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(bouncy music)
Katie Holmes: I'm really excited
to sit down with all these women.
It's always interesting to read about a person or have an idea of someone and then get to the bottom of how they became who they became.
Kim Hastreiter: I am sort of a cultural anthropologist.
I am an artist.
I do have a magazine also called "Paper."
Jane Rosenthal: I'm Jane Rosenthal
and I produce movies and television.
Katie: Just say your name and what you do.
Christine Barberich: My name is Christine
and I'm the editor and chief of Refinery29.
Jeanne Yang: My name is Jeanne Yang.
I am a stylist and a co-designer and co-partner of Holmes & Yang, a clothing line.
Cornelia: This is my mother Jill Abramson.
She is the executive editor of the "New York Times."
The first woman to hold that position, to be in that role.
Renee Robinson: My name is Renee Robinson.
and I am a dancer.
Katie: What shapes your identity first?
Being a woman, your career, or being a New Yorker?
Renee Robinson: It would probably be
being a woman.
Kim Hastreiter: I mean New York is really important to me,
I am a New Yorker, I love New York,
but also I think the thing that I live for
is inspiration.
Jill Abramson: I think probably being
a New Yorker has had the biggest influence on me.
Christine Barberich: Definitely my career.
I always wanted to be a writer and an editor,
you know, I never ever doubted that for a second.
I think it's just like who I am.
Jane Rosenthal: I think my daughters
shape me most.
Katie: Well they're lucky.
Renee Robinson: Female leaders.
Those were my examples.
In the dance business, you know,
there are a lot of male choreographers,
a lot of male artistic directors,
but I was surrounded by all these female leaders.
Katie: What would you say was one of the most difficult times for you
and how did you get over it and how did you
believe that led you to where you are now?
Kim Hastreiter: When I tried to do amazing things in these big magazines
they always fell flat because I would come
with an amazing idea and then it would
all go away and then it would come back unrecognizable to me so I was like
the only way to do it I have to do it myself,
so I said "we have to do a magazine."
Jill Abramson: When I was Washington bureau chief for "The Times"
the executive editor of "The Times"
at that point was kind of a
domineering strong personality editor
who I didn't get along with too well.
Jane O'Connor: He would offer Jill other jobs at
"The Times" and I was "yes, yes, take it, do that,
you'll be happy,"
and Jill "No, this is the job I want,
it's the job I deserve,
and I'm gonna just tough it out."
Katie: And how long did this go on?
Jill Abramson: For about 2 years,
it didn't go on and on.
Katie: That's long.
Jeanne Yang: I started working for a department store in their management training program
because I thought that was
the only thing you could really do in clothing.
I hated my job and I got laid off
and I was really upset about it
and my older brother pulled me aside and said
"have you ever thought of actually doing something
that you want to do, that you really like doing,
because things will come easier when
you really like doing what you're doing."
Jane Rosenthal: I will say that as
a working woman I was told that
I could do anything, be anything I wanted
and I actually believed that
and I believed that for so long
and it really wasn't until
the further along I got in my career
where I realized there would be times
I felt that I would be asked to be at
the table or part of a board or something more
because I was a woman
and not because I really had
the authority to be there.
Katie: What advice would you give
a young girl, you know, moving to
a big city right now who maybe
doesn't know what she's good at yet?
Kim Hastreiter: I know that everyone can't
do this, but I always say like
when kids want to go to graduate school,
they want to keep going to school,
I say instead of paying to go to school
just go and work somewhere for
a little or free and just work for
someone that you admire.
Jeanne Yang: When you are in the environment
of a workplace you can gain more knowledge
than sometimes in a classroom.
Jane Rosenthal: I certainly have learned more
by my failures than my successes
and I probably had more failures than successes.
Renee Robinson: If you continue to learn
about life outside of the dance studio,
outside of the dance world
the richer you are as a person
the more interesting you will be as a performer.
Katie: I feel that that is a wonderful
piece of advice for everyone of quite honestly
and one of the reasons that I wanted
to do this film was to inspire
that age group that might be searching
for what it is that they want to do
and I love what you're saying
because I was raised in the same way.
Christene Barberich: There's a lot of energy
a lot of, you know, sometimes nervous energy
and insecurity, you know, when you're young
and you're starting out and I think
that you have all these aspirations
and you have these high hopes about
what you want to do with your life
and sometimes it takes a little bit longer
than you think it's going to take.
Katie: How important are female relationships
to you in your life?
How do women support you?
How do you support them?
Jeanne Yang: I read a quote recently that said
"There's a special place in hell
for women who don't help each other out."
And I really truly believe that.
Renee Robinson: I love sharing information
with young people about how to investigate
what would be good for them
to get to their best
and each person will have to find
the specific details of what they will need
to make their journey its most sparkly
so that's why I say I enjoy sharing
what I have done in hopes that
it leads them to what will be best for them.