Work on this report was well underway when the pandemic effectively brought the entertainment industry to a halt in mid-March. We initially moved it and our annual Power of Women New York luncheon to July, but that date also proved problematic given the pandemic’s severe toll on the region.
Once we pivoted to a virtual Power of Women event, we surveyed the women in this report — selected based on their impact on the entertainment industry in the past year — for their COVID-19 heroes and experiences, lessons learned so far and the outlook ahead.
Read more about how the women on this list navigated the pandemic here.
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Lisa Alter
Partner, Alter, Kendrick, & Baron
Alter handled more than $800 million in music-publishing deals in the past year, but she’s also proud that three of her firm’s four partners are women. “Other than one partner who’s a man, our entire legal team is women. Our paralegal teams are women. It just worked out that way.” Alter couldn’t have envisioned that when she reluctantly entered what was then a male-dominated field with few female mentors. “We’re training lawyers who themselves will be role models for men and women going forward in this space, and that’s really exciting.”
COVID HEROES: Along with music industry organizations and healthcare workers that have stepped up during the pandemic, Alter salutes co-workers “who have been dealing with various life events through this whole thing, and managed to hold it together for their families, for their clients, for the artists we work for. A lot of people in very small ways are making a difference in keeping people’s lives going and keeping the economy going.”
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Michele Anthony
EVP, Executive Management Board Member, Universal Music Group
UMG has flourished in the past year, thanks to massive hits from artists including Ariana Grande, Post Malone and five-time 2020 Grammy-winner Billie Eilish. Anthony also served as executive producer for the One World: Together at Home COVID-19 benefit in partnership with Global Citizen and the World Health Organization. Under Lady Gaga’s creative direction, the eight-hour special, which aired in April, featured 100 performances across 77 broadcast and digital platforms, drawing a historic 260 million viewers and raising $128 million for healthcare workers. “There was no template for something like this, nothing cookie-cutter for us to use,” says Anthony. “We had to rethink and imagine how to create, produce and distribute this event from the top-down and the bottom-up.”
COVID HEROES: Amina Mohammed, the deputy secretary-general of the United Nations, who worked with Lady Gaga, the exec’s other COVID hero, to craft many of the themes for One World: Together at Home.
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Susie Banikarim
EVP and Global Head of Newsgathering, Vice News
Tapped in December for the newly created role, Banikarim oversees Vice’s newsgathering in bureaus across New York; Washington, D.C.; London; and Los Angeles. She also leads digital and social-media divisions for news operations. “It is an incredible time to be a woman in media, because we have seen — and continue to see — a fundamental shift in who gets to tell and shape our stories,” she says. Banikarim has worked in digital and TV news, beginning her career at ABC News before a stint on Katie Couric’s syndicated talk show and at the Daily Beast, most recently serving as editorial director and EVP of
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Sarah Barnett
President, AMC Networks Entertainment Group
Barnett was promoted to full oversight of the networks under the AMC umbrella (including BBC America, AMC, SundanceTV) in August, a month before its big Emmy wins for “Killing Eve” (BBC America) and “State of the Union” (SundanceTV); all told, the networks received 25 nominations. Barnett’s elevation came nine months after she was put in charge of programming for the entertainment cable channels. “You have to develop an ability to pre-digest all the changes and be fluid and flexible — while holding tight to the things that should be unchanging,” she says. “The old truisms of yesterday no longer last.”
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Bonnie Bernstein
Partner, ICM Partners
A longtime New York-based ICM partner, Bernstein represents Emmy nominees and winners such as Bradley Whitford, Anthony Carrigan, Giancarlo Esposito, Ty Burrell, Jesse Tyler Ferguson and Edie Falco. She also reps “Frozen 2” and “Uncut Gems” talent Idina Menzel, Michelle Monaghan, Kelli O’Hara and Holly Hunter. “I decided to make 2020 the year of yes,” she told Variety pre-pandemic lockdown. “Yes to fully absorbing new experiences, yes to embracing new challenges, yes to pushing the boundaries, and yes to finding any excuse to be with my girlfriends who constantly inspire and support me.”
COVID HERO: “It feels impossible to pick only one hero, but as all my friends know, I live for Gov. [Andrew] Cuomo’s daily press conferences. We have never needed clear leadership more and Gov. Cuomo is a living embodiment and reminder of what that looks like. His clear-eyed presentation of facts, unabashed deference to science, willingness to deftly speak truth to power, all laced with his personal musings and compassion, bring much needed comfort to me every day.”
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Sara Bernstein
EVP, Imagine Documentaries
When Bernstein joined Imagine Entertainment’s fledgling documentary arm in September 2018, she and topper Justin Wilkes worked out of a coffee shop. They soon moved into an office and ramped up projects, including Imagine co-founder Ron Howard’s “Rebuilding Paradise,” which debuted at Sundance. Under lockdown, staffers have been working remotely on more than a dozen projects, including one on World Central Kitchen humanitarian Jose Andres, Julia Childs, as well as Rory Kennedy’s feature about the Boeing 737 Max disasters. “I’m incredibly proud of everything we’ve been able to launch at Imagine Docs,” says Bernstein, who relishes the opportunity to have a more hands-on role as a producer after nearly 20 years at HBO. “It’s liberating and really exhilarating.”
COVID HEROES: “As a NYC person and daughter of a doctor, frontline responders and healthcare workers are definitely my heroes, but to highlight an organization, it would definitely be Jose Andres and World Central Kitchen. They really do want to eradicate hunger as best they can.”
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Margaret Bodde
Executive Director, The Film Foundation
Bodde has helped preserve and restore more than 850 films for Martin Scorsese’s Film Foundation, spearheaded a widely taught film history and appreciation curriculum and the World Cinema Project, which preserves neglected films from around the globe. She also produces Scorsese’s documentaries, including last year’s “Rolling Thunder Revue.” “I’ve really been able to help Marty shape what we could accomplish,” Bodde says. “I could help to grow something that was really an incredibly important idea into an organization that has real programs in preservation, restoration, exhibition and in education.”
COVID HEROES: “In my community of Montclair, New Jersey, Toni’s Kitchen is now preparing daily meals for students from food-insecure homes in addition to providing hot meals and groceries to those in need. In 2019, a record year, Toni’s Kitchen averaged 4,365 meals a week; last month was over 16,000. Local food pantries like Toni’s Kitchen have been heroic during this crisis, when taking care of each other has never been more important.”
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Rose Byrne
Actor
Days before surgical masks and ventilators became part of everyday conversation in New York, Byrne concluded an eight week run of Euripides’ “Medea” at the Brooklyn Academy of Music, starring as the vengeful wife opposite her real-life partner Bobby Cannavale in the modern adaptation of the Greek tragedy. “It was such an interesting thing to bring compassion to a character that is universally demonized,” says Byrne, who also portrayed Gloria Steinem in “Mrs. America,” an FX series about the battle to ratify the Equal Rights Amendment in the 1970s. “What they were talking about then — equal rights, women’s rights, reproductive rights, equal pay — are all issues being discussed now, which is surreal.”
COVID HERO: Helen O’Keefe, a nurse in the labor and delivery ward at New York City’s Mount Sinai Hospital and childbirth educator with Fledgling Families, an organization that helps families prepare for their newborns. “She and her team are working with some of the most vulnerable people affected — pregnant women and their newborn children. With new restrictions in place and our knowledge constantly evolving, their roles are even more crucial as they are not just asked to be doctors, but surrogate family and friends to these women.”
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Victoria Cook
Partner, Frankfurt Kurnit
Cook represented 14 clients at Sundance this year, including Liz Garbus, Anne Carey and Ryan White, who followed up “Ask Dr. Ruth” with “Assassins.” She helps documentary clients make the leap to feature directing, as Garbus did with “Lost Girls,” a true-crime adaptation streaming on Netflix. Cook also represents filmmakers Jim Jarmusch and Todd Solondz, along with Robert Eggers, director and co-writer of “The Lighthouse.” After some 20 years as an entertainment lawyer, Cook welcomes the opportunity “to learn new things all the time.”
COVID HERO: Blima Marcus, a nurse practitioner at Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center who does house calls on her days off and has raised thousands of dollars through the Orthodox Jewish Nurses Assn. to purchase PPE. “She is my personal hero who really deserves every accolade, medal, and acknowledgement in the world.”
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Findley Davidson
VP, head of New York casting, WB TV
Davidson landed her own starring role in 2019 when she took over for retiring mentor Meg Simon. She has been integral in the casting of “Prodigal Son” (Fox) and overall casting for Apple TV Plus’ limited series “Lisey’s Story” (Julianne Moore, Clive Owens). Now set to teach at the Juilliard School, Davidson says being New York-based gives her a wealth of access to up-and-comers: “Theater is the lingua franca of the New York acting community, and being able to foster and nurture those relationships is where I have the greatest impact.”
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Marian Dicus
Co-Head of Music & VP, Global Head of Artist & Label Services, Spotify
Named co-head of music along with Jeremy Erlich in September, Dicus has leveraged her strong relationships within the artist community to deepen fan engagement and help lead the company to more than 130 million paid subscribers and 285 million users. She has also led marketing campaigns for artists including Billie Eilish and Taylor Swift. “Our success means the music industry’s success,” Dicus says of her team, half of whom identify as female. “Women and people of color must be more fairly represented across our industry, and while we’re making some progress there is a lot more work still to be done.”
COVID HEROES: Working through the pandemic, Dicus has been “moved by how the entire music industry has come together to support artists and make sure the music doesn’t stop.” She cites the COVID-19 Music Relief project, backed by industry partners, and its Artist Fundraising Pick, which enables musicians to choose whom to donate money to, as two such initiatives. “It’s an incredibly difficult time for so many — and there are so many worthy causes to support at this time.”
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Ariel Dumas
Head Writer, “The Late Show With Stephen Colbert”
In November, Dumas, who has worked with Colbert since his Comedy Central days, moved up to head writer, a post she shares with Jay Katsir. Her sense of humor is her superpower. When the COVID-19 pandemic sent everyone home, Dumas and Co. figured out how to put the CBS show together anyway. “Turns out it’s a combination of teamwork, good WiFi, and several reheated pasta meals throughout the day.” Asked what other challenges she’s looking forward to, shesays, “The election. Are we still having one? God, I hope so.”
COVID HERO: Tanisha Brunson-Malone, who works in the morgue at Hackensack U. Medical Center, and with her own money purchases flowers to honor the bodies that lie in the refrigerated trailers outside her hospital before transport to funeral homes. “It’s an act of unfathomable grace: A private gesture that brings dignity and humanity to those who have been cast as a statistic.”
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Lori Feldman
Chief Marketing Officer, Paradigm Talent Agency
After a nearly 25-year tenure at Warner Music, Feldman joined Paradigm in September as the agency’s first CMO. She’s responsible for overseeing marketing and branding initiatives across all business units at a company with a roster that includes Henry Golding, Shawn Mendes, Billie Eilish, Stephen King and Janelle Monáe. “Looking ahead, I see the opportunity for extraordinary innovation,” says Feldman, who was promoted to managing partner after five months and is optimistic despite pandemic business challenges. “My business of live events and TV and film production was hit hard by COVID-19, but I am witnessing innovation all around me,” she says. “There is a pivot in mindset and strategy, and a deep exploration of how to create opportunity for our clients and our company in this new world order.”
COVID HERO: Feldman’s friend Janet Balis at EY has partnered with restaurants in Harlem to provide meals to doctors, nurses and other healthcare workers on the frontlines. The initiative is called #DoubleGood, “which in this case meant sponsoring a meal for an entire floor at a hospital of your choice, and allowing these Harlem eateries to keep their staff on the payroll and working hard, feeding healthcare workers.” #DoubleGood is also feeding first responders, including firemen and police officers.
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Jennifer Flanz
Executive Producer, Showrunner, “The Daily Show With Trevor Noah”
As showrunner, Flanz faces the same challenges as her male counterparts. “ ‘The Daily Show’ — or any topical late-night show — is complicated by the news cycle; the moment you think ‘Ah! We’re in such good shape!’ someone from the administration is fired and you need to rethink the entire show,” she says, noting that other challenges stem from societal norms or self-doubt. “Whenever I’m confident in my abilities or the decisions that I’m making, I find people will listen.”
COVID HERO: “My Dad! He manages two hospitals out in Queens — one of the boroughs that was hit the hardest by the pandemic. He’s been in the trenches with the staff since the beginning of March. He works seven days a week. And even though I insist he looks tired, he tells me he’s not. My Dad and all of the people he works with and the entire healthcare system are heroes of mine for giving so selflessly during this time. And hopefully sometime before 2025 I’ll be able to get closer than six feet away to give him a big old thank you hug.”
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Greta Gerwig
Actor-Screenwriter-Director
Gerwig’s adaptation of Louisa May Alcott’s “Little Women” opened on Christmas Day and went on to receive six Oscar noms, including one for best picture and one for Gerwig’s adapted screenplay, and gross more than $100 million at the domestic box office. Gerwig, previously nominated for “Lady Bird,” watched ticket sales for her first wide release closely. “I guess some people just check out, and they say, ‘It’ll do what it does, and I’ll see later,’” Gerwig told Variety in February. “But I don’t know. That’s not my way. It also dictates whether or not you get another at-bat. And that’s the whole thing — another at-bat.”
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Mónica Gil
CMO, EVP of NBCUniversal Telemundo Enterprises
Aside from overseeing original programming launches for Telemundo, Gil has led the expansion of the company’s brand and corporate social responsibility programs, including “Unstoppable Women,” which, on air, highlights the contributions of women who have impacted their communities while internally, includes a training program that helps place female staffers in male-dominated positions. Gil joined Telemundo in 2017 as the country was redefining what Spanish-language TV was and the TV industry was facing the challenges of fragmentation: “The challenge was to create original programming that delivered across all platforms and on all devices,” says Gil.
COVID HEROES: “So many. Of course our first responders, teachers, grocery workers, and I find myself thinking a lot about our farmworkers, the unsung heroes that day in and day out nourish us through their work.”
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Camille Hackney
Chief Partnerships Officer, Atlantic Records / Head of Global Brand Partnerships Counsel, WMG
A brand partnership juggernaut, Hackney has brokered deals for hundreds of the Warner Music Group label’s artists such as Bruno Mars and Lizzo with companies including Coca-Cola and Samsung. She has paired Janelle Monáe with Belvedere for its “A Beautiful Future” endorsement; Missy Elliott with Pepsi Zero Sugar for a Super Bowl spot; and Lizzo and Coldplay for a Dolby Atmos advertisement. Even with ad spending in flux during the ongoing pandemic, Hackney says, “I am super bullish on brand partnerships, and feel that artists will lean in even more with like-minded brand partners post-COVID.”
COVID HEROES: Planned Parenthood Federation of America, “already in for a vicious battle this election year to preserve women’s reproductive health rights and now access is in even greater jeopardy.” Plus: “My kid’s teachers, and all the dedicated educators around the globe. In addition to educating them, they are dispensing a huge dose of normalcy and certitude at a time when the world feels upside down. I am truly grateful for the immeasurable amount of emotional care and comfort that they have provided.”
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Katori Hall
Playwright, TV Showrunner
Not only did Hall write the book for the Broadway musical “Tina: The Tina Turner Musical,” but she also adapted her play “Pussy Valley” into the Starz series “P-Valley” and opened Off Broadway play “The Hot Wing King” on March 1. “I’m a storyteller,” says Hall, who believes it’s her responsibility as a woman of color to create relatable, multi-layered, stereotype-defying characters that help give voice to people from marginalized communities. “The playwright is God, so there’s this feeling of complete, total control in theater vs. TV, where even though you may be called the showrunner, you are not God.” Calling herself a gregarious writer, Hall enjoys the collaborative nature of TV work.
COVID HEROES: The Bret Adams & Paul Reisch Foundation, which gave her and scores of other playwrights COVID-19 response grants. “Theater unfortunately has been the hugest hit in terms of the entertainment industry because we are the industry that is based on gathering in a small space, shoulder to shoulder, with people you don’t know in order to witness a story. And I have no idea when and how we’re going to be able to feel safe in that very sacred place of theater, so I was particularly grateful that this particular organization stepped up to take care of people who create that very special experience in theater.”
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Tamron Hall
Syndicated Show Host
The former “Today” show co-host has rebounded nicely since she exited NBC, launching her own syndicated show in September and co-hosting “The Oscars Red Carpet Show” in February. Hall never forgets the trailblazers that preceded her. “I often name Iola Johnson, who was the first African-American woman who anchored in Dallas-Fort Worth. I saw her on the television and my father said, ‘You know, you can do that, too,’” Hall recalls. “Seeing multiple women — including Carole Simpson on the national news — on the air gave me more of a confidence boost than I realized.”
COVID HERO: Latresa Rice, a Michigan newlywed who went on Hall’s show while grieving her husband’s death from COVID-19 to urge others to stay at home.
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Women of the Harvey Weinstein Trial
Witnesses Dawn Dunning, Miriam Haley, Jessica Mann, Tarale Wulff, Lauren Young, Annabella Sciorra; prosecutors Joan Illuzzi and Meghan Hast
During her closing arguments of what would become the most monumental verdict in Hollywood history, Manhattan ADA Illuzzi described Harvey Weinstein as “the master of his universe” who treated the women he abused as “ants that he could step on.”
Less than a month after Illuzzi faced the jury during that pivotal moment, Weinstein — once arguably the most powerful producer in the business — was sentenced to 23 years, convicted on the charges of sexual assault and rape. And six of those women — the ants — made it possible for Weinstein to be held accountable.
Dunning, Haley, Mann, Wulff, Young and Sciorra testified in the two-month-long trial, risk- ing their anonymity and reputation in front of flashing cameras, all in the name of justice.
“In my wave of emotions, I’ve been thinking, one of the reasons people hesitate to come forward is because you’ll be a poster child,” Wulff says of the level of media attention that followed the trial. The New York-based model testified she was raped by Weinstein in 2005. “I had a moment after the sentencing where I felt really overwhelmed and wanted to go back to normal, but then, I felt like I want to do something with it. The whole reason I did this is to help other women, and in turn, it has helped me.”
Haley, a former “Project Runway” assistant, says the feedback has been the greatest reward. “Women from all over the place have been saying thank you, and have shown their support and appreciation. Every time I get a message like that, I feel like this is good and it matters to someone.”
Currently in an upstate New York prison, Weinstein is awaiting trial in Los Angeles where he faces an additional maximum sentencing of 32 years.
Dunning, a mother of two, who says she was propositioned for a threesome with Weinstein under the false promise of obtaining movie roles, believes the women who spoke up against Weinstein changed history.
“This was the first trial of its kind,” Dunning says. “I hope that there is a bigger social change in behavior, and I hope people are not afraid to report abuse and injustice.”
— Elizabeth Wagmeister
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Aishah Hasnie
Correspondent, Fox News
Aishah Hasnie, a Fox News correspondent based in New York, says her background as a Muslim allowed her to collaborate with fellow correspondent Lauren Green on a report about how Muslims dealt with fasting for Ramadan last month amid the pandemic and the hardship of not being able to gather for prayer services.
“That came directly from relatives and friends asking me whether it was safe to fast,” Hasnie says. “We have to pay attention to all of the families who are hurting.”
She has also made a point of getting out of her midtown apartment to do live shots outside even if more of her reporting is being done by videoconference calls these days.
“That has been one of the biggest losses — that human interaction,” Hasnie says. “Interviewing someone face-to-face sometimes leads to a conversation going in a much deeper direction. It’s been hard to lose that.”
For more from Hasnie and other reporters covering the coronavirus pandemic, click here.
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Katie Hockmeyer
EVP, Late Night Programming,NBC Entertainment
The first woman to oversee NBC’s late-night programming, Hockmeyer has played the long game, having been with Jimmy Fallon’s production team early on. “We were the little engine that could, that then transformed into a rocket ship,” Hockmeyer says of “The Tonight Show” host’s late night trajectory. Hockmeyer has been energized by the challenges of broadcasting late-night shows during a pandemic. “It has been such an exciting time to be on the frontline of creating new content when the whole world was at home and ready to watch.”
COVID HERO: Jimmy Fallon, who has “blazed the trail for creative innovation by reimagining the talk-show format with his at-home episodes.”
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Scarlett Johansson
Actor
The double Oscar nominee says the same thing drew her to both “Marriage Story” and “Jojo Rabbit”: desire to work with each film’s writer-director, Noah Baumbach and Taika Waititi, respectively. With Baumbach, she developed the stamina required to work intensely — likening it to training for a marathon — and that prepared her to jump right into Waititi’s film. Up next: “Black Widow,” originally poised for an April launch and now rescheduled for November. While Johanssonn hopes to try her hand at directing one day, right now she’s focused on her production company, These Pictures. “I love producing and working with other artists and writers and actors and directors to fully realize their vision.”
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Rashida Jones
Senior VP, NBC News and MSNBC
Rashida Jones, senior VP, NBC News and MSNBC, has continued to work at 30 Rock headquarters during the pandemic — one of a handful of staffers there to make sure the news programs air without a hitch. When COVID-19 shut down much of the country, her team immediately pivoted: Out went enterprise stories pegged to the election as COVID took center stage. “Our priorities shifted really from ‘let’s figure out how we can creatively get in front of new big ideas’ to ‘what is the most effective way to cover the one story that everyone cares about while also thinking ahead to at some point we will get beyond this story,’ ” Jones says.
From her perch inside 30 Rock, Jones has been charting the duration. “I’m looking through the glass of my office at a stack of New York Times papers that’s — let’s call it 2½-feet tall — abandoned New York Times newspapers because no one’s been here to read them,” she says. “It’s my daily reminder how long this has been going on and how far we’ve come.
“One day, these desks, these halls, will all be filled, but it’s just so surreal and remarkable how things turned on a dime.”
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Gayle King
Host, Journalist
Gayle King is ready for change. After reporting countless acts of violence and hate towards people of color in the media the “CBS This Morning” co-host and long-time journalist wants to see a difference in the world.
“I’m just hoping it’s going to lead to some kind of substantial change and that something really meaningful will come out of all this pain,” King told Variety. “You can’t look at the George Floyd video and not feel that this is too much. Anybody with a beating heart can see that. But it feels different this time. I’ve had more white people reach out to me to say, ‘How are you doing?’ The answer is, not well.”
King’s next move? A “Justice For All” special on CBS News. The hour-long special will go deep into the civil unrest being felt throughout this country, and the protests and activism that has followed.
Read our full interview with Gayle King here.
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Michelle King
TV Producer
King is queen at Viacom properties thanks to her producing work (with husband Robert) on “The Good Fight” (CBS All Access, third season); “Evil” (CBS, second season); and “Your Honor” (Showtime, season one) — all solidly crafted, often darkly humorous and even political series with an edginess not seen on broadcast these days. But her real focus lately has been on the ramifications of productions shut down by COVID-19 restrictions. “Running a business of 200 employees means you have to think about the impact on people you work with day to day,” she says. “You have to prioritize their well-being.”
COVID HEROES: “My COVID heroes are the industry folks donating their efforts to TV Dinners, a charitable initiative that’s delivered thousands of meals to New York’s hardest hit hospitals, shelters, children’s homes, police precincts, and nursing homes,” King says. “The food is being prepared in a local commercial kitchen by the caterers who would otherwise be working on our sets and production professionals are working for free to coordinate logistics. Meanwhile, New York Teamsters are donating their time to deliver the meals, and the Actors Fund is managing the 100% tax deductible donations.”
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Samantha Kirby Yoh
Partner/Head of East Coast Music, WME
Aside from her work as one of four founders of She Is the Music — the organization that launches female writing camps, mentorship programs and a reference database for hiring women in all sectors of the music industry — the New York-based Brit has helped guide the careers of clients including St. Vincent, Florence + the Machine and Björk. But it’s her work with Spain’s pop-export Rosalía that Kirby Yoh singles out as a crowning achievement of the past 18 months. “She is staying true to who she is, including singing in Spanish, and moving from Barcelona clubs to the international Grammy stage,” where the young artist was nominated in the new artist category and took home the award for Latin rock, urban or alternative album.
COVID HEROES: WIN, a non-profit New York City organization for women in need, has been providing shelter for the most vulnerable during the pandemic. “The work the WIN staff is doing during this crisis is more essential than ever. They are providing clean, safe shelter, offering remote learning support for more than 2,700 children and stocking emergency food pantries for the 1,600 families who call WIN home every night.”
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Laura Linney
Actor
Emmy-nominated last year for “Ozark,” Linney returned to Broadway in “My Name Is Lucy Barton,” and reprised her role in Netflix’s money-laundering series for a third season. She credits growing up in New York and being part of the city’s theatrical community for giving her a strong foundation, and says she gets “itchy” when away from the theater for too long. “But you go where the work is,” Linney says. “And you go where the good people are, and you go where the good material is. When those things present themselves — whether it’s film, television, or theater — you say yes to the opportunity to work on good things with good people.”
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Jennifer Lopez
Actor, Musician
Last summer, her concert tour grossed $54.7 million, and she went on to receive a Golden Globe award and SAG nomination for her starring role in “Hustlers.” Lopez executive produced the femme-powered movie, which grossed $157 million globally. “I think the huge success of our little movie just shows that there is a voracious appetite out there for women-led productions and stories,” she says. In February, Lopez performed a 15-minute Super Bowl halftime set with her daughter and Shakira. “To stand up there with my daughter, and be able to say to all the little girls all over the world to always ‘Get Loud’ and use your voices against any and all injustices and to always be proud of all you are and where you’re from, was a moment I will never forget.”
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Jenifer Mallory
EVP and GM, Columbia Records
Mallory, who became Columbia’s first-ever female EVP-GM in 2018, oversaw the launch of Harry Styles’ chart-topping sophomore album “Fine Line” and helped break rising Spanish singer Rosalía in the States, conceptualizing her U.S. TV debut at the Grammys. Much of last year was devoted to new talent, developing artists including Lil Nas X as well as Lil Tjay and Polo G, while striking a balance with Columbia’s more established acts. “It’s important that we spend just as much time and resources on the songs that are immediate hits as we do on an artist that might take longer to develop, but will have lasting power,” says Mallory. “Labels are as valuable as their catalog.”
COVID HERO: Friend Matt Lenski, an artist who designed COVID-19 T-shirts to generate profits for Children’s Aid of N.Y. “A lot of kids will have such a rough summer this year without support from centers like these, and they need our help now more than ever,” she says. “By mitigating the physical and emotional stress of this pandemic we can reduce the likelihood of it having a lasting impact on their future.”
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Riva Marker
President, Nine Stories
After four years, the production company Marker formed with actor Jake Gyllenhaal is finding a happy medium between stage productions and film/TV adaptations, ranging from “Sea Wall/A Life,” which had a limited Broadway run, to the upcoming “Good Joe Bell” (screenplay by “Brokeback Mountain” Oscar winners Larry McMurtry and Diana Ossana), feature “The Devil All the Time” (produced with Netflix) and the upcoming “Sunday in the Park With George” revival coming to London with Gyllenhaal. “It’s about finding the boldest storytellers we can in all genres, and backing them and their stories to the utmost,” she says.
COVID HERO: Friend and entrepreneur Niki Russ Federman, co-owner of Russ & Daughters, who has worked mightily to save her business and as many employees as possible, raising money for furloughed staff. She and her cousin-business partner Josh Russ Tupper have “delivered meals to frontline workers, and their food has brought joy to anyone lucky enough to receive a box,” says Marker. “Everything Niki does is with heart and foresight.”
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Ann Mincieli
Engineer and Co-Founder, Jungle City Studios
Mincieli has engineered Alicia Keys’ six albums (including the two due this year) and co-founded Jungle City Studios in Chelsea’s High Line district with her. Together with Keys, she’s been a vocal advocate of inclusivity, diversity and righting gender inequality: They co-founded She Is the Music, the nonprofit created in 2018 with the goal of increasing the number of women working in the global music industry. Mincieli also serves on the New York board of trustees for the Grammys. (Keys has hosted the past two years.) “With Alicia, it’s never been about job titles; it’s about how we can collaborate,” says Mincieli. “And I think that’s critical today.”
COVID HEROES: She Is the Music joined with Amazon to donate $100,000 to MusiCares’ COVID fund, which disbursed $14 million in six weeks before it temporarily ran out of money.
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Anaïs Mitchell
Singer-Songwriter
Mitchell wrote “Why We Build the Wall” for the first draft of “Hadestown” unusually quickly in 2006. “It’s as if it wrote itself,” says Mitchell, who won the original score Tony for the musical last year and was also nominated for her book. “I was thinking a lot about climate change and the migration of people,” she says. The show, which had an Off Broadway run before transferring to the Great White Way in 2019, has spawned TikTok videos, dance and music covers. “At some level, the best thing art can do is inspire other art,” says Mitchell, who gave birth to her second child during the pandemic and plans to focus her musical energy on her new folk band Bonny Light Horseman and also work on a new solo record “…if possible.”
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Elisabeth Moss
Actor-Producer
The Emmy-winning star and producer of “The Handmaid’s Tale” toplined one of the last box-office hits before theaters shut down: Universal’s remake of “The Invisible Man,” which debuted in multiplexes on Feb. 28. She also stars in Neon’s “Shirley,” a fictional take on author Shirley Jackson’s life that began streaming on Hulu last week, and clearly loves what she does. “I find it incredibly fulfilling so it doesn’t seem like work to me,” says Moss, who received an Indie Spirit nom for her performance in “Her Smell.” “I also feel really lucky to be able to make a living at something I love. There are so many stories and never enough time to tell them all.”
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Vicky Nguyen
Correspondent, NBC News
Vicky Nguyen, investigative and consumer correspondent for NBC News, says early in the lockdown, she started to feel uncomfortable being on the street wearing a mask as an Asian American. She penned an op-ed for the “Today” website and on May 13 hosted a virtual town hall with other NBC News correspondents and prominent Asian American political leaders.
“This did hit close to home for me,” Nguyen says. “This was a new fear for me. It’s a good opportunity to remind everyone that there’s one enemy here, and it’s the virus. It’s not attributed to any race of people, and we should be aware and speak out about discrimination. At the end of the day, coronavirus doesn’t care what color your skin is.”
For more from Nguyen and other reporters covering the coronavirus pandemic, click here.
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Keke Palmer
Actress, Activist
Keke Palmer went viral when she implored a national guard officer to march with the Black Lives Matter supporters at a Los Angeles protest. “March beside us and show us that you’re here for us,” she told him.
“Sometimes, going against authority is the only remedy for change, especially when we have seen, too often, those authority figures step over the line,” Palmer wrote in a guest column for Variety. “So where do you draw the line? How do you know to draw the line? Is there a line?”
The breakout “Hustlers” star is ready for the revolution: “I truly believe that everything that has led us to this moment has prepared us for a revolution and a revelation: the dismantling and rebuilding of a system that is better, more equitable and representative of the people it claims to represent.”
Read her full column here.
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Desiree Perez
CEO, Roc Nation
After a decade-long reign as COO of the behemoth that is Roc Nation, Perez was promoted to CEO last December — a rare Latina chief executive officer of a U.S.-based entertainment company. But her proudest achievements are not listed on LinkedIn: Roc Nation’s commitment to philanthropy (“fairness and justice are woven into our fabric”) and diversity (“providing opportunity and career advancement for people of color and women — two grossly underserved communities, especially in management circles”).
COVID HERO: Sixers and Fanatics owner Michael Rubin, who has raised more than $50 million to help address the growing problem of food insecurities across the nation through his All in Challenge;
Perez also salutes Roc Nation’s philanthropic branch for “working even harder now with all of our clients to help those most in need.” -
Eva Pilgrim
Correspondent, ABC News
ABC News correspondent Eva Pilgrim risked her health to follow first responders in New York as the outbreak began to spread. The backdrop of her reporting — a desolate New York City — added context to how quickly life had changed in the nation’s largest city.
“Talking to them about the emotional toll and the stress of knowing that they were constantly coming into contact with [COVID-19] was a way to humanize what was happening,” Pilgrim says. “It was crazy to see the city of New York just empty. You never see that, even in the middle of the night. Actually being able to hear from [first responders] changes the way that other people can relate to the story.”
For more from Pilgrim and other reporters covering the coronavirus pandemic, click here.
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Stephanie Preiss
Executive Director, TV & Audio, the New York Times
Preiss’ job is developing television and audio content to attract smart, curious people and convert them to customers. “The company has given those of us working on film and TV and audio a lot of space to figure out what we think is the smart thing to do, build a case around it, and do it,” she says. From the FX/Hulu docu-series “The Weekly,” to the company’s upcoming first documentary film for Netflix that took nearly a decade to complete, Preiss has set a high bar for future projects. “It’s an amazing privilege,” she says of her work for the Times.
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Emma Quigley
Founder, Shakermaker
As founder of Pepsi’s in-house music agency Shakermaker, Quigley has brokered ongoing partnerships and worked across numerous brand campaigns as well as the Super Bowl Halftime Show, which Pepsi has sponsored since 2013. This year, Quigley led the sponsorship for the joint performance between Jennifer Lopez and Shakira that pulled in an estimated 102 million viewers, and landed Lil Nas X, Missy Elliott and MC Hammer in commercials for Doritos Cool Ranch, Pepsi Zero Sugar and Cheetos Popcorn. “Each [had] a narrative that authentically reflected the individual artist’s personality and all completely unique to each brand,” says Quigley, who partnered with Global Citizen on One World: Together at Home benefit.
COVID HEROES: Hugh Evans, Lady Gaga and the Global Citizen team for their work on the massive One World: Together at Home benefit. “It was a monumental undertaking for everyone involved, raising $128 million towards fighting COVID-19 and helping those who have been impacted the most,” says Quigley.
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Debra Rathwell
EVP, Global Touring and Talent, AEG Presents
Rathwell joined AEG’s global touring and talent department in 2018 and assumed her current role in December. In 2019, AEG posted substantial revenue for Carrie Underwood’s “Cry Pretty” tour, which raked in more than $17.1 million on its North American leg, and arranged Elton John’s three-year “Farewell Yellow Brick Road” tour, including the 40-date sold-out stint in Australia and New Zealand that wrapped in March amid brush fires and the COVID-19 pandemic. With the concert industry on pause, it’s pretty overwhelming “to get up every day knowing that there is no easy or quick fix,” Rathwell says. “Patience and keeping your sea legs is what is required right now.”
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Shari Redstone
Chair of the board, ViacomCBS
Redstone won her battle to reunite Viacom and CBS last year, becoming the only woman to run an entertainment conglomerate of that size, and presided over the first shareholder meeting of the reunited company last month. But the drama isn’t over: ViacomCBS shareholders recently filed a class-action suit against Redstone, accusing her of using “persistent influence” to push the merger through. “We totally believe the stock is dramatically undervalued,” Redstone said during the Q&A session of the virtual shareholder meeting on May 18. “The market is looking for us to prove that we can execute on our strategy. I’m confident we will do so more quickly than anyone expects.”
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Julia Reichert
Documentarian
More than four decades after she received her first Oscar nomination, Reichert won her first little gold man for co-directing “American Factory,” a feature doc about a General Motors plant taken over by a Chinese glass manufacturing company. Netflix acquired the film after its Sundance debut, and it was the inaugural title from Barack and Michelle Obama’s Higher Ground shingle. Her next film — “9to5: The Story of a Movement” — was set to premiere at SXSW before the fest was canceled due to COVID-19. “Now we’re seeing a real resurgence of feminist militancy, you could say, and feminist women being able to really speak their truth and speak what’s happened to them,” Reichert, whose first nominated film was for “Union Maids” in 1978 and worked on her latest doc for eight years, recently told Variety. “Boy, as an old woman, I think this is frigging great.”
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Mackenzie Roussos
Talent and Literary Agent, UTA
Roussos reps some of the industry’s top comedic television creators, writers, directors and performers, including Awkwafina (“Awkwafina Is Nora From Queens”); “SNL’s” Michael Che and its first Chinese-American cast member, Bowen Yang; and Vanessa Bayer (“Big Deal”). She helped assemble the Hulu series “Shrill” starring her clients Aidy Bryant and Lolly Adefope that is in its second season. “I am attracted to the resourcefulness and punk rock attitudes of comedians; they tend to write, produce, direct and act in their own creations,” says Roussos. “They are not fazed by gatekeepers and I certainly can appreciate that.”
COVID HEROES: “My tireless mother-in-law, who has stepped in to help us with our three kids under the age of 4, as well as the heroic organization God’s Love We Deliver, which continues to supply nutritious meals to New Yorkers who are too sick to shop or cook for themselves.”
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Suzanne Scott
CEO, Fox News Media
Scott oversees a news organization that reaches 200 million people each month across all platforms. She oversaw the launch of streaming platform Fox Nation in 2018 and, a year later, a major brand refresh for Fox Business Network. Scott also has unveiled mentoring and professional development programs. The network’s first female CEO, she takes pride in Fox’s executive leadership team that consists predominantly of women while the network’s linear channel has more women in prominent on-air roles than any other cable news network. “I’m proud to look around the conference room table of my senior staff and see more women at the table than ever,” she says.
COVID HERO: Fox News donated more than $1 million to Feeding America, an organization led by CEO Claire Babineaux-Fontenot, “one person who I met during the pandemic that stands out as a hero among heroes, not just to me, but to many who have been helped by her organization,” Scott says. Ordinarily, the organization feeds more than 46 million people across the country, but during the pandemic it has expanded its focus “to encompass the food industry — engineering a team of volunteers across the country to feed those in need and providing meals for first responders while helping displaced restaurant workers and distressed farmers.”
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Samantha Selolwane
SVP of Urban Promotion, RCA Records
Transforming a viral sensation into a mainstream success is just another day at the office for Selolwane. “Last May, we introduced Doja Cat to radio,” she recalls. What a difference a year — and 2 billion streams — can make. “She’s become the breakout star of the year,” adds Selolwane, who also oversaw campaigns for other female artists (Alicia Keys, H.E.R., Grammy-winner Koffee) ruling urban radio. “It’s been so rewarding getting to work and help these ladies rise and stay at the top of the charts.” She and her team also led the charge on Chris Brown and Drake’s “No Guidance” (which dethroned labelmate Miguel’s “Adorn”) and kept Khalid popping at radio.
COVID HERO: Jamila Lyn, founder of Bottom Up Thinking, and director of specialized programming at Benedict College, for springing into action and tapping into her network to help students at the historically black institution in South Carolina with aid, resources and funds during the state-wide shutdown due to the pandemic.
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Sarah Snook
Actor
Of all the conniving members of the ridiculously wealthy Roy family on HBO’s “Succession,” we’re most on board with Shiv. That’s thanks to the actor’s portrayal of the sole female sibling, who possesses the most humanity among the grasping, love-starved bunch. Snook’s career breakthrough in the role led to a recent move to New York from her native Australia, and in addition to tackling a third season of the Emmy-winning drama, she hopes to exhibit her Annie Leibovitz-inspired photography in 2020. “Impact is about what you can do long-term in the industry, and the best way to do that is by fostering younger
talent,” she says.COVID HERO: Ads-Up Refugee Network, which has been “stepping up for refugees from Manus and Nauru Island, who have been caught between two governments that are both trying to shirk responsibility for them. Now that the pandemic has hit, the difficulties of resettlement have been exacerbated ten-fold.”
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Bess Spaeth
SVP, Global Brand Media and Experiences, American Express
Spaeth manages relationships with the world’s two largest live-entertainment firms, more than 40 venues in seven countries and nine music festivals. On the local level, she served as co-executive lead of Amex’s Pride Colleague Network, which kicked off the Proudly Backing campaign with an exclusive performance from Lizzo in New York’s Times Square last June. For Spaeth, it’s all about the value of human connection — and finding innovative ways to connect digitally. “I’ve learned that distance doesn’t have to mean disconnected,” she says.
COVID HERO: “I am truly inspired by the leadership Steve Squeri, our CEO, has shown during this challenging time. He has firmly put the health, safety and well-being of our colleagues at the forefront of every decision, exhibiting candor and clarity in the way he leads to build a true sense of trust.”
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Daniela Taplin Lundberg
Founder, Stay Gold Features
With her four-year-old finance/ production company (named as much for its “The Outsiders” reference as a Robert Frost poem), the former English major raised private equity so she could take risks on such films as “Honey Boy,” Shia LaBeouf’s feature writing debut, and mystical biopic “Harriet,” a double Oscar nominee. “If I hadn’t put myself on the line, neither of those films would have gotten made,” she says. In the works: “Good Joe Bell” (Mark Wahlberg) and “The Rise of Theodore Roosevelt.” With $10 million funding on Stay Gold Film Fund II, she’s still ready to go out on a limb for the right project. “If we, as producers, want more diverse stories out there, we have to fight for them,” she says.
COVID HEROES: “I am so grateful to the doctors and healthcare care workers who dove headfirst into this pandemic to save lives,” says the producer, who also also tipped her hat to “Dr. Anthony Fauci, who is a scientist first and decidedly not a politician. He is a national treasure as far as I’m concerned.”
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The Women Behind ‘Today’
Jackie Levin, Joanne LaMarca Mathisen, Libby Leist; Executive Producers, “Today”
Unexpected developments keep the “Today” show team sharp, and its exec producers have had plenty to navigate in the past few years, from the forced departures of hosts Matt Lauer and Megyn Kelly to Kathie Lee Gifford’s 2019 retirement. Then came COVID-19. When a producer on the third hour tested positive for the coronavirus in mid-March, the staff immediately began working from home, the first group from NBC News to do so, and they have continued ever since.
“We’re taking the coronavirus one day at a time,” says Leist, the first woman to run the flagship 7-9 a.m. program, on the air since 1952. “The biggest lesson of this is to stay flexible and patient: As producers, we’ve had to sur- render to the reality that we can’t produce the way we used to. We’re getting creative about how to do interviews, features, live surprises and all the things that make ‘Today’ great.”
Levin, in charge of the third hour, admits it hasn’t always been easy to adjust to pandemic production realities, which has also forced on-air talent such as Savannah Guthrie, Hoda Kotb and Al Roker to adjust their duties.
“My team has had to learn an entirely new skill set of producing under very limiting circumstances — basically no control room, studio or use of camera crews for tape spots,” Levin says. “The segments may not have all the bells and whistles they used to have, but at their core, they still have the highest level of storytelling our viewers have come to expect from us.”
It helps to stay focused on the show’s overriding purpose amid challenging circumstances. “We try every day to stay true to our goals to shine a light on what is happening in the world and help people navigate their daily lives,” Leist says.
LaMarca Mathisen, who returned to NBC last year in order to executive produce the fourth hour, never forgets her mandate for that late-morning programming block: to inform and entertain. “Our viewers tune in because they want to be lifted up and laugh and maybe learn a thing or two that’ll help them get through the day,” she says. “Whatever we’re going through, our audience is going through to a certain degree as well, in their own lives. That’s the connection. “We’re just here to hold their hand and get through the tough times together.”
COVID HEROES:
LaMarca Mathisen: Neighbor Valerie Allusson, an internist and the CMO of her local hospital in Montclair, N.J., and mother of four children. “Every day I watch Valerie leave those kids behind, dressed head to toe in her protective gear, and every night I watch her come home to a family she can’t hug,” LaMarca Mathisen says. “While many of us are working from home in our cozy sweats, pouring ourselves a cup of coffee and then poring over our laptops, Valerie and her comrades are pouring every bit of their being into helping people recover and at the same time, helping others sadly leave this world in a dignified way without being able to say goodbye to those they love.”
Leist: “I’m particularly struck by the doctors and nurses who have left their homes and families across the country to come help in NYC. I think of a young woman I met from Idaho who is now in New York working the overnight shift at NYU. They are incredible.”
Levin: “I think the obvious answer is the frontline healthcare workers who risk their lives every day. I really don’t know how they do it. But I also salute everyday people, especially parents of young children, who have gone above and beyond, to stay at home, to do their part and not spread this disease so that those healthcare workers can get home to their loved ones safely.”
— LaTesha Harris
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Adrienne Warren
Actor
Playing the titular living legend in “Tina: The Tina Turner Musical” was initially daunting to Warren, who quickly became empowered by it. “In nearly every job I’ve had on Broadway, I’ve been asked to do something I’ve never done in my life, and execute it eight times a week,” Warren says, citing “Bring It On’s” cheer stunts as an example “Each role in my career thus far has been a stepping stone towards the next role. I’m grateful for that.”
COVID HERO: “The Covenant House has kept their doors open during this time, housing, feeding and caring for youth who have nowhere to call home,” says Warren. “The staff at Covenant House are not only there to look out for these young people, but they also act as nurses, sacrificing time with their own families as well as their health by caring for the sick within the home.”
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Kristen Welker
Correspondent, MSNBC and NBC News
In telling the stories of frontline workers and keeping government officials’ feet held to the fire, journalists like Kristen Welker have become something like frontline workers themselves.
“I’ve never felt more responsibility as a journalist and as a White House correspondent to get actionable information out to the public,” she says. “You’re constantly asking yourself, ‘Am I doing enough? Am I living up to this moment? Am I asking the toughest questions of the president to make sure we’re continuing to do our job to hold him accountable for his words and his promises?’”
NBC News has put its White House correspondents on a strict rotation of one week of working at the White House followed by two weeks of working from home. Welker, who also is a “Weekend Today” anchor, figured out with her husband how to Velcro an iPad on top of a camera to create a teleprompter for her anchoring duties.
“This has forced us to work even more so as a team,” Welker says. “In this moment more than any other we’ve been forced to work together.”
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Courtney White
President, Food Network & Cooking Channel
White’s recipe for success: mix strategy and vision, stir in a little innovation and top it off with a generous helping of out-of-the-box thinking. White’s leadership has netted ratings wins for “Kids Baking Championship,” “Worst Cooks in America” and the new series “Buddy vs. Duff.” She brought back “Restaurant: Impossible” after three years to double-digit success. And she’s struck new deals with Giada De Laurentiis, Ree Drummond and Alex Guarnaschelli. White also was instrumental in launching a first-of-its-kind interactive app with the introduction of Food Network Kitchen, in which fans can cook along with their favorite chefs. Asked about her network’s future endeavors, White simply says: “To make good on our internal mantra, ‘Food. You’ll die without it.’”
COVID HEROES: “Guy Fieri has been tirelessly working on raising money for the Restaurant Employee Relief Fund he created in concert with the National Restaurant Assn. Educational Foundation. He has raised millions of dollars to provide grants for restaurant workers in need and his passion and commitment is truly admirable,” says White, who also paid tribute to other chef outreach, including Michael Symon’s live cooking classes for 40-plus days on the network’s Facebook page.
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Debbie White
Vice Chair, Music Industry (Entertainment Group), Loeb & Loeb
With clients spanning five continents, White’s work negotiating deals for how artists are paid and protected typically traverses datelines and time zones. “I normally don’t know what time it is, but with [COVID] I literally don’t know what day it is,” she says. In the past year alone, White has represented South Korea’s Big Hit Entertainment and BTS in its North American contracts, including a multimillion dollar merchandise deal with Live Nation. She worked with Tencent, China’s largest media company, on music, film, television and gaming; and negotiated a complex multimillion-dollar international publishing deal with BMG for client Diane Warren. “We are pointing, clicking and swiping our way through an online streaming life, and I make sure contracts accurately reflect this new reality,” says White. At present, however, she’s dealing with cancelled or postponed concerts for clients including the Who.
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Christina Zisa
President of Publicity, Neon
Zisa led the publicity efforts for Neon’s groundbreaking Academy Award win for “Parasite,” the first non English language film to prevail as best picture, from its Palme d’Or-winning debut at Cannes to its Oscar-night triumph. Bong Joon Ho’s film also won three more trophies that evening. Beyond it, Zisa’s team guided “Portrait of a Lady on Fire,” “Honeyland” and “Apollo 11” through the long film awards season. “My goal is to show everyone that Neon isn’t a one-hit wonder,” Zisa says. “This past year wasn’t a fluke and didn’t just happen on its own. We are a company that can sustain this type of success, whether it’s awards or box office, over and over again.”
COVID HEROES: “Personally and professionally, one group of people that stand out to me are the working parents. Being a parent is a hard enough job as it is, then combine that with quarantine, working from home, and homeschooling your kids [a feat in itself]. I’m constantly impressed and in awe of my co-workers who somehow manage to get it all done despite the circumstances.”
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UP NEXT: Elyse Dolbec
VP, Development and Production, Playground
Dolbec manages Playground’s film and TV slate, and recently brought in screen rights to C.K. McDonnell’s supernatural book series, “The Stranger Times.” Associate producer on Starz’s “The Spanish Princess,” “The White Princess” and BBC/Starz’s “The Missing” and “Howards End,” she’s also an assistant producer on the West End and Broadway productions of “Harry Potter and the Cursed Child.” Upcoming projects include F. Scott Fitzgerald’s “Tender Is the Night” and “Dangerous Liaisons” for Starz.
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UP NEXT: Chloe Fineman
Cast Member, “SNL”
In her first season on “Saturday Night Live,” Fineman has already made her mark, as anyone who saw her on the Oscar previews “Weekend Update” will attest. A graduate of NYU’s Tisch School of the Arts, the Berkeley-born Fineman has performed with the Groundlings and appeared on such TV shows as “Search Party,” “Mozart in the Jungle” and Hulu’s “High Fidelity.” Her ultimate career goal? “To make a classic, funny movie and put all my friends in it. The kind you watch again and again,” she says, citing “Bridesmaids” and “Clueless” as two examples.
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UP NEXT: Eliza Hittman
Writer-Director
Hittman’s year got off to a good start: Her searing abortion drama “Never Rarely Sometimes Always” received a jury award for neorealism at Sundance followed by the Silver Bear at Berlin. Back home in Brooklyn in March, she got COVID-19 and the film, starring newcomer Sidney Flanigan, received a premium VOD launch from Focus rather than a platform theatrical run. But the filmmaker, who also teaches at the Pratt Institute, is glad viewers can see it wherever they are. “I hope the film is obviously part of the conversation throughout the year but also part of the political conversation that we’re continually entrenched in without access to reproductive care.”
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UP NEXT: Hannah Kuzniecky Epstein
Agent, CAA
Kuzniecky Epstein reps directors, producers and production companies in non-fiction TV from CAA’s New York office, and sold “Fyre Fraud” to Hulu, “The Pharmacist” to Netflix and “The Panama Papers” to Epix. “I know I have discovered a great project when it entertains, makes you wonder, questions your beliefs and, most importantly, creates a dialogue,” she says. On the eve of Disney Plus’ launch, she closed Imagine Documentaries’ deal for its upcoming “On Pointe” series. Other clients include Fisher Stevens and Bing Liu.
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UP NEXT: Kerri Mackar
EVP Brand Partnerships, Republic Records
Mackar was promoted in May for fostering brand partnerships with Republic artists, including Post Malone, whose fourth, limited-edition Croc shoe sold out instantly; Doritos built its new Flamin’ Hot Limon chips campaign around his personal brand. The Weeknd’s deal with Mercedes-Benz helped propel his single “Blinding Lights” to multiplatinum status. “It’s remarkable when brands see the value of a special artist, and the two seamlessly come together,” Mackar says.
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UP NEXT: Clio Massey
GM, Work of Art Publishing / VP A&R, Arista Records
Named GM earlier this year in tandem with the role of VP of A&R at Arista, Massey has inked deals with musicians including Scott Harris (Shawn Mendes), Whitney Phillips (Ariana Grande, Justin Bieber) and JP Saxe, whose single “If the World Was Ending” has more than 238 million Spotify streams. “Our strategy at Work of Art is to identify and work with career artists and songwriters-producers and to create opportunities for them,” Massey says.
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UP NEXT: Sono Mitchell
SVP, Program Advertising and Marketing, HBO
Responsible for overall program strategy and marketing, audience development, digital and social media strategy at HBO, Mitchell spearheaded the marketing campaign for “Euphoria,” aimed at a younger Gen Z and millennial audience, and the “Watchmen” reboot. For the latter, she was charged with winning over fans of the original sci-fi comic book, video game and movie while at the same time introducing the franchise to a whole new audience.
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UP NEXT: Tamar-kali
Singer, Composer
Tamar-kali scored three filmsat Sundance — “Shirley,” “The Assistant” and “The Last Thing He Wanted,” reuniting with “Mudbound” director Dee Rees on the latter — and also scored “John Lewis: Good Trouble,” which was supposed to debut at Tribeca. Tamar-kali, who grew up in a musical family, made her feature-film score debut with “Mudbound” three years ago and relishes the opportunity to experiment with different sounds and palettes with each new project.
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UP NEXT: Crissle West
Co-Host, “The Read,” Fuse TV
West is the dynamic comedic mind behind “The Read,” which began as a weekly podcast with co-host Kid Fury in 2013 and was adapted by Fuse TV into a live show last year. West and Fury serve as executive producers on the program. West’s other accolades include co-hosting HBO’s “Insecure” recap podcast and hosting Beats 1 Radio; she has appeared in several installments of Comedy Central’s “Drunk History” as a fan-favorite narrator.
Thomas K. Arnold, Randee Dawn, Anna Marie de la Fuente, Diane Garrett, LaTesha Harris, Paula Hendrickson, James Patrick Herman, Steven J. Horowitz, Brooke Mazurek, Addie Morfoot, Jazz Tangcay and Elizabeth Wagmeister contributed to this report.