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Ms. Megan Smith Goes to Washington

September 21, 2014 By WHC Insider

Mikey Dickerson,Megan Smith, Hilary Rosen, Tammy Haddad, Kara Swisher, Lucky Carney

Mikey Dickerson,Megan Smith, Hilary Rosen, Tammy Haddad, Kara Swisher, Lucky Carney

Vicki Kennedy, Rita Braver, Bob Barnett, Jeremy Bash

Vicki Kennedy, Rita Braver, Bob Barnett, Jeremy Bash

One of Google’s top thinkers, Megan Smith, joined the White House as Chief Technology Officer and Saturday night Washington rolled out the Design Cuisine treats for a proper welcome for Ms. Smith.
Hilary Rosen, Hunter and Kathleen Biden, Kara Swisher, Tammy Haddad and Edie and Walt Mossberg introduced Ms.Smith to some of Washington’s top influentials and media.

See the slide show to the left of this post for more photos.

Filed Under: News Tagged With: Hilary Rosen, Kara Swisher, Megan Smith, Mike Allen, MIkey Dickinson, Tammy Hadda

The Twitterati Search Political Media Women

October 26, 2012 By Tammy Haddad

As seen on The Huffington Post

Masters of search and the Twitterati in this election have obsessed about the real headline makers, Barack Obama‘s Deputy Campaign Manager Stephanie Cutter and Mitt Romney‘s Barbara Comstock.

Cutter’s previously invisible hand has led many initiatives in her roles in the White House, Treasury, the Senate and, of course, campaigns. For those who have shot her to the top of Google’s search by putting her name alongside “husband” or “workout routine,” she is not just another Washington lawyer. She is a fierce, effective and engaging advocate for the President and that is why a lot of people on the other side have gone after her.

And she is not alone. For example, in one of the most politically important swing states, there is Barbara Comstock. The Virginia delegate and Virginia for Romney co-chair began her media career as Chief Counsel with the House Committee on Government Reform and Oversight. She has been successfully working the ground game, grassroots and coalition efforts throughout the Commonwealth — door to door — as well as the leading woman’s voice on TV, radio and media; she’s micro and macro. Known in the nineties as one-half of “The Barbaras,” she and the late great Barbara Olson were the toughest Republican advocates during President Clinton’s second term when everyone wanted to be a prosecutor or was being investigated by one. As the most effective female voice for Romney, I am reminded of her challenging role in the Justice department press office post-9/11.

Shattering the debate glass ceiling were two of the longest-serving Washington correspondents. Candy Crowley and Martha Raddatz hosted two of the most important debates and showed the world just how in command strong women can be. CNN’s Jessica Yellin won the booking war by being the only reporter to host primetime specials featuring separate one-on-one interviews with President Obama and the first lady. They all represent a generation of Washington women who have played critical roles on the political inside and now have a supercharged public face. And none of these women blinked in the face of endless searches and comments about their personal lives and clothing.

Finally, there is the tech world. The prominence of women in media and politics is happening in technology chiefly through two top players, Sheryl Sandberg and Kara Swisher.

Washington Post veteran Swisher built the most important technology event of the year, All Things Digital’s D Conference, into the must-attend event for techie street cred. Swisher’s iconic interviews are best represented by hertough questions and velvet glove treatment with Mark Zuckerberg through a hoodie malfunction.

Zuckerberg turned to another Obama Treasury Department veteran, Sheryl Sandberg, to help him run Facebook and she has made history. This January, at the World Economic Forum in Davos, she mesmerized world leaders just by walking through the main hall.

Notably, she is bringing Silicon Valley and top women from across the country out of the backrooms and into the boardrooms, and on to the public stage.

A group of us were inspired by Sandberg’s efforts and started the Washington Women Technology Network, which includes successful women from politics and government — former Congresswoman Susan Molinari at Google, Marne Levine at Facebook and Mindy Finn from Twitter. Another former congresswoman, Ellen Tauscher, who was most recently Under Secretary of State for Arms Control and International Security in the Obama Administration, is the Vice Chair of the Brent Scowcroft Center at the Atlantic Council of the United States. She is promoting the role of women as political and business leaders in international security, diplomacy, and nuclear weapon non-proliferation.

So you can keep searching, pinning and tweeting but none of these women have been defined by or talk about who they date, what they wear or any food plan.

Filed Under: News, Washington Tagged With: Barbara Comstock, Candy Crowley, Jessica Yellin, Kara Swisher, Martha Raddatz, Media News, Sheryl Sandberg, Social Media, Stephanie Cutter, Twitter, Washington Women Technology Network

Kara Swisher Gets Better Hoodie Than Mark Zuckerberg

August 20, 2012 By WHC Insider

Tech titan Kara Swisher returned to her roots with a “state visit” to Washington and was the guest of honor at a dinner hosted by the Washington Women’s Technology Network last week.

Swisher had the crowd roaring with anecdotes from her early career and spellbound by her comments about technology and media today. She started her journalism career in the mailroom at the Washington Post and as a college stringer to the newspaper after she complained to an editor about bad facts in one of its stories. After time at Columbia Graduate School of Journalism and some other jobs, as well as a Post internship, she began her real career reporting for the business section. She covered local retail, including the travails of the infamous Haft family breakdown. After taking a break in Russia, her then-editor, David Ignatius, asked her to return to DC to cover new online services companies, such as AOL, which was based in the DC suburbs. After writing a book on the history of AOL she made her own history in coverage of technology and the launch of All Things Digital — first a conference and then a Web site.

Kara tickled the news producers in the crowd by talking about her TV career as a staffer for “The McLaughlin Group,” writing fast and furious copy for the panelists including MOR-TON, but never calling McLaughlin, “Dr. McLaughlin,” as he famously insisted. Maura Corbett, the Glen Echo Group, reminded Kara that they traveled the country with Jim Barksdale to talk about the Internet in the late 1990s.

The dinner took place at Café Milano and owner Franco Nuschese joined Tammy Haddad, Betsy Fischer Martin, Connie Milstein, Ellen Tauscher and Holly Page as co-hosts. Kara, not only attended nearby Georgetown University, but she told the group she used to sell Chipwiches on this very chi-chi corner of Georgetown.

Usually asking questions from her bright red D chair, she answered the policy and technology questions from WWTN members Twitter’s Mindy Finn, Google’s Ginny Hunt, Facebook’s Marne Levine, former Chief of Staff for First Lady Laura Bush Anita McBride, POLITICO COO Kim Kingsley, Gibraltar’s Kelley McCormick, ABC News Bureau Chief Robin Sproul,TIME’s Jay Newton-Small, and Sarah Start Fund’s Lindsay Ellenbogen.

Inspired by Facebook COO Sheryl Sandberg’s women’s group in Silicon Valley, WWTN’s membership includes the top women in technology, media and politics. Their mission is to leverage the power and resources of Washington women in the technology and media communities for positive impact here and around the world.

Ambassador David Gross headlined the first WWTN event to discuss the upcoming International Telecommunications Union meeting and the push by Russia and other countries for global Internet regulation. FCC Commissioner Mignon Clyburn and WWTN founding members Hilary Rosen and Susan Molinari attended the luncheon at the Jefferson Hotel.

WWTN presented Kara with a White House hoodie, hat and cup and of course, a presidential motorcade set for her two kids. The hoodie — which the swag specialist, pronounced “good quality” — was a tribute to her famous interview with Mark Zuckerberg at a D conference, where he began sweating profusely until Kara coaxed him out of his hoodie. She brought the house down when she observed the odd symbols on the inside of Zuckerberg’s jacket and proclaimed that she had found the “lluminati.” The rest of the WWTN crowd went home each with a sacred “Meet The Press” coffee mug.

As the crowd gathered for a “class photo” with Swisher, members laughed recalling one reporter’s comment to Swisher from the early Internet days that she was “covering CB Radio.”

Said Swisher then and also now: “The kids seem to love it.”

Filed Under: WWTN Tagged With: All things D, Kara Swisher, Washington Women's Technology Network

Mark Zuckerberg: Getting Under the Hoodie

June 8, 2010 By WHC Insider

It’s tough to get a straight answer these days about Facebook’s troubled privacy policies but Mark Zuckerberg was coerced into unveiling a secret of his own at the Wall Street Journal’s D8: All Things Digital conference – what’s inside his hoodie.

Walt Mossberg and Kara Swisher had Zuckerberg on the hot seat when Swisher skillfully slid in the request. The young CEO was reluctant at first until the warm stage lights and the thick hoodie added up to one sweaty situation. Zuckerberg unzipped, and Swisher joked we were witnessing a “great moment in Internet history.”

So what is printed inside the Facebook hoodie? Their mission motto: Making the world more open and connected. Swisher likened the design to “a secret cult” and wondered if the “weird symbol” in the middle was for the Illuminati. Take a look below and click here for more from the Zuckerberg D8 interview.

Filed Under: News Tagged With: All Things Digital, D8, Facebook, hoodie, Kara Swisher, Mark Zuckerberg, Walt Mossberg

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About White House Correspondents Insider

Exploring “behind the scenes” of the most powerful city in the world — Washington, D.C. — and those who cover it.

We track the White House Correspondents’ weekend and all the activities around it, from journalists and media companies to the White House and politicos.

Tammy Haddad is Co-Founder and Editor-In-Chief of WHC Insider and CEO of Haddad Media.

White House Correspondents Insider is not affiliated with or approved by the White House Correspondents’ Association, which is a registered trademark of the WHCA.

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