Ladies Who Punch: The Explosive Inside Story of "The View"
5/5
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Self-Confidence
Self-Care
Self-Respect
Self-Expression
Self-Worth
Mentorship
Rags to Riches
Fish Out of Water
Rivalry
Forbidden Love
Redemption
Underdog Story
Underdog
Power Struggle
Workplace Drama
Self-Esteem
Self-Love
Self-Sufficiency
Self-Compassion
Self-Protection
About this ebook
THE INSTANT NEW YORK TIMES AND WALL STREET JOURNAL BESTSELLER
Like Fire & Fury, the gossipy real-life soap opera behind a serious show.
When Barbara Walters launched The View, network executives told her that hosting it would tarnish her reputation. Instead, within ten years, she’d revolutionized morning TV and made household names of her co-hosts: Joy Behar, Star Jones, Meredith Vieira and Elisabeth Hasselbeck. But the daily chatfest didn’t just comment on the news. It became the news. And the headlines barely scratched the surface.
Based on unprecedented access, including stunning interviews with nearly every host, award-winning journalist Ramin Setoodeh takes you backstage where the stars really spoke their minds. Here's the full story of how Star, then Rosie, then Whoopi tried to take over the show, while Barbara struggled to maintain control of it all, a modern-day Lear with her media-savvy daughters. You'll read about how so many co-hosts had a tough time fitting in, suffered humiliations at the table, then pushed themselves away, feeling betrayed—one nearly quitting during a commercial. Meanwhile, the director was being driven insane, especially by Rosie.
Setoodeh uncovers the truth about Star’s weight loss and wedding madness. Rosie’s feud with Trump. Whoopi’s toxic relationship with Rosie. Barbara’s difficulty stepping away. Plus, all the unseen hugs, snubs, tears—and one dead rodent.
Ladies Who Punch shows why The View can be mimicked and mocked, but it can never be matched.
Ramin Setoodeh
Ramin Setoodeh is Variety's co-editor in chief and the author of the New York Times bestselling book Ladies Who Punch: The Explosive Inside Story of ""The View."" In 2018, Setoodeh was named entertainment journalist of the year by the Los Angeles Press Club. He previously worked as a senior writer for Newsweek and the Daily Beast. He lives in New York.
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Ladies Who Punch - Ramin Setoodeh
Prologue
Out, Damned Cohost!
Barbara Walters was creating a scene. Not that she minded it. As the most powerful woman in the news business, her mere presence at Spago in Beverly Hills infused the room with an aura of royalty. The chef came over to welcome her. Other patrons leaned over their plates to get a better look. Any meal with Barbara was always an intimidating exercise, which started with her dropping the names of some people she’d recently run into: Hillary Clinton, Michael Bloomberg, Jennifer Lopez, and more. On this evening in the winter of 2007, her dining companion—Brian Frons, the president of ABC Daytime—tried his best to keep up.
The View, the daytime talk show that Barbara had created in 1997 with a panel of mild-mannered women, had peaked in Season 10. The show was averaging an impressive 3.5 million viewers, up 17 percent from the previous year. Normally, nothing made Barbara happier than strong ratings, like the high school valedictorian that gloated over every percentage point on a math quiz. Yet, despite a surge in viewership, Barbara felt miserable.
In just a few months, The View had suffered through a series of embarrassing controversies, drawing the anger of Donald Trump (mocked for his hair and, even worse, his finances), Kelly Ripa (accused of homophobic behavior after she told a guest, Clay Aiken, not to cover her mouth with his hand), and the entire Asian American community (subjected to a racist impersonation). One culprit was behind all these fires: Rosie O’Donnell.
Barbara knew what had to be done. In the past, she’d quietly orchestrated the firings of other cohosts on The View as they outlasted their welcome: Debbie Matenopoulos in 1999, Lisa Ling in 2002, and Star Jones in 2006. Even though Barbara had recruited Rosie herself, she admitted that she’d made a terrible mistake, telling Trump that much in a private conversation.
Barbara’s decision to push out Rosie wasn’t simply a power play. It was an act of self-preservation. Rosie had disrupted the normal mechanisms of a talk show. She fought constantly with the show’s director, Mark Gentile, and berated the senior staff. She hated the executive producer, Bill Geddie, so much that he took a temporary leave of absence to get away from her. On top of that, Rosie was running around telling the staff that Barbara, at seventy-seven, was much too old to be on TV.
For most of her career, Barbara had been known as a serious news anchor. Now, all that had changed. Her empire had expanded in a lopsided direction, unheard of for a news icon. She looked more like the matriarch of an out-of-control family—a septuagenarian Kris Jenner before the world knew who that was. Camera crews from TMZ regularly camped out on the sidewalk of Barbara’s Upper East Side apartment, trying to ask her about the latest drama unfolding on The View. She didn’t like it one bit.
I know you’ve been very calm this year, and I really appreciate that,
Barbara told Frons after they’d exchanged pleasantries.
I want the best for you and the show.
He sighed, momentarily relieved.
Barbara was nothing if not direct. I do want you to know,
she calmly announced, if you re-sign Rosie to this show, Bill and I are going to quit.
Barbara Walters, the griller-in-chief of world leaders and presidents, had a soft spot for a heroine that gulped cosmopolitans. Barbara loved Sex and the City, the HBO series about four girlfriends trying to have it all in New York City. Sometimes, for a fleeting moment, she’d imagine herself in Carrie Bradshaw’s Manolo Blahniks. I watch old reruns,
she told me one afternoon, sitting in her dressing room at The View, decorated with framed pictures of her daughter, Jackie, and her beloved Havanese dog, Cha-Cha. I still think Sarah Jessica Parker is adorable, and I want her to meet Mr. Big and live happily ever after.
The View, which debuted one year before Sex and the City, even played like the unscripted version—minus the one-night stands, but with just as much yakking, fussing, and chatter about defining a woman’s worth on the journey to having it all.
In television history, The View’s influence is significant in a way that doesn’t usually get said out loud. When Barbara started the show, with a group of pals (Meredith Vieira, Star Jones, Joy Behar, and Debbie Matenopoulos), news and opinion were clearly separated. In the pre-Twitter age, reporters such as Barbara weren’t allowed to tell the public what they thought, let alone speculate about a president’s marriage or relationship to his mistress or children (which The View made into a national pastime). The show offered a venue where opinion wasn’t just as important as news, it was the news in some cases, such as when Rosie O’Donnell made noise with her September 11 conspiracy theories or Whoopi Goldberg refused to believe her friend Bill Cosby was a rapist. We didn’t create a new format,
Barbara said. We created a new atmosphere.
In 2011, Anderson Cooper unveiled an afternoon talk show while keeping his anchor job at CNN—nobody questioned him because Barbara had already done it.
Speaking of CNN, its political coverage had come to look a lot like The View, with Trump supporters playing the role of Elisabeth Hasselbeck. It’s hard to watch television now without running up against a row of bickering pundits. The View got there first, as the Martha Washington of panel shows, and it made the idea of a single talk show host (Jerry Springer, Sally Jessy Raphael, Ricki Lake, etc.) seem quaint. In our supersize culture, why settle for one voice when you can have five—even if that means straining to hear them scream over one another?
Barbara handpicked all the original cohosts of The View, called them the ladies,
and treated them like her TV daughters. As each of the ingénues rose to fame, their own personal lives and dramas became mini-sagas that unfolded in real time. To be a cohost of The View meant excavating your deepest secrets—a foreshadowing of our TMZ (and TMI) culture. In a way, The View was TV’s first mainstream reality show after The Real World. Yes, three years later, Survivor took credit for that, but The View opened a window into the personal relationships among strong women, a predecessor to Bravo’s Real Housewives or MTV’s The Hills. It was like a reality show and a soap opera,
said Debbie Matenopoulos, the youngest cohost, who got the job when she was twenty-two. There’s something about how raw and real it would be.
The View certainly paved the way for the CBS knockoff series The Talk, which emphasized less politics and more celebrity; the Fox show The Real, targeted to younger women of color; the ABC cooking show The Chew; the failed Tyra Banks offering FABLife; and Fox News’s Outnumbered, the Republican edition. We are copied almost line by line by other programs,
Barbara said. It’s sort of flattering.
The View wasn’t TV’s first panel show (Politically Incorrect and Crossfire ran before it), but it brought the genre to daytime.
The View made it socially acceptable for men to yammer about their feelings, too. Dick Clark cribbed the conceit for 2001’s The Other Half, costarring Mario Lopez and Danny Bonaduce. Joan Rivers spearheaded her own View pilot with several loud gay men, called Straight Talk—her cohosts were the then unknown Andy Cohen and Billy Eichner. Come to think of it, even Rivers’s Fashion Police, which had a panel of experts dissing celebrity frocks on the red carpet, traced its origins back to you know where. "I think they would absolutely slit their wrists if I managed to draw a line between Fashion Police and The View," said Melissa Rivers, who cohosted the E! series with her mom.
The mood across the country in 1997, The View’s birth year, was dramatically different from what it is now. Ellen DeGeneres had just kicked down the door as TV’s first openly gay sitcom star, although it was clear she wouldn’t be successful. Hillary Clinton was a full-time first lady, hiding her ambitions to run for a seat in the Senate. As the baby boomer generation raised their own kids, college-educated women weren’t as likely to give up their careers. Yet for those who did, Barbara carved out a room of one’s own. The View was like the walking, talking antithesis to The Feminine Mystique, the groundbreaking 1963 book by Betty Friedan, which explored the causes of unhappiness among housewives. According to Joy Behar, a reason that The View succeeded was that it was an unapologetically feminist show: We basically embody a feminist. We are self-employed. We have control over our personal lives. We try to do as much with our lives as we can.
While the show tried to celebrate its empowered stars, that didn’t always happen. Sometimes The View was overshadowed by catfights,
as the media loved to speculate about how the ladies really felt about one another. When it comes to women in Hollywood, the press has always had a double standard. Then again, the ladies of The View never masked their true feelings. They all had a lot of relational aggression,
shrugged Tina Fey, who cowrote the Saturday Night Live sketches of The View, starring Cheri Oteri as Barbara.
The View got hip early on that treating happenings on Capitol Hill like a soap opera could be riveting TV. It was ahead of its time in thinking that politicians were celebrities. Back in 1992, Bill Clinton’s appearance as a saxophone-playing governor on The Arsenio Hall Show was considered an exception to the norms of late-night TV. But The View made daytime hospitable to senators, from Elizabeth Warren to John McCain; vice presidents, such as Dick Cheney and Joe Biden; and President Barack Obama, who stopped by the show twice in 2012 to rally women voters for his reelection bid. I like hanging out with women, what can I tell you?
said Obama, the first sitting president in history to appear on daytime TV.
Michelle Obama counted herself a loyal viewer. So did Nancy Reagan, who would call up if she felt the show’s signature Hot Topics debates sounded too critical of her late husband’s legacy. Nicolle Wallace, a cohost who had worked as George W. Bush’s communications director, watched The View from the White House—It’s this iconic show,
she said—as a barometer of national moods. If a political topic was on their radar, I used it as ammunition with the president or the White House staff,
she recalled. She’d tell them, "This is such a big deal. They are talking about it on the damn View."
The show inadvertently offered a bridge between Hillary Clinton and Trump before they knew they’d become political adversaries. Both attended the much-hyped Star Jones wedding in 2004, where they sat at the same table. Trump was a regular guest on The View. Clinton’s presence loomed larger. Over the years, she was like a phantom sixth cohost, an easy conversation starter for Barbara’s ladies. Hillary was a prism through which the cohosts viewed themselves, from the Monica Lewinsky scandal through Clinton’s years as a US senator and secretary of state. In the lead-up to her first presidential run, Clinton used The View as a warm-up for how she’d fare with tough questions.
So in December 2006, days before Christmas, Clinton made an appearance on The View, with anecdotes about opening presents with Bill and Chelsea. But she was eclipsed by a figure who would later haunt her. Rosie opened the show that day with a historic roast of Trump, which led to an infamous and bitter feud. Clinton watched the routine from her dressing room, not knowing that ten years later she’d be facing off against Trump for her dream job, and that Rosie’s name would be dragged into one of their presidential debates. I was laughing so hard backstage, I didn’t think I’d get out,
Clinton said, when she settled on the couch, channeling a friendly pal.
Every day we’re in trouble on this show,
Joy offered, correctly predicting the firestorm ahead.
Isn’t that interesting?
Clinton asked. I wonder why that happens?
I don’t know,
Joy said. We’re just women.
Part One
Barbara’s View
1
Everybody’s a Critic
For a long time, nobody had any clue why Barbara Walters—who symbolized the gold standard of the TV news business—would dip her feet in the murky waters of daytime. This was the genre that gave rise to paternity tests, plastic surgery, and too fat to wear.
In 1983, a serious broadcaster named Sally Jessy Raphael started a talk show with the goal of tackling lofty societal issues. But a few years in, she caved and went the tabloid route. All her competitors were doing the same. Geraldo Rivera staged so many fights he ended up with a broken nose during an episode called Teen Hatemongers.
Maury Povich made a cottage industry out of unfaithful boyfriends. Jenny Jones was on a constant search for guests who didn’t know their real daddies. Jerry Springer presided over a circus of angry misfits who threw chairs and fists. The nuclear arms race for smut TV was the complete opposite of Barbara’s brand, as an erudite ambassador of world news—with access to everybody from Barbra Streisand to Mu‘ammar Gaddafi.
Most daytime talk had evolved from Phil Donahue, who in 1967 launched his eponymous show that changed the culture. Donahue had no fear of boundaries or taboos—he tackled homosexuality decades before Will & Grace, once invited a Nazi to speak to an audience of Jews, and challenged a young Donald Trump about his real estate dealings. We can’t continue to give you guys these big tax breaks,
Donahue scolded. Just as important, he taped his show in front of a live audience, taking their questions and concerns into living rooms across the country.
His no-holds-barred approach cleared the way for Oprah Winfrey, who duplicated the template. Winfrey started on local TV news as a reporter who studied Walters on NBC’s Today, imitating her interviewing techniques and style. When Winfrey landed her own nationally syndicated talk show in 1986, she gravitated toward education and information, emulating a best friend you can trust with your deepest secrets. By the midnineties, Oprah ruled the cult of stay-at-home moms with remember your spirit
segments and book club recommendations. The inspirational programming made Winfrey the mightiest woman on TV, with up to 20 million daily viewers.
But in 1996, she finally got some competition. Rosie O’Donnell, a comedic actress from movies (Sleepless in Seattle, A League of Their Own, and The Flintstones), wanted to take a shot at her own talk show. She modeled her venture on a staple from her childhood: 1961’s Mike Douglas Show, on which the squeaky-clean host chatted playfully with rising celebrities such as Aretha Franklin and Mel Brooks. Douglas was an early adopter of celebrity gab, an afternoon counterpart to The Tonight Show, which had started seven years before. In Rosie’s reboot, the format stayed the same, but she revved up the pace with Broadway musical numbers, audience giveaways, and lengthy discussions about her crush—back when she was closeted—on Tom Cruise. As two of TV’s biggest moguls, O and Ro built up their kingdoms, shaping pop culture and raking in fortunes.
Unlike soap operas, most talk shows are cobbled together quickly and inexpensively. There’s no need for actors or too many writers toiling on scripts. The biggest expense is usually the host’s salary, assuming he or she is a marquee name. Many of the giants in the industry started out small, such as Regis Philbin, who climbed into his seat on Live with Regis and Kathie Lee in 1988 after years as a local morning emcee in New York and LA. The measure of a successful host is genuine connection, imitating a BFF with jokes, self-help tips, and makeovers. It’s not so easy, though. The daytime audience is impatient and fickle, with an appetite for sauce. Since Oprah’s rise, an army of A- and B-list personalities have tried to mimic her—Katie Couric, Anderson Cooper, and Megyn Kelly (anchors); Queen Latifah and Harry Connick Jr. (singers); Roseanne Barr, Tony Danza, Megan Mullally, and Fran Drescher (sitcom actors); Kris Jenner and Bethenny Frankel (reality stars)—only to fall flat on their coiffed heads.
But if you make it, the job is lucrative. Advertisers embrace successful daytime talk shows because they reach stay-at-home moms, who typically control their family budgets and watch the programs live, even the ads. As a result, Ellen DeGeneres, Dr. Phil, and Kelly Ripa earn multimillion-dollar salaries, in the same range as movie stars such as Jennifer Lawrence and Brad Pitt. Above them, there’s that short-tempered brunette with a gavel, Judith Sheindlin, who cashes a check for $47 million a year. Her courtroom series, Judge Judy, which started in 1996, isn’t really a talk show, but it plays like Jerry Springer meets Matlock, with wounded plaintiffs battling over unpaid dues and broken promises. I would have been so happy if we had done three years, and I had enough money to buy a condo two blocks off the beach of Miami,
Sheindlin told me. That was my dream.
Sheindlin’s perch in daytime is so towering and profitable that she scoffed when she heard that Trump had been considering her for a vacancy to the US Supreme Court. It must have been one of those moments when he wasn’t thinking,
Sheindlin said. I have too good of a day job.
By the midnineties, Barbara Walters was at the head of her class at ABC, carrying a hefty workload as the number one star of TV news. She served as the coanchor of 20/20, then a place for meaty investigations, cranked out Oscars specials, aired her 10 Most Fascinating People (which began in 1993 with Hillary Clinton at the top), and constantly outhustled her peers for exclusives. In 1995, she scored the first interview with a paralyzed Christopher Reeve, making headlines around the world. A year later, after the O. J. Simpson verdict, prosecutor Christopher Darden sat down with Barbara before anyone else.
Barbara grew up in New York and Florida, where she lived in a pistachio-colored house. Her father, Lou, ran a string of nightclubs, packed with showgirls and hit singers, which gave her early brushes with famous people—he was constantly socializing with the likes of Milton Berle, Johnnie Ray, and Frank Sinatra. It made me the way I am,
Barbara told me one day. I’m not in awe of any celebrity.
Her mother, Dena, stayed at home with Barbara’s older sister, Jacqueline, who was mentally disabled. My childhood was totally influenced by my sister,
Barbara said. It gave me a childhood that was sad and kind of lonely because there were things I couldn’t do, like have friends over.
Barbara had a few false starts to her career. She wanted to be an actress, but she was too scared of rejection. You can’t be an actress if you’re afraid of being turned down,
she recalled. After a stint as a publicist (during which she learned how to manipulate the press, a skill that came in handy later), Barbara joined the staff of Today in 1961 as a writer. Because of her gender, this was groundbreaking for the time. There were six male writers and one female,
Barbara said. And you didn’t get to be the female writer unless she got married or died.
Through sheer determination, Barbara migrated in front of the camera, reporting segments about fashion or a night out with a Playboy Bunny. I was not the natural choice when I began,
Barbara said. I was not beautiful. I had a speech impediment. That didn’t help.
She said the standards were different back then. Most of the women in television now are very lovely, but they are also talented. In my time, they were maybe not as talented.
Her secret to success was perseverance. What I had was this creative curiosity and ability to ask questions,
she said.
Her agent slipped a clause in her contract that if the current host left, she’d assume the title. Nobody thought he’d go anywhere, but when Frank McGee suddenly died of bone cancer in 1974, Barbara took over as the first female cohost, opposite Jim Hartz. "Since then, a woman is the cohost on the Today show, Barbara said.
That’s my legacy." (In fact, now there are two women: Savannah Guthrie and Hoda Kotb.) Barbara drew in viewers with her tenacity as she interrogated powerful men such as Richard Nixon and Henry Kissinger with her prickly questions. Because of Walters’s success, TV executives started to let more women cover hard news, enter war zones, and tackle politics.
In 1976, she shattered another glass ceiling, when she left NBC for ABC to be the first woman coanchor of a nightly newscast. Her new employer shelled out a record $1 million a year to nab their new star—a deal that, forty years later, created a culture where Megyn Kelly could demand $25 million from Fox News, before ultimately fleeing to NBC. The hysteria over Barbara’s move to ABC was followed by questions of whether she could cut it. The press ran sexist stories about how she owned a pink typewriter. Her coanchor, Harry Reasoner, hated her, and the tension was awkward. We were terrible together,
Barbara said. From the beginning, viewers were angry with me for doing this to poor Harry.
She survived by leaving the news desk and reinventing herself through her trademark specials. Barbara would convene three newsmakers—a celebrity, a world leader, and a miscellaneous person in the news—for an hour of prime time. She wanted to capture her subjects in intimate settings, so she devised the novel conceit of visiting their habitats. Barbara popularized the idea of bringing cameras into celebrity homes, long before audiences were used to MTV’s Cribs or the Kardashians. She became just as famous as the people she interviewed, as she rode a wave of success for the next two decades.
But in her own home, Barbara’s personal life was fraught. In the fifties, her father gambled away her family’s fortune on a series of bad investments, putting pressure on Barbara to support her parents and her sister with her money. This was an especially odd arrangement for a woman of her generation, who would normally rely on a husband’s paycheck for security. It meant that Barbara had to stay employed—in spite of Lou Walters’s concerns about her longevity on TV. He was afraid I was going to get fired,
Barbara said about her father. His doubts instilled two traits in her that followed her for the rest of her career: a boundless desire for success and a lurking, irrational fear that her savings could vanish overnight. I had to support them for so long,
Barbara said of her family. I knew I had to work, and I just worked harder.
Barbara consistently chose her job over her marriages (she had three, with the last one ending in 1992) and raised her adopted daughter, Jackie (who she named after her sister), as a single mother. I don’t think there was a person I should have been with,
Barbara said. I don’t look back and think, ‘How did he get away?’
In 1984, she met the man who would become her most important companion—her hairdresser, Bryant Renfroe, who always stood by her, just a few feet away from the cameras. He came into Walters’s life after he’d left his salon in Florida to perform miracles at ABC on Joan Lunden and Kathie Lee Johnson (who later married Frank Gifford). Fate led him to Barbara’s apartment one afternoon, after her stylist had to bail. When I finished, she looked at me and said, ‘I can’t go out like this.’
Renfroe ripped up the instructions from the previous stylist and started over. I always thought her hair looked awful,
Renfroe confessed. It was choppy, uneven, messy, unconstructed.
He created Barbara’s modern-day look, a bob haircut that was emulated by millions of career-climbing women (just ask Hillary Clinton). It’s called giving you cheekbones and jawlines,
Renfroe said.
From then on, Barbara was inseparable from her gay best friend. Renfroe traveled with Walters to all her big interviews and meetings, such as a lunch with Princess Diana at Buckingham Palace. (Barbara always personally introduced him.) Renfroe not only tended to her hair, he provided her with constant moral support. There were times where the producers gave me headphones because it was important that I heard,
Renfroe said. After she’d wrap an interview with anyone from Cher to Barack Obama, Barbara would scan the room to make sure she hadn’t missed anything, usually calling out one person by name (Bryant!
) for last-minute feedback. Barbara’s idea of hell was forgetting an obvious question and waking up in the middle of the night in a cold sweat about what she should have asked. She relied on Renfroe to be her safety net.
No matter how successful she became, Barbara always pondered new ways to expand her empire. So in her late sixties, when most TV journalists are winding down—if not already deep in retirement—Barbara had a fresh idea. In the spirit of Gatsby, she gazed out at the green light from Oprah’s and Rosie’s docks and envisioned a rival creation, a competing act.
The View was born out of a conversation between a mom and her daughter, which seems right because of the maternal relationships—between Barbara and her cohosts—that would fuel the show.
In the summer of 1996, while wrapping one of her celebrity specials, Barbara took aside her producer Bill Geddie to tell him about a conversation she’d had with Jackie, then in her late twenties. It’s so interesting,
she told Geddie. She comes at the world from a completely different point of view.
Barbara wondered if they could create a show around that premise, with women of different generations debating the headlines of the day.
Her inspiration for the format of The View came from two places. The first was ABC’s This Week, a Sunday news program in which anchor David Brinkley held a roundtable with pundits arguing about politics. The other, Girl Talk, which aired from 1963 to 1969, lived up to its name with its host, Virginia Graham, booking trailblazers such as Cindy Adams, Olivia de Havilland, and Joan Rivers for cozy chats—Barbara herself had been a guest repeatedly. I thought if you could combine those two together, you’d have a successful show,
Barbara said.
And then there was a show from Barbara’s own history, a missed opportunity that still gnawed at her. In the seventies, she hosted a local NBC program called Not for Women Only (the title alone hinted at the bias women in the TV industry faced). Barbara, who juggled the gig in addition to Today, would assemble a weekly panel of experts—among them soap opera writers, inventors, politicians’ wives—to talk about important issues in the culture, at a time when the women’s movement was on the rise, personified by strong heroines on such shows as The Mary Tyler Moore Show and One Day at a Time. Barbara’s side project, which she binge-taped in an afternoon, was essentially a predecessor to The View, with rotating cohosts. I sometimes think I should have hung on to that show, syndicated it, and I would have been a very rich person,
recalled Barbara, momentarily forgetting her own considerable worth. "I didn’t. But it taught me a lesson for The View."
Barbara didn’t just want to headline her talk show, she also wanted a piece of ownership through her company, Barwall Productions. If it worked, it would be a big step forward, moving Barbara from TV star to entrepreneur. She picked Geddie as an ally because she trusted him. He’d spent a decade with her as the steady hand that oversaw her specials. Geddie, an imposing six-foot-four Republican from Texas in his early forties, could look like a bodyguard next to his five-foot-five boss; he acted as her protector. In his spare time, he’d written a screenplay for the little-seen 1996 thriller Unforgettable, starring Ray Liotta as a man wrongfully accused of murdering his wife.
It taught him how he didn’t want to spend the rest of his career. I was not allowed on the set and it was rewritten many times,
Geddie said about his foray into Hollywood. So I go to a test screening with a bunch of New Yorkers. It was very exciting for me and my wife. The first third of the movie is exactly what I wrote. Then it changes and people start laughing—it’s not a comedy. By the end, it was a horrific experience, and we both sat up like ghosts, thinking, ‘Oh my God, this is the worst movie ever made!’ We walked through a crowd of smoking teenagers in front of the theater. And I remember one young girl took a big inhale and said, ‘Who writes shit like that?’
Geddie plotted to move up the ladder in TV. After he received a tip that ABC was canceling one of its daytime offerings, he told Barbara that this was their chance. They wrote up a proposal for what they could slot into that hour. In that first draft, they needed a name for their show, so they used a placeholder, Everybody’s a Critic. It hinted at the tone for what the man behind the curtain hoped to achieve. I wanted it to be a bitchy show,
Geddie said. "Barbara did not want it to be bitchy. I got my wish, by the