LYNN POVICH
Lynn Povich is an award-winning journalist who has spent more than 40 years in the news business. After graduating from Vassar, she began her career as a secretary in the Paris Bureau of Newsweek magazine, rising to become a reporter and writer in New York. In 1970, she was one of 46 women who filed sex discrimination charges against the magazine, the first women in the media to do so. Five years later, she was appointed the first woman Senior Editor in Newsweek’s history. Lynn has written a book about that landmark lawsuit, its bittersweet effect on the women involved and women in the media, and what has--and hasn't--changed. The Good Girls Revolt was published in 2012 by PublicAffairs, which inspired the Amazon Prime series of the same name. Povich became Editor-in-Chief of Working Woman magazine in 1991, and in 1996, she joined MSNBC.com as East Coast Managing Editor, overseeing the internet content of NBC News and MSNBC programs and personalities. In 2005, she edited a book of columns by her father, famed Washington Post sports writer Shirley Povich, called All Those Mornings… At The Post. Povich is a recipient of the Matrix Award for Magazines, serves on the Advisory Boards of the International Women's Media Foundation, the Women's Rights Division of Human Rights Watch and the CUNY Graduate Center Foundation Board. She is married to Stephen Shepard, who was Editor-in-Chief of Business Week magazine for 20 years and Founding Dean Emeritus of the Graduate School of Journalism of the City University of New York. They have two children.
"We were all good girls, but that didn’t work for us."