Mary Richards may have inspired viewers as a go-to news producer, but she never made it to the top of the WJM ladder. Now her real-life descendants are taking care of business.
Women will run the top four TV newsrooms in the Twin Cities, the only U.S. major market that can make that claim.
The deal was sealed Tuesday when WCCO announced that Kari Patey would replace Mike Caputa as the CBS affiliate's news director next month.
"Today, something BIG happened in Minneapolis TV," tweeted Florida-based news veteran Al Tompkins, who wrote the textbook on TV journalism, "Aim for the Heart."
WCCO general manager Ann Ouellette said she wasn't trying to make history when she selected Patey, who produced newscasts at WCCO and KSTP before spending the past decade in New York City.
"Honestly, it was never part of my consciousness. I was just looking for the best person for the job," she said. "But I've got to admit it's pretty cool."
The next largest market that can say the same is Portland, Maine, which boasts the nation's 79th largest audience; The Twin Cities ranks 15th.
Jill Geisler, who became a news director in Milwaukee a year after "The Mary Tyler Moore Show" went off the air in 1977, said the achievement shows how much the industry has matured.