РефератыИностранный языкWoWomen In Society Essay Research Paper Women

Women In Society Essay Research Paper Women

Women In Society Essay, Research Paper


Women in all careers are striving to gain equality in


the work force today, and female television news anchors


are definitely part of the fight. The road to television


news anchoring is a rocky one, where only a few women


survive and many fail. Where progress was once thought


to have been made, there aren’t many females getting ahead


in the world of television news. Today, there is a very


slow, if any, gain in the numbers of women who succeed.


There are many questions surrounding the subject of


women in television news, and I will attempt to answer


relevant ones in this paper. How have the women that


actually make it to the top and succeed as anchorwomen,


done it? What does it take to make it? Why do those few


endure it/enjoy it? Why has it been and still is


difficult for women? What are the expectations of women


in the field, as opposed to the expectations of men?


I am interested in this topic because I once aspired


to become a television broadcaster. I still have


inspiration in me, but not quite as much due to the


negative and discouraging aspects I have heard about in


classes and in the media. I am not sure that I could be


happy in a career such as this, and I know there are great


difficulties in “making it” in this profession. I have


read about the incredible ambition of successful females


in television news, and it seems like it takes a special


kind of passion to want to keep up in the business.


I kept my questions in mind when gathering research


material. While focusing on the key questions, I was able


to find information that led me to form answers to them.


Christine Craft’s biography told of her individual


experience of being fired on the basis of her looks and


her age. I realized from reading her story that she had a


“nose for news”, a passion for telling it to the world,


and a unique spark that made her a good journalist, yet


those qualities weren’t enough in her case. She took that


passion and spark, filed a sexual discrimination case and


won.


Hard News: Women in Broadcast Journalism had a few


chapters that were relevant to today, and I could draw on


some information for my paper. However, much of the


information was historical and not helpful to answering my


questions.


Battling for News concentrated mainly on print


journalism. There was material about the first women in


broadcasting in the 1950’s and how they were hired and


fired.


Television News Anchors had very helpful information,


in that there were individual stories from anchorwomen


telling of their experiences. This provided stories about


the women who have succeeded within the field–why and


how. There was a round table discussion conducted by The


New Mother Jones magazine with television newswomen Linda


Ellerbee, Marion Goldin, Ann Rubenstein, and Meredith


Vieira. This provided first-hand opinions about what these


women see going on in the business.


Women in Television News was published in 1976, and


thus, much of the information was outdated. However, I


was able to use some quotes from newswomen about what they


believe one must do to “make it” in broadcast journalism.


I also found some interesting quotes from a former vice


president of ABC News regarding women in the industry.


Waiting for Prime Time had valuable information about


Marlene Sander’s experience and opinions of other


anchorwomen and men. It covered possibilities for the


future of women in broadcasting.


Pamela Creedon’s two books were helpful in that they


discussed topics of sexual discrimination in broadcast


journalism and included a chapter by Marlene Sanders,


titled “The Face of the Network News is Male.” Here she


attempted to tackle some problems women in television news


face: what the problems are, why they exist, and a bit


about what needs to be done to cure these problems.


Liesbet van Zoonen’s book included a chapter titled


“Media Production and the Encoding of Gender.” It showed


how society views women in the media. The expectations of


female anchorwomen in part stems from the overall view of


women on television–whether it be in a movie, music


video, or soap opera. This was relevant to my paper in


answering the question of why there are certain


expectations of women in television news.


The textbook, Gender, Race and Class in Media had a


few chapters relevant to my paper. Larry Gross wrote a


chapter titled, “Out of the Mainstream: Sexual Minorities


and Mass Media.” He discussed various stereotypes in our


society that lead to stereotypes in all areas of our


lives.


I found some of my sources from Oasis, and also used


a couple of magazine articles that were relevant to the


subject. I focused on the questions that I wanted to


answer and drew points from the material that were


relevant and provided substantial evidence to answer my


questions. I found that opinions and thoughts of women


who had been through the business were most helpful.


There was one big limitation I faced if I wanted to


prove that women in television news were discriminated


upon based on sex and age. Women have been fired from


their anchor positions, and it has seemed that the reasons


were because of looks or aging. But this is hard to


prove. In August, Carol Schrader, a woman anchor from


KETV-TV in Omaha, Nebraska was asked to leave. She said


that it was because of her age, although her bosses didn’t


say that was the reason, stating that she wasn’t doing her


job. She was replace by a young, blond woman. Also, when


Marlene Sanders was asked to leave ABC, instead of saying


point-blank that she was too old, her boss told her she


had outgrown the profession. Lynn Sherr of ABC News was


also fired, and she believed it was because of her


appearance, as no one told her why she lost her job. It


isn’t a proven fact that every case of a woman getting


fired from their professions were fired because of their


age.


The number of women news anchors is scarce. Only a


few succeed, and the reason for this is because what is


expected of them is much greater than what is expected of


men. Women must work twice as hard, be twice as


beautiful, and go above and beyond their abilities. The


television broadcasting business is dominated by males,


and, in turn, males have the majority of the power.


Positive steps have been taken by women, but they are


still far from being equal in the field. Advances are not


being made quickly.


Some men in the world of television news say that


women do have a tougher time. Larry King had this to say:


I know that if I were “Loretta” King instead of


“Larry” King I would be nowhere near where I am


today. I would not have had a national radio


talk show in 1978, a national cable show of my


own, and a national column if I had started out


being the “wrong” gender (Craft 1988, p. 6).


Al Ittleson, former vice-president of ABC News, says


that physical appearance is important for both male and


female broadcasters, but emphasizes the importance of a


woman broadcaster’s looks:


Women are supposed to be beautiful. People


anticipate what a woman is supposed to look


like, so when they come to television-I haven’t


seen an unattractive woman on television yet…


In fact, they’re hired, I would say, probably


more because of the way they look and their image


than because of their background. A man with a


very strong journalism background and a man who


has broken stories…can get away with a little


bit of homeliness. Men aren’t supposed to be


attractive. Women have a tougher time (Gelfman


1976, p. 53).


Our society pins importance upon women’s looks.


They are required to retain qualities of femininity, yet


must also be professional. van Zoonen explains the


different expectations of men and women in journalism,


saying, “one must assume ‘femininity’ as a feature of


female journalists and ‘masculinity’ as a different


characteristic of male journalists” (van Zoonen 1994, p.


63). The images that are instilled in society are


carried over into all aspects of life, and are prevalent


in television news.


Just as our society is dominated by white, middle and


upper-middle class males, it is so in most professions.


The men are the bosses in television news, and this has


made it difficult for women to gain prestige. The men


place expectations upon the women, and punish them if they


aren’t exactly what they want.


One good example of a case where a woman news anchor


was fired on the basis of her looks is Christine Craft.


Craft was discriminated against because of her sex,


appearance, and age. She was fired from KMBC in Kansas


City and told, “You don’t hide your intelligence to make


guys look smarter” (Craft 1988, p. 66). Along with this,


she was fired because she was “too old, too unattractive,


and not sufficiently deferential to men” (Craft 1988, p.


66). Because her boss directly told her these things, she


felt she had been sexually discriminated against. She won


two court cases, winning a total of $600,000 in damages.


Craft’s case opened the eyes of many anchorwomen, as


well as others in the media and elsewhere. Here is a


talented, competent broadcast journalist who was unfairly


treated and took a stand. She comments on her experience,


“The men could be balding, jowly, bespectacled, even fat


and encased in double-knit, yet the women had to be


flawless. Moreover, there was the expectation that I


should pretend not to know certain facts just because I


was a woman” (Craft 1988, p. 10).


What is disturbing about Craft’s case is that it is


so blatantly obvious that she lost her job on the basis of


being a woman, being too old, and not being pretty enough.


At the time, out of all the anchors in the country who


were over 40, men made up ninety-seven percent of that,


with three percent being women who did not look their age.


Marlene Sanders writes that what is seen in Craft’s case


is “that wrinkles are ’seasoning’ in a man but


‘disqualification’ in a woman,” and that while this may


not be sexual discrimination, “it is a sad statement about


how women are viewed in our society” (Sanders and Rock


1988, p. 148).


The world of television news is an unstable one,


where women take chances, not knowing if or how long they


can thrive in the business. Marlene Sanders puts it


plainly, “The message is clear; we can all be replaced.


There are no guarantees of longevity, and no obvious


destination where news professionals can translate their


experience and knowledge into new and satisfying careers”


(Sanders and Rock 1988, p. 205).


Before she took the job at KMBC in Kansas City, Craft


was working at a smaller station in Santa Barbara, where


she had a positive experience. She says, “I was content


to be in a place where the emphasis was on getting the


stories and getting them right. Only once did management


mention my appearance, and that was to tell me to pull my


hair back a bit” (Craft 1988, p. 28).


Craft was attracted to the Kansas City station in a


larger market. However, she made clear before taking the


job that first and foremost she did not want to change her


appearance. They promised her it wouldn’t happen, yet


within the first week they had a beauty consultant piling


the make-up onto her face.


Sexual discrimination is evident in television news.


KMBC practically begged Christine Craft to come to their


station. “Women are rewarded more than men for changing


news shops often or for moving to larger markets more


because of their gender than because of their journalistic


qualifications” (Creedon: Smith, Fredin, Ferguson Nardone


1993, p. 174).


During the first trial, a former news producer at


KMBC, Sherry Chastain, testified, saying that her bosses


“instructed her to monitor the appearance of female


anchors and reporters, but never males…the male


counterpart was bald with a bad toupee and thick glasses,


yet nothing was ever mentioned about monitoring his


appearance” (Craft 1988, p. 118).


Diane Sawyer says that equal pay for equal work is a


more serious issue than aging on the air. The reason this


is such a difficult challenge is because the number of


women on a news staff, as well as their ages can be easily


established. However, salaries tend to be confidential,


and the dollar value of experience and other


qualifications are hard to determine. Therefore, while it


is possible that aging may not be a major issue for women


broadcasters ten years from now, equal pay for equal work


will most likely linger on (Hosley and Yamada 1987, p.


152-154).


Some of the blame for all anchorwomen’s problems were


voiced by cynical male television executives in the


1980’s. Jon Katz, former executive director of CBS


Morning News, tells of another executive who had a way of


deciding which women to interview for anchor positions.


He would look at their tapes in the VCR for eight seconds


and he would ask himself, “Do I want to fuck them?” This


was his basis in deciding who to hire (Katz 1995, p. 158).


Catherine Crier experienced tinges of sexism at CNN.


A former lawyer and judge, she was criticized for being


just another pretty face entering the field of


broadcasting. She had no previous experience in


journalism, yet her political experience provided the


skills and knowledge necessary to succeed. She says,


“Journalists couched their reaction in terms of experience


and background, but those same journalists have failed to


voice similar criticisms of Pierre Salinger of Bill


Moyers, two men who jumped from politics into broadcast


news” (Fensch: McHargue 1993, p. 182). Crier says that


the gains of women in television news is being made very


slowly, and that “it is still a frustration for most


women” (Fensch: McHargue 1993, p. 184).


Jane Pauley is an exception to the negativity women


broadcasters often receive. The public loves her. “It is


precisely because Pauley is so down-to-earth and


easy-going that Americans loved waking up with her”


(Fensch: Holloway 1993, p. 249). She possesses the


feminine quality that is appealing to the mass audience.


She was replaced by Deborah Norville, a younger, blonder


woman on the Today show, and viewers were upset to see her


go. Now she is a success on NBC Nightly News.


There are certain qualities a woman needs to have in


order to be able to survive in television news. Ann


Rubenstein of NBC Nightly News says, “You must really


decide for yourself what you’re going to do and not do.


And what price you are willing to pay for whatever they’re


offering” (Fensch: Orenstein 1993, p. 128).


Hard work and undying ambition are important


qualities of anchorwomen. Mary Alice Williams, of CNN and


NBC, gave it her all the first day she went to work for


NBC, “appearing on camera, as an anchor of the evening


news breaks, and by the end of her first three weeks she


had anchored every network news show” (Fensch: White 1993,


p. 289).


A passion for telling the news is important, and is


one reason why the successful women stay in the field.


Diane Sawyer explains,


“I really love what you learn every day in the


business. 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”


(Fensch: Zoglin 1993, p. 278).


Sawyer’s never-ending ambition carried her from news


correspondent to network star. While working for CBS


Morning News and covering the negotiations to free Iran


hostages, she “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” (Fensch: Zoglin 1993, p. 284).


The will to endure any obstacles and believe in


themselves keeps the few successful anchorwomen going.


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.

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