A critic's view: You've come a long way, Barbara Walters

A respectful appreciation of one of television's groundbreakers.

May 12, 2014 at 2:48PM
Barbara Walters
Barbara Walters (ABC via AP/The Minnesota Star Tribune)

Here's a dangerous confession: Barbara Walters bugs me. I don't like that she runs in celebrity circles, poses for affectionate photos with her subjects and overdramatizes the simplest of questions. Sure, she's landed a lot of tough-to-get interviews, but most of them had about as much substance as a vanilla wafer.

And yet … Walters deserves every honor she's getting this week: ABC News headquarters being named in her honor, Thursday's reunion of every panelist in "The View's" history, Friday's prime-time special, the 1,000 buckets of tears her departure will create. Heck, go ahead and throw in a ticker-tape parade.

The justification for all the hoopla is simple: Walters may not have been the best female journalist in the business, but she was its most important founding mother.

It's painful to recall how sexist the business was when she began carving out her career.

She put up with the indignity of being a "Today Show Girl" long enough to rise to the top.

Her position as the first network female anchor came with the cruel caveat that she had to share the desk with Harry Reasoner, a newscaster who thought a woman's place was in the cooking segments.

She revolutionized daytime TV with the insane theory that women could hold a riveting conversation with no input from the other gender. And she did it all with spunk.

I love spunk.

Working journalists shouldn't get the kind of maudlin, showbiz tributes we'll hear this week, but in this case I'm willing to bend the rules — just as she did.

Neal Justin


This image released by ABC shows host Barbara Walters, left, with New York City Mayor Bill de Blasio and his wife Chirlane McCray on ABC's "The View," Monday, April 21, 2014 in New York. De Blasio is proclaiming May 16 as ìBarbara Walters Dayî in New York City. Walters is retiring that day after a storied television reporting career that has spanned five decades. (AP Photo/ABC, Lou Rocco)
Mayor Bill de Blasio has proclaimed Friday “Barbara Walters Day” in New York City. (The Minnesota Star Tribune)
May 3, 1974 DAYTIME EMMY HOST -- Barbara Walters, co-host of "The Friday Daytime Emmy ***** Presentation," to be colorcast Tuesday, May 28 (12 noon-1:30 p.m. NYT) on NBC-TV, poses with one of the coveted statuettes. The broadcast will ***** television's first Emmy Awards presentation designed specifically to honor outstanding daytime programming. May 23, 1974 May 20, 1975 June 22, 1976 June 27, 1976 NBC
Walters co-hosted the first “Daytime Emmy Awards” in 1974. A year later she won her first, for “The Today Show.” (The Minnesota Star Tribune)
April 30, 1985 Barbara Walters interviews a sexy Cher about the men in her life on "The Barbara Walters Special," Wednesday, May 29 (9:00-10:00 p.m., EDT) on the ABC Television Network. Other guests on the program are Raquel Welch and Diahann Carroll. ABC
Cher and Walters chatted in 1985 for a “Barbara Walters Special.” (The Minnesota Star Tribune)
about the writer

about the writer

Neal Justin

Critic / Reporter

Neal Justin is the pop-culture critic, covering how Minnesotans spend their entertainment time. He also reviews stand-up comedy. Justin previously served as TV and music critic for the paper. He is the co-founder of JCamp, a non-profit program for high-school journalists, and works on many fronts to further diversity in newsrooms.

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J. SCOTT APPLEWHITE, ASSOCIATED PRESS/The Minnesota Star Tribune

The "winners" have all been Turkeys, no matter the honor's name.

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