Sawyer Nabbed Anchor Job by 'Waiting Around' Passage of time has 'smoothed bumps on her resumé' By Matt Cantor Posted Sep 6, 2009 6:59 AM CDT Copied In this image released by CBS, CBS News anchor Katie Couric rehearses for Election Night of Presidential Campaign 2008 on Friday, Oct. 31, 2008, in New York. (AP Photo/CBS, John P. Filo) What Diane Sawyer has achieved as the second female solo news anchor is “more subtle” than Katie Couric’s ascendancy, writes Alessandra Stanley in the New York Times. Sawyer “is a gorgeous, glamorous television personality who got to the top job by waiting around,” Stanley notes. It has smoothed “bumps in her résumé that at one time seemed insurmountable.” For instance, she went straight from working with Richard Nixon to working at CBS News at a time “when the line between journalism and government was virtually inviolate," Stanley writes. The problem with waiting is that women are becoming the majority of network news anchors just as the programs are losing “relevance and prestige,” she notes. “As in other fields, women seem to break through the glass ceiling just as the air-conditioning is being turned off in the penthouse office suites.” Read These Next The 8 Democrats who bucked party on shutdown have something in common. Porn studio is US' 'most prolific copyright plaintiff.' Hormone therapy for menopause was unfairly demonized, says the FDA. A veteran federal judge resigns to protest Trump. Report an error