Barbara Walters in her own words in 2014

ByBill Ritter WABC logo
Friday, December 30, 2022
WEB EXTRA: 1 on 1 with Barbara Walters
Bill Ritter sat down with Barbara Walters as she says goodbye to television.

NEW YORK -- Barbara Walters, the trailblazing television news broadcaster and longtime ABC News anchor and correspondent who shattered the glass ceiling and became a dominant force in an industry once dominated by men has died. She was 93.

The following is from a report in 2014

Back in the day - meaning when I started at ABC, which was in December 1992 - there was a star-studded cast of TV journalists. Good journalists to be sure, all of them, but celebrities in their own right as well.

Peter Jennings, Diane Sawyer, Ted Koppel, Charlie Gibson, Sam Donaldson, Hugh Downs, Connie Chung, Howard Cosell, Joan Lunden. The big names at ABC back in the 1990s.

But the best known of them all was Barbara Walters.

And she still is.

So now we say bon voyage to our colleague. And it's a strange feeling, surreal really because 'round here Barbara Walters is like the Eveready Bunny. She just keeps on going. Or at least we thought she would.

A year ago, Barbara announced that, after more than half a century on TV, she'd be hanging up her microphone - and while I heard her words, I didn't really believe she'd do it. After all, who worked harder than Barbara? Who was more tenacious? Determined? No one.

There's no shortage of legacy items on Barbara's resume. The first woman to anchor a morning show. The first woman to anchor an evening newscast. The first woman to anchor a prime-time magazine show. The first - well, the first at just about everything, including the first journalist to probe personal questions with officials and celebrities, and the first to come up with the concept of people sitting around a table just yakking.

There are those who will bemoan the preponderance of celebrity journalism, and journalism as entertainment, but Barbara wasn't only any one thing. Not ever. She interviewed Presidents and Kings, terrorists and Prime Ministers. And yes she interviewed movie stars. She got many people who would never think of crying in public, to cry on camera. And, perhaps most importantly, she paved the way for women to work as journalists on television.

I feel honored to know Barbara. She has been my champion professionally, working as one of her 20/20 reporters. (She's so intense, so focused when working on a story!) And she's been my champion personally. When I got divorced, and it made the gossip rags, Barbara was the first to phone. Let me do something - anything - for you, she said. A dinner, a party, whatever. Oh if I were only 10 years young, she laughed. She made me feel great at a time when my private life became quite public.

The video attached here is my conversation with Barbara, and you will see and hear her say things she has not said before. It's intimate, it's candid, it's insightful. It's Barbara.

We will all miss her. I will miss her.

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