What I know about Barbara Walters
"I couldn't audition one more time. It was as simple as that."
No wows. "Audition," the memoir of the most celebrated female television journalist in history, is on bookstands this morning . via AMNY
Tina Turner says she's hitting the road again
"That number doesn't mean a thing. It just doesn't"
Tina Turner says she's hitting the road again for her first tour in the United States in seven years. via WDTN-TV Dayton
Cruise not sure he regrets couch antics
"That was a moment, and it was real, and I don't know if I would do it [differently]. I really don't"
Tom Cruise says his couch-jumping on The Oprah Winfrey Show seemed to set off a "confluence" of bad publicity for him, but he's not sure he would take it back. via Theeagle.com
AFTRA Unit OKs Pact
As expected, the American Federation of Click for the lowest price on dmnobieblank television ');" onMouseOut="setTimeout ',500);" class=hotlink2>Television and Radio Artists overwhelmingly approved its ... via Digital Post Production
Barbara Dishes About Star and Rosie
"He was a wonderful man and a wonderful senator. ... I have always felt that I perhaps ruined his future"
She never opened up on her own talk show, but on "The Oprah Winfrey Show" today Barbara Walters let out the truth about what really happened with Star Jones and how she feels about Rosie O'Donnell. Walters told ... via ABC News
Barbara Walters Reveals Past Affair With Senator
"When I think of her, because she was beautiful and loving and all of that, it makes me cry."
After three decades of keeping mum, Barbara Walters is disclosing a past affair with married U.S. Senator Edward Brooke, whom she remembers as "exciting" and "brilliant."
Appearing on "The Oprah Winfrey Show" scheduled to air Tuesday, Walters shares details of her relationship with Brooke that lasted several years in the 1970s, according to a transcript of the show provided to The Associated Press.
A moderate Republican from Massachusetts who took office in 1967, Brooke was the first African-American to be popularly elected to the Senate. Both he and Walters knew that public knowledge of their affair could have ruined his career as well as hers, Walters says. Read more