Lynn sherr biography

Lynn Sherr

Believing that the stories of strong women needed to be remembered and honored, reporter Lynn Sherr covered women’s issues as a journalist and brought the story of Susan B. Anthony to a new generation. Sherr began as a freelance host for a local television station in New York before working for the Associated Press and CBS. She was a guest host of the MacNeil-Lehrer Report in 1977 and went on to work as a reporter and editor for Condé Nast in the 1980s. She then became a correspondent for 20/20, investigating stories on social change and issues that affected women and winning a Peabody award in 1994 for “The Hunger Inside,” a documentary on anorexia. She has written a number of books, including two on suffragist Susan B. Anthony, about whom she also created an hour-long program for 20/20. In 2006, she published a memoir about her time working in television and her struggles with her husband’s death and her own cancer diagnosis. She continues to write articles across various publications. 

Lynn Sherr

Award-winning broadcaster and author Lynn Sherr is now a podcaster, co-hosting (with Pulitzer-Prize-winning columnist Ellen Goodman) She Votes!, celebrating the centennial of the Woman Suffrage Amendment and examining the ongoing role of women in politics.

Sherr spent more than 30 years with ABC News covering a wide range of stories – from women’s issues and social change to investigative reports, politics, science and the space program – at “20/20” and World News. Her writing has appeared in numerous publications, including The New York Times, The Washington Post and Parade (cover stories on President and Mrs. Obama, then-Vice President Biden and Dr. Jill Biden, Mitt Romney, Neil deGrasse Tyson and Ina Garten, among others), as well as in Swimmer magazine. She continues to broadcast on a variety of platforms, to write for magazines and online, and to lecture across the country.

During the 2016 presidential campaign, she wrote a number of opinion columns for various online sites, including BillMoyers.com, where her articles are still archived.

Her biography “Sally

Lynn Sherr

Throughout her career, Sherr has covered a wide range of stories, specializing in women's issues and social change, as well as investigative reports. Her numerous awards include an Emmy, two American Women in Radio and Television Commendation awards, a Gracie Award, and, among other honors, a George Foster Peabody Award.

Prior to her ABC assignment at 20/20, Sherr was a national correspondent for ABC News, where she was also part of the network’s political team for every election cycle through 2000.  Sherr also reported on the NASA space shuttle program from its inception in 1981 through the Challenger explosion in 1986, anchoring almost every mission from launch to landing. She is a graduate of Wellesley College, where she served as a trustee.

Before going to ABC in 1977, Sherr was a reporter for WNET-TV in New York and WETA-TV in Washington, D.C., both public television stations. Prior to that, she reported for WCBS-TV in New York, and The Associated Press in New York and Condé Nast Publications.

Sherr is the author of SWIM: Why We Love the Water (2012);  her

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