Norah O'Donnell on Industry Upheaval, Sexism in Media, and Her Future
As the CBS Evening News anchor signs off, she reflects on her time in the famed anchor seat.
www.elle.comNorah O’Donnell rose to leadership through a steady ascent in national broadcast journalism, marked by hard-edged reporting, high-profile interviews, and key network leadership roles. She built her reputation at NBC News, covering the Pentagon, Congress, and the White House, and reporting from the Pentagon on 9/11, which helped establish her as a trusted anchor and correspondent.[1][5]
From NBC, she moved to CBS News, where she became the substitute anchor for Face the Nation, chief White House correspondent, and ultimately the anchor and managing editor of the CBS Evening News, with additional responsibilities as a 60 Minutes contributor. Her leadership at CBS is described as shaping the program around rigorous, fact-driven reporting and clear communication of complex issues.[3][9]
Key milestones in her leadership journey include:
Illustration of her leadership impact:
If you’d like, I can pull a concise timeline of her career milestones with citations, or summarize key interviews that illustrate her leadership style and decision-making in the field.[9][3]
As the CBS Evening News anchor signs off, she reflects on her time in the famed anchor seat.
www.elle.comPrior to joining CBS News, O’Donnell worked for more than a decade at NBC News, where she covered the Pentagon, Congress and the White House. At NBC, she reported from the Pentagon on Sept. 11, 2001, and received a second Sigma Delta Chi Award for Breaking News Coverage for a Dateline NBC story titled “D.C. in Crisis.” In the months following the attacks, she traveled extensively with then-secretary of defense Donald Rumsfeld, including on his first trip to Afghanistan following the terrorist...
www.paramountpressexpress.comNorah O'Donnell is CBS News' senior correspondent and a 60 Minutes contributing correspondent. O'Donnell is also the host of CBS News 24/7's "Person to Person," where she brings interviews that go beyond the headlines through thoughtful conversation. She is a multiple Emmy Award-winning journalist with nearly three decades of experience covering the biggest stories in the world and conducting impactful, news-making interviews.
www.cbsnews.comNorah O’Donnell i
www.womenshistory.orgPrior to joining CBS News, O’Donnell worked for more than a decade at NBC News, where she covered the Pentagon, Congress, and the White House. At NBC, she reported from the Pentagon on Sept. 11, 2001, and received a second Sigma Delta Chi Award for Breaking News Coverage for a Dateline NBC story titled “D.C. In Crisis.” In the months following the attacks, she traveled extensively with then-Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld, including on his first trip to Afghanistan following the terrorist...
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