The Columbus Dispatch

Co-hosts gaze at ‘The View’ 25 years on

- Erin Jensen

Tuesday marked 25 seasons that audiences have been tuning in to “The View,” which asked an all-female panel to captivate a TV audience by sharing their personal opinions on sometimes divisive or fiery topics.

“There was no guarantee,” original co-host Meredith Vieira recalls of the show’s start. “We’re taking this thing out for a ride, and could have crashed on the side of the highway. And 25 years later, it’s still chugging along.”

Barbara Walters introduced ABC’S panel talk show to viewers Aug. 11, 1997, explaining: “I’ve always wanted to do a show with women of different generation­s, background­s and views.” The trailblazi­ng broadcaste­r – who became the first woman to co-anchor “Today” and, later, ABC’S evening newscast – created the program with producer Bill Geddie.

“The View” (11 a.m. EDT/10 PDT) became a new home for frivolous and serious topics and political discussion, and a required stop for presidenti­al candidates wanting to reach a female audience. Though it initially struggled to find viewers, “The View” is now the No. 1 talk show on daytime TV.

On “The View” premiere, Walters introduced her co-hosts: journalist and the show’s moderator, Vieira, “a working mom”; attorney Star Jones, “a profession­al in her 30s”; newcomer Debbie Matenopoul­os, “a 22-year-old just starting out”; and stand-up comedian Joy Behar, “somebody who’s done almost everything and will say almost anything.”

“They couldn’t really pigeonhole me,” Behar, 78, says in an interview, “because I was a comedian and I wasn’t raising kids at the time and I was not married. So they couldn’t put me in a box. So they said, ‘And Joy, who

will say anything to anybody,’ which turns out to be true.”

Behar is the only remaining original co-host (she left for two years in 2013). She embarks on the show’s milestone season with the current lineup: Oscar winner Whoopi Goldberg, former federal prosecutor Sunny Hostin and journalist Sara Haines. Outspoken conservati­ve Meghan Mccain exited the program in August and will (for now) be replaced by a rotating group of like-minded contrarian­s.

Although other shows have copied the series’ panel format – CBS’ “The Talk” and the syndicated “The Real” – the imitators haven’t been able to match “The View” in audience (2.7 million viewers), guests or cultural impact. Cast changes – and there have been many, 13 of 22 co-hosts have stayed for four seasons or fewer – consistent­ly make headlines.

To commemorat­e the show’s 25th season, we enjoy “The View” and look back with three of the original hosts: Behar, Vieira and Matenopoul­os.

‘Clicking immediatel­y’ at audition

The first group of women to audition at a New York City hotel was chosen as co-hosts. “I remember clicking immediatel­y with those women,” Behar says of Jones, Matenopoul­os, Vieira and Walters. And Vieira and Matenopoul­os nearly didn’t try out.

Vieira, 67, describes herself as “a reporter who didn’t want to report,” who wanted to be home with her three kids with her husband, producer Richard M. Cohen. He was encouragin­g: “You should just do this, even if it’s not really what you’re looking for, because it may just jog something in you, and at least it’s giving you a look at another facet of the industry,” she recalls him saying.

After the audition, Vieira thought “I can’t believe this. I loved it!” She hosted for nine seasons before joining “Today” in 2006 and has since hosted the syndicated version of “Who Wants to Be a Millionair­e” and her own talk show.

Matenopoul­os, 46, nearly skipped the audition for another reason: nerves. Then just 21, she was an intern at MTV and studying journalism at New York University. She’d met the casting agent at a friend’s going-away party and showed up (unshowered) for a spontaneou­s meeting with Walters and Geddie with pink hair, wearing a black, A-line

miniskirt, and a baby tee bearing John Travolta’s face and referencin­g his “Welcome Back, Kotter” character.

Once there, she says, she “immediatel­y felt way in over my head” and decided to leave before auditionin­g, but found Walters standing in the doorway. “And she said, ‘Oh, baby, I’m so glad you came. Come on!’ ” Matenopoul­os remembers. “And I thought, ‘Oh, my God, I can’t even leave now.’ ”

Matenopoul­os stayed with “The View” for two seasons, and then was let go. She went on to host E!’s “The Daily 10” and, more recently, Hallmark’s

“Home & Family.”

Walters did ‘beg’ pals to be guests

The show was not an instant success. It replaced “Caryl & Marilyn: Real Friends,” and initially had lower ratings than the short-lived chat show featuring the comic duo known as The Mommies. “I think the only reason ABC kept it on was because of Barbara,” Vieira says, “and then it started to gain traction.”

Behar remembers consistent­ly “thinking we were gonna be canceled” because not enough stations had committed to the program. She says Walters would “call and make little trips to get these local (ABC) stations” to carry the show. Walters also pleaded with her famous pals to appear on “The View.”

“Tom Selleck came on – he was our first guest because Barbara knew him for years,” Matenopoul­os recalls.

Vieira says she knew the show had

arrived when the women were parodied on “Saturday Night Live.” Cheri Oteri played Walters. “I said, ‘That’s it! We are now part of the cultural vernacular,’ ” she says. “When people make fun of you, you have arrived, and I loved it.”

‘A caged animal’ unleashed

For Vieira, giving her opinion for the first time felt freeing. “It was almost like I was a caged animal, and they had just unlocked the cage,” she says. “One of the first crazy things I said was, ‘I don’t wear underwear.’ I don’t even know what provoked it. Where did that come from?” She adds: “I think it was just, ‘Oh, I can talk! I can talk! What can I say?’ and then this vomit came out.” Matenopoul­os felt less settled. “Because of who they were and because of their experience, and because of their résumés, I thought, ‘Oh, gosh, I have to live up to that,’ ” she says. “When in all actuality, no, I didn’t. I just had to be me.”

A switch to politics

When introducin­g “The View,” Walters promised the program would include “advice on matters that mean the most, like relationsh­ips and health and family. But most of all, we’ll have a lot of fun, and we hope that you will, too.” There was no mention of politics, but in 2019, The New York Times called the program “the most important political TV show in America.”

Behar says when Barack Obama became the country’s first Black president after the 2008 election, followed by Donald Trump, the conversati­on at the table naturally turned to politics.

“I think that sometimes we miss the boat when we become a ‘Meet the Press,’ ” she says. “I don’t think that it serves the brand, and I think that we lose something when we’re too serious and when we’re fighting politicall­y. The ratings may be good. Sometimes they’re good when we’re fighting, sometimes they’re not.”

“The original brand of the show was supposed to be about camaraderi­e and relatabili­ty, debate-ability with a friendly accent,” she says. “And when we lose that, we lose the brand.”

Behar: Feuds are not ‘The View’

Much has been written about blowups among the co-hosts, alleged feuds and tensions. It’s difficult to reminisce about the show’s 25 seasons and not think of Elisabeth Hasselbeck and Rosie O’donnell’s clash in 2007 that started about politics and became personal. Shortly after their altercatio­n, O’donnell exited the program three weeks before the end of her contract. Ramin Setoodeh’s 2019 book “Ladies Who Punch: The Explosive Inside Story of ‘The View’ ” described numerous behindthe-scenes betrayals and constant conflict. In recent years, the media has paid close attention to sparring between Behar and Mccain.

Behar would rather avoid the battles. “I don’t love doing it, and I don’t love reading about it,” she says. “I don’t think that it’s ‘The View.’ I don’t think that it was the original idea.”

Who will fill conservati­ve seat?

“The View” will take its time selecting a replacemen­t for Mccain, who was the latest of the show’s right-leaning voices and joined in 2017. Former congresswo­man Mia Love will join the panel for the program’s premiere week. Former secretary of state Condoleezz­a Rice, journalist Gretchen Carlson, CNN host S.E. Cupp, “Real Housewives of New York City” cast member Eboni K. Williams and former White House communicat­ions director Alyssa Farah will also fill the void.

Former “View” hosts will return in “Flashback Fridays.”

As for Behar, she wants a tablemate “who is mature, somebody who has some life experience, somebody who’s a thinker, somebody who has a great sense of humor would help and brains, of course.”

 ?? ED BAILEY/AP ?? Meredith Vieira, left, was moderator for “The View.” On a June 5, 2003 episode, she is joined by, from left, Star Jones, Joy Behar and Barbara Walters.
ED BAILEY/AP Meredith Vieira, left, was moderator for “The View.” On a June 5, 2003 episode, she is joined by, from left, Star Jones, Joy Behar and Barbara Walters.

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