.
- Although most are competent reporters, they have reached their
- positions largely because of qualities that have little to do
- with journalism: the way they look, the tone of their voices,
- their on-camera charm. Yet they have influence that betokens
- great wisdom and judgment. They are the people America listens
- to, relies on, trusts. The major events of the day are filtered
- through their eyes and ears. News becomes bigger news simply
- because they are present--in Paris for a presidential visit
- or Tiananmen Square for a nation's aborted experiment with
- democracy. The danger is that as stars become more and more
- important in the high-stakes world of TV journalism, they are
- overwhelming the news they purport to report.
- </p>
- <p> Sawyer, more than any of her colleagues, embodies all the
- contradictions of TV news: that uneasy mix of journalism and
- show business, reporting and acting, substance and style. Her
- experience as a reporter, while not negligible, is on the
- slender side. Sawyer came to network news rather late, at 32,
- after spending nearly eight years as an aide to President (and
- then ex-President) Richard Nixon. As a correspondent, she won
- respect for her doggedness and intelligence, but she was helped
- by some shrewd career moves and smart packaging. At 60 Minutes,
- for instance, she benefited from a corps of the best producers
- in TV news; still, according to insiders, she had difficulty
- with the format and was less productive than the show's other
- correspondents. "She's a monumental talent," says executive
- producer Don Hewitt. "But her coming to the broadcast didn't do
- that much for us. And her leaving has not even remotely crippled
- 60 Minutes." (She will be replaced this fall by Meredith Vieira
- and Steve Kroft, formerly of West 57th.)
- </p>
- <p> Few TV newspeople, moreover, have moved in such glittery
- social circles. Sawyer has kept company with a raft of
- celebrities, from Warren Beatty to Henry Kissinger, and last
- year married director Mike Nichols. She was the subject of a
- glamorous (too glamorous for some of her colleagues) Annie
- Leibovitz photo spread in Vanity Fair magazine. At CBS she
- cultivated friendships with founder William Paley and president
- Laurence Tisch, both of whom have taken a personal interest in
- her career. Says a veteran CBS hand: "She's the best politician
- I've ever come across."
- </p>
- <p> "Ambitious" is a word often used to describe Sawyer, but
- the fact is that others have had ambitions for her as well. In
- 1986, as her CBS contract neared renewal, Sawyer was avidly
- pursued by NBC. To keep her, CBS upped her salary to $1.2
- million and promised to give her additional projects besides 60
- Minutes: subbing for Dan Rather on the CBS Evening News and
- hosting a series of Person to Person specials, patterned after
- the old Edward R. Murrow interview series.
- </p>
- <p> But the anchor stints were sparse (reportedly because
- Rather was jealous of her), and Person to Person never got off
- the ground, largely because of Hewitt's resistance to letting
- his 60 Minutes star do outside work. That left an opening for
- ABC News president and chief starmaker Roone Arledge. In May
- 1988 he approached Sawyer with a proposal to co-anchor a new
- prime-time show he was developing. She declined, saying she did
- not want to leave 60 Minutes in the lurch as it was gearing up
- for a new season. But when Arledge tried again in January, she
- was more receptive. A deal was consummated in two weeks. "I
- always thought Diane was very good," says Arledge, "but I never
- had anything right for her until I came up with this show. Look
- at the success that Barbara Walters has had: she is set apart
- from the rest of the industry. I think Diane will have that same
- kind of success."
- </p>
- <p> Just what the new show will be was still in flux just days
- before airtime. Produced by Richard Kaplan, formerly of
- Nightline, the live weekly hour will be a mix of interviews,
- reports on breaking news stories and town meeting-like
- discussions. Sawyer describes it as a "lateral slice" of the
- week's news. Arledge compares its free-form structure to
- Olympics coverage: "The idea is that we will be all over the
- world where things are happening." What is most apparent is that
- Prime Time Live has been predicated on--and will succeed or
- fail because of--the chemistry between its two stars.
- </p>
- <p> It's a match that might have been made in a Hollywood
- mogul's heaven: the loudest reporter on the White House lawn
- meets the classiest lady in TV news--"a sonata for harp and
- jackhammer," in Sawyer's words. The pair represent different
- roads to TV stardom as well. Donaldson, unlike most of his
- fellow TV news stars, gained fame because of his brash,
- sometimes abrasive reporting rather than his on-camera charm or
- polish. He and Sawyer plan to engage in unrehearsed, possibly
- disputatious colloquies about issues, but Donaldson insists that
- the clashes won't turn into routs. "One of my fears was that I
- would be perceived as the bully," he says. "But if we have a
- disagreement, Diane is not going to be intimidated. I will
- probably be the one getting the sympathy votes." "We have a
- natural adversarial relationship on a lot of issues," says
- Sawyer. "But it's not going to be `Diane, you ignorant slut!'"
- </p>
- <p> The star system, of course, is hardly a new phenomenon in
- TV news: Murrow, Walter Cronkite, and Huntley and Brinkley were
- certainly as popular as any of the current luminaries. But
- salaries and network bidding wars entered a new phase in 1976,
- when Arledge lured Walters away from NBC for $1 million a year.
- The rise of superagents like Richard Leibner (who represents
- Sawyer, Rather, Shriver and Mike Wallace, among other network
- news stars) has brought about an escalation of salaries and an
- increase in the clout these personalities wield.
- </p>
- <p> Today, as the networks fight to retain their dwindling
- audiences, prime-time news programming is becoming more
- desirable because it costs only about half as much to produce
- as entertainment fare. And to compete in the glitzy arena of The
- Cosby Show and Dallas, stars are a must. Other entertainment
- elements are creeping into these shows as well. On Prime Time
- Live, Sawyer and Donaldson will be joined by an unusual (for a
- news show) featured player: a live studio audience. Both
- Yesterday, Today & Tomorrow and the revamped West 57th will
- feature dramatized "re-creations" of events, a dubious
- enterprise that blurs the line between news and entertainment.
- (Even ABC's World News Tonight tried the technique two weeks
- ago, with mock-documentary footage ostensibly showing suspected
- spy Felix Bloch handing a briefcase to a Soviet agent. Anchor
- Peter Jennings last week apologized on the air that the footage
- had not been clearly labeled as a simulation.)
- </p>
- <p> On the evening newscasts, too, stars are being hyped more
- than ever. Facing growing competition for the news viewer--from cable outlets like CNN, aggressive local stations and
- syndicated shows--the networks are trying to stress what makes
- them distinctive: namely, their anchors. That's why Rather,
- Jennings and Tom Brokaw can be seen jetting off to Eastern
- Europe or China whenever the President (or a Soviet leader) hops
- an airplane. Network executives gamely defend such trips on
- journalistic grounds, but they are primarily promotional
- gimmicks meant to showcase the network's resident Bigfoot.
- "We're almost defining news in such a way as to say something's
- not important unless an anchor is there," says Everette Dennis,
- executive director of the Gannett Center for Media Studies.
- "That's regrettable. Sometimes the specialists on a particular
- subject ought to be the ones dominating the coverage, not the
- anchors, who are by definition generalists."
- </p>
- <p> News personalities, of course, bring special skills to
- their jobs that are not always appreciated. They must be able
- not only to report the news but to communicate it effectively.
- An appealing on-camera demeanor is no less important than a
- writer's prose style or a magazine's layout. "You have to be a
- special combination of person to be the focal point of a
- successful show," says NBC News president Michael Gartner, a
- former newspaper editor. "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."
- </p>
- <p> Yet an excessive focus on stars has its costs for the news
- division. For one thing, it diverts resources from
- bread-and-butter reporting. Salaries for top people keep going
- up even as the networks trim their news budgets to the bone.
- Says former CBS News president Ed Joyce: "You simply cannot pay
- a large stable of news stars these million-dollar salaries in
- the diminished economy that now exists in television without it
- coming from somewhere. My concern is that it is happening at the
- expense of the basic responsibility of network news
- organizations: to maintain bureaus overseas, to maintain bureaus
- domestically, and to cover the news coherently and responsibly."
- </p>
- <p> What's more, these news stars--whom the networks must
- keep happy at all costs--are wielding more and more power
- behind the scenes. CBS's Rather, who is managing editor of the
- CBS Evening News as well as its anchor, is a force to reckon
- with at CBS News, with a major say in the assignment of
- reporters and even news executives. NBC's Brokaw too has been
- accused of becoming an "anchor monster," of engineering the
- departure of former News president Lawrence Grossman and of
- being reluctant to yield the spotlight to correspondents who
- might threaten him, such as Chris Wallace (who has left the
- network for ABC's Prime Time Live). In order to keep Nightline's
- Ted Koppel happy, ABC gave him an unprecedented contract that
- allowed him to set up a production company and make news
- specials both for ABC and for independent distribution.
- </p>
- <p> The anchors insist that their power has been overrated.
- "Careers did not go into decline at NBC because anyone argued
- with me," says Brokaw. "I protected Chris Wallace. I said it was
- a mistake to lose him." CBS News president David Burke has
- clipped Rather's wings a bit by shifting some of the anchorman's
- supporters out of key executive positions.
- </p>
- <p> Then there is the problem of what to do when stars collide.
- Sawyer and Rather are a case in point. The CBS anchorman
- insists that he did not prevent Sawyer from anchoring the CBS
- Evening News and that he even told her she would be considered
- the front runner if the network decided he needed a co-anchor.
- Those close to Rather, however, are skeptical that he--or
- either of the other two network anchormen--would willingly
- agree to share his platform with a dynamic female like Sawyer.
- </p>
- <p> Sawyer has proved that she can fend for herself in the
- corridors of power. Her determination to reach the top rung on
- the network ladder has been matched by her adeptness at making
- the right moves on the way up. That political savvy probably
- dates from her Louisville childhood. Her father was a Republican
- county executive active in state politics; her mother was a
- teacher. At 17, Diane won the America's Junior Miss competition.
- Her talent: reading an original poem about the Civil War and
- singing songs representing the North and South. A newspaper
- account at the time described Sawyer as a straight-A student who
- "wants to study foreign languages, for a possible career in
- diplomatic and foreign service. Her other interests include
- journalism."
- </p>
- <p> Hearing that today, Sawyer laughs in surprise: "Really! I
- thought I wandered aimlessly into this profession." She went to
- Wellesley, majored in English and marched in one campus protest--against mandatory Bible class. ("I have to confess I was
- ambivalent about it, because I loved Bible class.") Meanwhile,
- she suffered through an identity crisis and an undernourished
- social life, which she traces to the Junior Miss "aberration."
- "I only dated four or five times in college," she says. "I went
- to my first mixer my first year, and I heard some guy say to his
- date, `That can't be her. She's nothing special.' And I slinked
- out of the room and never went to a mixer again. I became very
- self-conscious."
- </p>
- <p> After graduation she got a job as a weather girl at a TV
- station back in Louisville. Too nearsighted to see the western
- half of the map from the East Coast, she made jokes on the job.
- "I had no interest in the weather," she says, "and it showed
- nightly." Later she did reporting; her first assignment was to
- follow Supreme Court Justice William O. Douglas on a hike
- through Kentucky's Red River gorge. Toting the camera and
- recording equipment herself, she fell backward into the gorge
- while trying to get a shot. The Justice's comment: "Are you new
- at this, dear?"
- </p>
- <p> "I felt that the journalist's perspective was home for me,"
- Sawyer says, "but I really wanted to know something about
- making decisions, taking responsibility." That led her to
- Washington, where her father's connections helped her land a job
- in the White House press office. She started answering phones,
- was soon writing press releases and eventually became a chief
- assistant to Press Secretary Ron Ziegler. Her personal contact
- with President Nixon at the White House was limited: their only
- face-to-face encounter came when she accidentally barreled into
- him on the stairs leading to the Situation Room. The eager young
- press aide made a better impression with a piece she wrote for
- a magazine that expressed Nixon's feelings about his mother. The
- President called to compliment her; thereafter he dubbed her
- "the smart girl."
- </p>
- <p> "She brought an intellectual spark to the press office and
- creativity that was invaluable," remembers Ziegler. Another
- colleague recalls, "She had a great deal of political
- sensitivity for someone her age. She was smart and cunning, very
- clever and resourceful. She was dogged in her approach to
- things: she covered all the bases." Loyalty was another of her
- hallmarks. One Washingtonian recalls sitting next to Sawyer in
- the cheap seats at a radio and TV correspondents' dinner in
- 1973. Satirist Mark Russell was taking swipes at Nixon's
- Watergate troubles, and the audience was laughing; even Ziegler
- seemed to roll with the punches. But Sawyer broke down in tears.
- </p>
- <p> Dealing with the gathering Watergate storm, Sawyer recalls,
- was "bruising, nerve-deadening torment." Her response was to
- devour all the information she could about the scandal. "I read
- all the newspapers and all the testimony and all the lawyers'
- briefs," she says. "I became a kind of walking computer. Even
- the lawyers would call me occasionally because I seemed to have
- everything on file." Only after the famous "smoking gun" tape,
- released just days before Nixon's resignation, did Sawyer become
- convinced that the end was inevitable. She was one of the
- stalwarts who rode on the plane that carried Nixon to San
- Clemente after his farewell speech. What explains her loyalty?
- She ponders the question quietly for a few seconds. "When
- someone's life is shattered," she says, "there is only
- humanity."
- </p>
- <p> To some friends, however, her loyalty went beyond
- reasonable bounds: Sawyer remained with Nixon for nearly four
- more years in San Clemente, helping Frank Gannon (whom she was
- dating) gather material for the President's autobiography. "I
- had the illusion of indispensability," she explains. Her job was
- to assemble all the on-the-record material about Watergate and
- the Final Days--an assignment that led to some tense moments
- with the former President. But she does not regret the
- experience (she and Nixon still correspond regularly): "I knew
- that being out there with him was going to be a seminar the
- likes of which one could never attend. I had a real sense of the
- Shakespearean, dark history that I was going to be a minor
- character in."
- </p>
- <p> Her role in that Shakespearean drama caused something of an
- uproar at CBS, when, shortly after leaving Nixon in 1978, she
- was given a reporter's job by Washington bureau chief William
- Small. Several correspondents, including Rather, openly
- expressed opposition to her hiring. "Conversations would stop
- as I entered the room," she recalls.
- </p>
- <p> Gradually, though, she earned her colleagues' respect. For
- several months she labored in relative obscurity, doing legwork
- on stories that rarely made it on the air ("They called me queen
- of the stakeouts"). Her big chance came after the Three Mile
- Island nuclear accident. She broadcast live reports from the
- damaged reactor--borrowing a producer's tennis shoes so she
- could stand atop the microwave truck in the rain without
- slipping off--and got her first major exposure on the CBS
- Evening News. After a stint covering the 1980 presidential
- campaign, she was assigned to the State Department, where she
- impressed her bosses with her hard work and excellent sources.
- Says former CBS News president Richard Salant: "I think she was
- the best State Department reporter we ever had."
- </p>
- <p> During the negotiations to free the Iran hostages, Sawyer's
- reports often wound up on the CBS Morning News. "I would sleep
- all night on two secretarial chairs so I could get up at 4 a.m.,
- stalk the halls and see what I could get," she recalls. Her
- live exchanges with Charles Kuralt led to her being tapped as
- the show's co-anchor, and Sawyer made the leap from journeyman
- correspondent to network star.
- </p>
- <p> As co-anchor with Kuralt and later Bill Kurtis, Sawyer
- helped boost the ratings for the No. 3-ranked morning show to
- their highest levels ever. Colleagues were impressed by her
- dedication. "She would show up at 2 o'clock in the morning and
- write her own copy," recalls a producer. "This was unheard of.
- There was no way you could not respect her." But she soon grew
- dissatisfied with the low priority the Morning News was given
- at the network and with the trivia she was sometimes forced to
- handle. "I thought this is not really what I should be doing,"
- she says. "It was time to move on."
- </p>
- <p> That's when Hewitt came calling with an offer for her to
- become 60 Minutes' first female correspondent. Joining the
- old-boy network of Wallace, Morley Safer, Harry Reasoner and Ed
- Bradley was not easy, and reviews of her performance were mixed.
- Producers found her, as usual, to be a trouper--willing to go
- anywhere, endure any hardship for a story. "She has a lot of
- cold blood," says producer Anne de Boismilon. "You can never
- feel fear coming from her." Others, however, grew impatient with
- her for endlessly tinkering with stories. "She could drive a
- producer crazy fixing, then fixing again and again," says one
- source. "What she needed was a baby-sitter to tell her to get
- on with it."
- </p>
- <p> Outside the office, Sawyer is praised as unfailingly
- gracious and generous. When relatives of co-workers are sick,
- she sends cards and fruit baskets; her thank-you notes are known
- for their eloquence. Her own life-style, meanwhile, is far from
- extravagant. In the New York City apartment she occupied while
- single, "she preferred no decor," says a close friend.
- "Basically, what she had was an awful little table in the living
- room with a couple of small couches and some dying plants."
- Admits Sawyer: "I'm hopeless. I'd just as soon send out for
- pizza and sit on pillows in front of the fire."
- </p>
- <p> Her marriage to Nichols has changed some of that; they are
- planning to redecorate their brownstone on Manhattan's Upper
- East Side, and they have a house in Connecticut and a ranch in
- California. Sawyer is even getting involved in cooking. "She
- does it the way she does everything," says Nichols. "She cuts
- out 35 different versions of the recipe. We do it together. It
- is very detailed and sometimes complex." The pair met two years
- ago on a Concorde flight from London and went to lunch a couple
- of times to discuss doing a profile for 60 Minutes. Nichols
- finally confessed that he didn't want to do the piece--but
- wanted to keep having lunch. "All of her is always available all
- the time," he gushes. "She uses more of her brain than almost
- anybody I know."
- </p>
- <p> Sawyer's enthusiasms also run to tennis and movies, and
- Nichols has been introducing her to old films on the VCR (her
- most recent discovery: Renoir's The Rules of the Game). Nichols
- sat in on run-throughs of Sawyer's new ABC show and offered some
- suggestions about lighting and blocking. But, says Sawyer,
- "we're not very good consultants on each other's careers. We're
- very good, astute experts on each other and being happy." Notes
- a colleague: "She's like a kid, madly in love for the first
- time."
- </p>
- <p> Sawyer resists dwelling on such personal matters: it pains
- her that her journalistic accomplishments are overshadowed by
- questions about her looks, marriage and glamorous life-style.
- "We're a Madison Avenue country," she sighs. "I'm not sure that
- we make a distinction between newspeople and celebrities. And
- I think there is a distinction. The distinction lies in what you
- do every day--what you do to get stories and how far you will
- go and how much you will dig for them. All of the rest of the
- attention that comes to you because you're on the air seems to
- me an irrelevance."
- </p>
- <p> It is no irrelevance, however, to the executives who pay
- Sawyer and her fellow news stars million-dollar salaries and bet
- entire prime-time shows on them. Nor is it an irrelevance to the
- audience that tunes in, not to watch the NBC Nightly News or a
- new show called Prime Time Live, but to see Tom Brokaw or Diane
- Sawyer or Connie Chung. This is perhaps the ultimate irony of
- TV news in the celebrity age: reporters spend their careers
- trying to become stars, only to lament, once they make it, that
- they are treated as stars rather than reporters. The complaint
- may actually be sincere, but it almost doesn't matter. It's good
- for the image.
- </p>
- <p>-- Melissa August/Washington, Mary Cronin and William Tynan/New
- York
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
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