Her time in the limelight was limited. Her desire for higher level interviews caused a stir with the network and Chung's credibility suffered as she continued to cover the tabloid stories assigned to her.
Her firing from the co-anchor position and subsequent loss of "Eye to Eye with Connie Chung" disturbed many who were pleased to see a woman reaching new heights in journalism. She graduated with a degree in journalism in Connie Chung entered journalism right after finishing her education.
Chung interviewed Richard Nixon during the infamous Watergate scandal. In , Chung shifted to NBC as an established journalist. The program focused on interviewing celebrities and famous personalities. The program was criticized for not focusing on news, and rather wasting time on brainless entertainment by the media. Connie Chung was born in Maryland to recent-immigrant parents from China. As the youngest of ten children, Chung said her family found her decision to study the then-budding field of television journalism surprising.
After graduating from the University of Maryland, Chung got a job as a correspondent in Washington, D. It was at this job that she proved her knack for chasing the story.
She shared an anecdote on Watch What Happens Live in about an impromptu interview with President Richard Nixon during the height of the Watergate scandal. She recalls not taking out her pen and notepad, hoping to encourage him to keep talking without getting scared.
The result: She went on the air later that evening with an exclusive scoop. As a young journalist, Connie Chung's success came with the challenge of dealing with sexism and wholly inappropriate treatment from men in the industry. It wasn't until after the MeToo movement that Chung felt comfortable enough to talk about her experiences.
In , talk show host Andy Cohen asked Chung if she was sexually harassed in her career, and she told him, "Yeah. Every day. That same year, Chung wrote a letter in solidarity with Dr. Christine Blasey Ford — the woman who became a lightning rod during the confirmation hearing of Brett Cavanaugh to the Supreme Court. After a miscarriage and multiple failed attempts at in vitro fertilization, Chung and her husband adopted their son, Matthew, in Chung was 48 years old at the time.
For the first couple of years of motherhood, Chung stayed at home with her son before returning to work for a few years when he was a toddler. A short time later, she again returned to being a stay-at-home mom. I think these years are the ones in which kids can take the wrong path. Chung, the youngest of ten children, was born shortly after her family arrived in America in Menu Home.
Table of Contents. Connie Chung. Connie Chung Young Age.
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