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Marciarose Shestack, First Woman Anchor in Major-Market Prime-Time US TV, Visits
Adham Center as Consultant
MAY 17, 2000 She is a role model for all the women
at the Adham Center who want to work in broadcasting. That was Marwa Ragaa's
reaction to the veteran TV journalist Marciarose Shestack, this year's Adham Center
visiting consultant and the first American woman to anchor a major-market prime-time
TV news show. Marwa is one of the Adham Center's MA candidates in TV journalism
who attended the studio workshop Marciarose conducted, Anchoring and Interviewing
Techniques. First-year Adham Center graduate student Mahitab Ezz El Din said
of this session, the way Marciarose shared her past experiences with us during
the workshop showed her generosity and her dedication to helping a new generation
of journalists.
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Marciarose also drew upon her personal experiences when she
gave a lecture, titled American Women in TV Journalism: Past, Present and Future
in Oriental Hall that was co-sponsored by AUC's Gender and Women's Studies Advisory
Group. She provided a sense of the difficulties women faced in overcoming the
prevailing opinion, as recent as three decades ago, that women lack the authority
and credibility to anchor TV news. She alluded to her own experiences as the first
American woman to anchor a prime-time TV news show in a major market in the early
seventies. Marciarose spoke with the detachment of a veteran TV journalist who
went on to produce award-winning documentaries the elite public broadcasting network
PBS, and as a daily columnist commenting on the media for The Philadelphia Inquirer.
But for the Adham Centers second-year graduate students, the
high point was their own graduation project presentation session, where Marciarose
headed a professional panel that critiqued the MA candidates work. Dana Zureikat
said she was honored to have someone who has gone so far in the business comment
on my work. Classmate Yasmine Attia agreed. It was a great experience to be
critiqued by a celebrity like Marciarose. Whatever she said, we took it for granted
that was the way reports should be done. Effat Kamel, who served as executive
producer for this year's graduating class, noted: You didnt feel offended by
criticism but were happy to have someone like Marciarose helping you do a better
job.
Marciarose was also videotape interviewed by Adham Center alumni
Nihal Saad for Channel 2 and Nile TVs prestigious Good Morning Egypt show.
Nihal is an old fan of Marciaroses; she had Marciarose on her show four and a
half years ago when Marciarose was last in Cairo as a visiting consultant. Nihal
says: Marciarose is brilliant and beautiful. I hope I can mature as she hasshes
a poised professional in all circumstances.
Ibrahim Saleh, Adham Center class of 2000, also interviewed
Marciarose for his show on ERTUs satellite Family Channel. For convenience Ibrahim
used the Adham Center studio, and his classmates helped out behind the cameras
and the mixers. Ibrahim has conducted all the VIP interviews over the past year
for the AUC TV Video Magazine, which showcases the graduate students weekly field
report assignments; his interviews have included such VIPs as Gulf DTH/Showtime
CEO Peter Einstein and Egypts Minister for Environment Nadia Makram Ebeid. So
this interview with Marciarose was a moment of emotion for Ibrahim; it was the
last interview that he would do from the Adham Center.
Marciarose told Ibrhaim she was struck by the high percentage
of women working in Egyptian television in general and in news in particular,
a much higher ratio than in America, where the struggle for qualified women to
have their rightful place in the TV news studio as anchors was a hard one.
In her talk at Oriental Hall on this issue Marciarose noted
the progress women have made. Her pioneering role as the first American woman
anchor is now a model for almost all of more than 2,000 local stations broadcasting
in the 500 markets in America: local prime time news shows often feature male
and female co-anchors.
But the downside, according to Marciarose, is that mature women,
however knowledgeable, professional and presentable, will not be selected for
that slot when competing with younger, less knowledgeable women. This is not the
case with men, where the public can appreciate the mature, greying male anchor
like Tom Brokaw. Station managers and network executives justify this prejudice
by recourse to audience research which points to nearly all male viewers and even
most female viewers preferring the younger-looking woman to the older woman.
Dr. Cynthia Nelson, Dean of the School of Humanities and Social
Sciences, introduced Marciarose at the Oriental Hall lecture in her own capacity
as head of the AUC Gender and Womens Studies Advisory Group, which co-sponsored
the talk. She said the lecture was exciting and provided the context to understand
the struggle of American women to participate in the field of television journalism.
She [Marciarose] is a lovely lady.
For Marciarose it was wonderful seeing the enthusiasm and determination
of the Adham Center students to become professional TV journalists. "It was exciting
for me to critique their work and to see how good it was," she said. "I had a
terrific time, and I look forward to returning."
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Marciarose, left, with Bill
and Hillary Clinton
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