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Barbara Burns
2m 54s
Get to know the story of Barbara Burns and how she broke into a male dominated industry.
Chart the last five years of the women’s movement and its re-energized, intersectional fight for equality. Activists, journalists, entertainers, athletes, and politicians report from the frontlines of the feminist tidal wave.
Video description: Makers: Women in Comedy tracks the rise of women in the world of comedy, from the “dangerous” comedy of 70s sitcoms like Maude to the groundbreaking women of the 1980s American comedy club boom and building to today’s multifaceted landscape. Today, movies like Bridesmaids break box office records and the women of Saturday Night Live are often more famous than their male counterparts.
Get to know the story of Barbara Burns and how she broke into a male dominated industry.
Radicalized by their experiences for Civil Rights, women began see there needed to be a women's liberation movement.
Makers: Women Who Make America will tell the remarkable story of the Women's Movement for the first time. Built on an extraordinary archive of interviews already completed for the website Makers.com, the film will feature the stories of those who led the fight, those who opposed it, and those – both the famous and unknown – caught up in its wake.
Women were finally given a voice in the publishing world when Gloria Steinem founded MS Magazine in 1972. The magazine grew rapidly during the 1970's and highlighted issues such as women's health and domestic violence.
Sarah Weddington was a the attorney in Roe v Wade. Learn more about the landmark case.
In 1967 Kathrine Switzer ran in the Boston Marathon, and had to enter under her initials as women were not allowed in the race. By proving that women could finish the race she changed the sport of running forever.
Most middle class women of the 1950s became homemakers. Many women felt dissatisfied.
Flight attendants had a very short career for at 32 they were forcible retired. They were the first case for the Equal Opportunity Commission.
In 1963 Betty Friedan wrote The Feminine Mystique, and exposed he happy homemaker myth. Many women wanted the opportunity of a career of their own.
The Equal Rights Amendment passed both houses of congress in 1972 leaving only ratification before the law was adopted. 30 states ratified it in the first year but the culture war was just starting.
Phyllis Schlafly leads the protest against the ERA and focuses on the possibility of women being exposed to the military draft
Lorena Weeks applied for a job within Southern Bell and was told the job was reserved for men.
Billie Jean King's work on behalf of women’s opportunity and equality in competition came together when she beat former men's champion Bobby Riggs in 1973’s famous “Battle of the Sexes” match.
African American women saw little in the Women's Movement that resonated with their lives. They had to work to support their families and saw little in common with the women of NOW.
MAKERS: Women Who Make America tells the story of how women have helped shape America over the last 50 years through one of the most sweeping social revolutions in our country’s history, in pursuit of their rights to a full and fair share of political power, economic opportunity and personal autonomy. Airs on PBS Feb. 26 at 8pm
The fight to ratify the ERA ran into a changing political climate, and effective opponents.
In 1980, Susan Love became the first female General Surgeon on the staff of Boston’s Beth Israel Hospital. Realizing that women were not getting the best care in the treatment of breast cancer she decided to specialize and has drastically altered the equations surrounding the disease. 1990’s Dr. Susan Love’s Breast Book is now in it's fifth edition.