“To
love what you do and feel that it matters – how could anything be more fun?”
– Katharine Graham
– Katharine Graham
Award-winning writer, and
publisher of The Washington Post for
over two decades, Graham was born on this date in 1917. Today, she’s especially remembered for her
newspaper's role in exposing the Watergate Scandal. Her Pulitzer Prize winning
memoir, simply titled Personal History, exudes the joy of working in media. She and her editorial
team revived a so-so newspaper and made it a national powerhouse, and the
investigative effort during Watergate stands as a benchmark for “How it’s done.”
A Republican who oversaw
investigative reporting of a Republican president, she said politics should
never get in the way of good reporting.
“It matters not if a person is from one party or another. If someone has done something that needs to
be exposed in print, then that’s what a good reporter should do.”
A personal friend of luminaries like
Truman Capote and Adlai Stevenson, who was twice a candidate for U.S. President
and served as the U.N. Ambassador, she was awarded The Presidential Medal of
Freedom shortly before her death in 2001. The International Press Institute
named her one of the world’s 50 most influential and powerful media people of
the 20th century.
“Once, power was considered a
masculine attribute,” Graham said when told of the honor. “In fact, power has no sex.”
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