Ladies Who Punch

Home > Other > Ladies Who Punch > Page 31
Ladies Who Punch Page 31

by Ramin Setoodeh


  Elisabeth, Star, Joy, and Meredith at the Christmas party, before all the wedding freebies wrecked their friendship. Credit: Bernadette Piccolomini

  “Rosie O’Donnell is a great talent,” Barbara said. “She also has, shall we say, emotional problems.” Credit: © American Broadcasting Companies, Inc.

  The View from the elevator: the cohosts rode together each morning from their dressing rooms on the second floor to the studio on the third floor. Credit: Bernadette Piccolomini

  Michelle Obama fist bumps Elisabeth as a guest cohost on June 18, 2008, before her husband accepted the Democratic nomination. Credit: © American Broadcasting Companies, Inc.

  Barack Obama became the first sitting president to grant an interview to a daytime talk show on July 29, 2010. Credit: © American Broadcasting Companies, Inc.

  Cramming during a commercial. Credit: Bernadette Piccolomini

  Whoopi sits in Joy’s lap during a Hot Topics meeting. Credit: Bernadette Piccolomini

  Barbara with her beloved hairdresser, Bryant. Credit: Bryant Renfroe

  Director Mark Gentile in the control room. Credit: Bernadette Piccolomini

  On May 15, 2014, the 11 View cohosts gathered for Barbara’s retirement. From left: Whoopi, Meredith, Star, Debbie, Joy, Barbara, Lisa, Elisabeth, Rosie, Jenny, and Sherri. Credit: © American Broadcasting Companies, Inc.

  Senator John McCain at The View for his daughter Meghan’s birthday on October 23, 2017. Credit: © American Broadcasting Companies, Inc.

  In April 2014, I wrote this Variety cover story on Barbara about her legacy and fifty-year career on TV. Credit: Variety

  A Note on Sources

  The first one out was the first one in. One spring afternoon, I drove to The Insider in Los Angeles, where Debbie Matenopoulos invited me to her dressing room after a taping. She was eager to share all her memories about working on The View. It all happened so quickly, I thought maybe I could line up everybody else in the next few months. But I came to learn that nothing associated with The View is easy. The research for this book took three years and involved more than 150 interviews with producers, agents, network executives, and guests.

  But none of that mattered if I couldn’t hear directly from the stars of the show. Ultimately, I conducted lengthy conversations with eleven of the cohosts, with periodic follow-ups over the phone or email. Barbara Walters, who gave me her blessing, met me for an iced tea near her home shortly after I’d sold this book. She connected me to her trusted executive producer, Bill Geddie. Eventually, he and I spent many hours over several months talking near his home on the West Coast. He was always gracious in helping me tell his story. And this is the first time he’s told many of these anecdotes to a reporter.

  If someone passed on participating, I’d just do what Barbara would do, which is never accept no for an answer. And so I’d wait a few months and try again. Over time, I was able to schedule one-on-one interviews with Meredith Vieira, Star Jones, Rosie O’Donnell, Sherri Shepherd, and Jenny McCarthy, in either New York or Los Angeles. I visited Joy Behar and Meghan McCain at The View, where I’d spent so much time backstage that I sometimes felt like Michael Wolff at the White House. Nicolle Wallace welcomed me to 30 Rockefeller Center, where we chatted before she taped her afternoon program on MSNBC. Lisa Ling agreed to a phone conversation. The two cohosts who never sat down with me—even though I’d interviewed them both before—were Whoopi Goldberg and Elisabeth Hasselbeck.

  This book is primarily based on new interviews. Since I’ve been covering The View for more than ten years, I relied on some of my unpublished manuscripts for quotes that couldn’t be re-created due to time passing. In 2014, I wrote a cover story for Variety on Barbara prior to her retirement, spending multiple days with her in different settings. I also wrote a cover story on Rosie the second time she joined The View, and I profiled Whoopi for Newsweek in 2011.

  It was important for me to tell the full story of the show. And I understood that not everyone could talk for attribution. This is The View, after all.

  Acknowledgments

  Barbara Walters knew what she was doing when she coined the phrase “Hot Topics.” Of all the articles that I’ve written as a journalist, The View is the one subject that always draws the most readers. When it comes to online traffic, stories about Barbara’s TV show often outperform those about Marvel’s The Avengers or Fifty Shades of Grey. Forget Jamie Dornan. What the internet really wants to know is what’s going on behind closed doors at The View.

  I have a theory about why so many people—even those who don’t regularly tune in—can’t stop themselves from reading about The View. The show touches on a cross-section of important themes: political polarization, red states vs. blue states, feminism, the challenges women face in Hollywood and beyond, and, of course, Donald Trump. When I first pitched this book, my thesis was that The View defined a turning point in American society, before the election of the first female president. That hasn’t happened (yet). But for the last twenty years, The View has elevated opinionated heroines who believe the future is female, foreshadowing our current climate.

  Bill Geddie once told me that he suggested to a prominent journalist who was covering David Letterman that he should write a book about The View. I’m glad that the other writer didn’t take Geddie up on the offer. And I’m indebted to all the producers who worked tirelessly on the show for the last two decades. Many of them invited me into their homes or agreed to lengthy phone conversations to talk about what it was like to be on such a groundbreaking program.

  I’d like to thank my brilliant friend Kate Aurthur, for navigating me through my first book. I might never have been ready if it weren’t for her genuine enthusiasm for this project. Kate read and edited every page from its early draft stages, providing invaluable suggestions and questions. When I’d gain her approval—with notes like “LITERAL LOL”—I knew that I was on the right track and had to keep going.

  I started as an editor at the age of twenty-one at Newsweek, when newsmagazines were still a force in journalism. Thank you to Marcus Mabry, Mark Whitaker, and Kathy Deveny, for hiring me and turning me into the reporter I became. And to Marc Peyser, who, as culture editor, made me rewrite every story at least five times; he has unquestionably good taste. For proof: he assigned me several stories about The View, which led me to this book.

  Meghan McCain championed this idea, declaring it a bestseller, even before she became a cohost on the show. Melissa Durliat has been a loyal friend, who always pushes me to be better—usually with a glass of rosé in her hand.

  At Variety, I’m grateful for my boss, Claudia Eller, who never wavers in supporting great journalism. The same goes for Jay Penske. I’m lucky to work with so many talented colleagues, including Michelle Sobrino, Gerry Byrne, Owen Gleiberman, John Ross, Lauren Utecht, Mary Corbet, Brent Lang, Stuart Oldham, Elizabeth Wagmeister, Sylvia Tan, Dea Lawrence, Donna Pennestri, Daniel D’Addario, Caroline Framke, Brian Steinberg, Robert Festino, Michael Ausiello, Meredith Woerner, Rebecca Rubin, Nicholas Stango, and Dayna Wolpa.

  More than twenty publishing houses passed on this project, because they weren’t interested in a book about “women in media” (whatever that means!). At St. Martin’s Press, I’m beholden to Emily Angell, for believing in this manuscript. The penetrating Stephen S. Power inherited this book, without having ever seen The View, and he devoured every chapter. I couldn’t have asked for a wiser or more energetic editor. Also, thank you to Sally Richardson, Jennifer Enderlin, Thomas Dunne, Laura Clark, Tracey Guest, Kathryn Hough Boutross, and Samantha Zukergood. My agent, David Kuhn, helped inspire the structure of this book and found it a good home.

  At the start of this process, Brian Stelter took me out to lunch and gave me some incredibly helpful advice. Susan Szeliga, my old friend from the Newsweek library, was invaluable at finding old newspaper and magazine clips. Cindi Berger at PMK/BNC is a vault of information related to The View. At ABC, Julie Townsend and Lauri Hogan were crucial in helping with a
rchival research and overseeing interview requests. At Warner Bros., Chris Circosta assisted with impossible-to-find episodes of The Rosie O’Donnell Show.

  I’ve wanted to be a writer all of my life. I learned how to do that through my teachers, starting in high school with Demetra Chamberlain, Kathy Brandes, Karen Kyer, Pam Rakis, and Deborah Ledford, who encouraged me at fourteen to write, write, write, even though she taught math. At Stanford, I learned from ZZ Packer, Elizabeth Tallent, and Tobias Wolff in the creative writing department.

  Thank you to my boyfriend, Christophe Hollocou, for reading early pages, acting as my secret brainstorming partner, and never getting tired of me asking him to watch old clips of The View.

  And finally, thank you to my parents, for your love and kindness, and for teaching me your strength and determination. As immigrants from Iran, they grew up with a rich tradition of storytelling. My mom would take my sister, Sheila, and me to the library every few days, so that we couldn’t live without books. And my dad would tape-record my shaky voice working its way through A Little House on the Prairie, because he knew I’d learn how to read faster if I could hear myself doing it. I love you all more than I can say.

  Index

  The index that appeared in the print version of this title does not match the pages in your e-book. Please use the search function on your e-reading device to search for terms of interest. For your reference, the terms that appear in the print index are listed below.

  A

  abortion debate

  abuse

  Access Hollywood

  advertising

  age limits

  Aiken, Clay

  Ailes, Roger

  All My Children

  Allen, Woody

  Andrew, Prince of Wales

  Anthony, Crystal McCrary

  Arledge, Roone

  auditions for cohosts

  after departure of Debbie Matenopoulos

  after departure of Joy Behar

  after departure of Lisa Ling

  after departure of Rosie O’Donnell

  after departure of Rosie Perez

  after departures of Nicolle Wallace and Rosie Perez

  after departures of Sherri Shepherd and Jenny McCarthy

  first

  autism

  B

  Bad Habits: Confessions of a Recovering Catholic (McCarthy)

  Balthazar, Brian

  bankruptcy

  Barbara Walters Building

  Barbara’s Mailbag segments

  Barber, Janette

  Barnes, Katreese

  Barone, Randy

  Barwell Productions

  Behar, Joy

  abortion debate incident and

  Andrew Smith and

  Clinton-Trump election race and

  departure of

  Donald Trump and

  earliest episodes and

  George Bush and

  interviewing for cohost position

  interviewing for new cohosts and

  John McCain and

  Meredith Viera and

  as permanent cast member

  reality TV and

  return of as host

  Rosie O’Donnell and

  Star Jones and

  belly button piercing

  Berger, Cindi

  Berman, Donald

  Biden, Joe

  Bila, Jedediah

  bisexuality

  brainwashing

  Branaugh, Kenneth

  breakdowns

  bridezilla

  Brien, Lindsay

  Brinkley, David

  Bush, George W.

  Air National Guard Service of

  Elisabeth Hasselbeck and

  Joy Behar and

  Rosie O’Donnell and

  Whoopi Goldberg and

  Butler, Rene

  C

  Cameron Bure, Candace

  Campos-Duffy, Rachel

  interviewing after departure of Debbie Matenopoulos

  interviewing after departure of Lisa Ling

  Star Jones and

  Cantone, Mario

  Carey, Mariah

  Caryl & Marilyn

  CBS Evening News

  The Celebrity Apprentice

  Celebrity Deathmatch (MTV)

  Celebrity Detox (O’Donnell)

  celibacy

  Chen, Julie

  The Chew

  chicken pox

  Cibrowski, Tom

  Clark, Dick

  Clinton, Bill

  Clinton, Chelsea

  Clinton, Hillary

  Barbara Walters’ final show and

  Donald Trump and

  Elisabeth Hasselbeck and

  Lewinsky scandal and

  loss of election by

  as regular on The View

  The Rosie O’Donnell Show and

  Star Jones and

  What Happened book tour and

  Cohen, Alexandra

  Colbert, Stephen

  Collins, Michelle

  Columbine High School massacre

  Comey, James

  comic roasts

  Conner, Tara

  Cooper, Anderson

  copycats

  Cordes, Jill

  Cosby, Bill

  cosmetic surgery

  Couric, Katie

  Cox, Laverne

  creationism

  Cupp, S. E.

  Curry, Ann

  D

  Daniels, Stormy

  Darden, Christopher

  Daytime Emmy Awards

  DeGeneres, Ellen

  departures

  of Barbara Walters

  of Ben Sherwood

  of Bill Geddie

  of Brian Frons

  of Candace Cameron Bure

  of Debbie Matenopoulos

  of Elisabeth Hasselbeck

  of Jedediah Bila

  of Jenny McCarthy

  of Joy Behar

  of Lisa Ling

  of Mark Gentile

  of Meredith Viera

  of Michelle Collins

  of Nicolle Wallace

  of Raven Symoné

  of Rosie O’Donnell

  of Rosie Perez

  of Sara Haines

  of Sherri Shepherd

  of Star Jones

  depression

  Destiny’s Child

  diabetes

  Diana, Princess of Wales

  directors. See also Gentile, Mark

  dogfighting

  Donahue, Phil

  doublespeak

  Douglas, Michael

  Dummer, Vicki

  Dunaway, Faye

  Dwyer, Joseph

  E

  earpieces

  Eichner, Billy

  Eisner, Michael

  Elliott, Josh

  engagements

  Entertainment Tonight

  erectile dysfunction

  Etheridge, Melissa

  Everybody’s a Critic

  evolution

  exercise

  exits. See Departures

  F

  Faris, Paula

  Farrow, Dylan

  Farrow, Mia

  Fedida, Barbara

  The Feminine Mystique (Friedan)

  Fey, Tina

  Filarski, Elisabeth. See Hasselbeck, Elisabeth

  Fili-Krushel, Patricia

  firings. See Departures

  focus groups

  Fox News

  freebies

  Friedan, Betty

  Frons, Brian

  Barbara Walters and

  departure of

  Meredith Viera and

  Rosie O’Donnell and

  Whoopi Goldberg and

  G

  gastrectomy, vertical sleeve

  gastric bypass surgery

  gay issues. See Homosexuality

  Geddie, Bill

  Andrew Smith and

  beginning of The View and

  departure of

  Donald Tr
ump and

  Elisabeth Hasselbeck and

  interviewing for cohost positions and

  Jenny McCarthy and

  Meredith Viera and

  relationship with Barbara Walters

  Rosie O’Donnell and

  Sherri Shepherd and

  Star Jones and

  in studio audience

  on weight loss

  Gentile, Mark

  on chemistry in beginning

  departure of

  hiring of

  Rosie O’Donnell and

  studio and

  ghrelin

  Gifford, Kathie Lee

  Gilbert, Sara

  Girl Talk

  Gold, Judy

  Goldberg, Whoopi

  after second departure of Rosie O’Donnell

  Barack Obama and

  Barbara Walters and

  Donald Trump and

  as guest co-host

  hiring of

  Jenny McCarthy and

  personal history of

  reunion show and

  Rosie O’Donnell and

  Sherri Shepherd and

  Goldston, James

  Gonzalez, October

  Good Morning America

  Goodman, Dana

  Gore, Al

  Graham, Virginia

  Grease

  grievances

  Griffin, Kathy

  Guber, Jackie

  Guillen, Stephanie

  Guiney, Bob

  gun control

  H

  Hackner, Lisa

  Barbara Walters and

  Ben Sherwood and

  Elisabeth Hasselbeck and

  Mark Gentile and

  Rosie O’Donnell, Whoopi Goldberg and

  Haines, Sara

  haircuts

  Handler, Chelsea

  Harden, Marcia Gay

  Hasselbeck, Elisabeth

  addition of to The View

  Barack Obama and

  departure of

  disagreement with Barbara Walters and

  Donald Trump and

  John McCain and

  loss of viewers after departure of

  Michelle Obama and

  reunion show and

  Rosie O’Donnell and

  Hasselbeck, Tim

 

‹ Prev