One of America's most powerful female executives controls a $30 billion media empire - and she still faces surprising harassment in the workplace
- Shari Redstone is one of the most prominent female media executives in America.
- She still faces surprising misogyny and harassment in the workplace, according to a new book by a Wall Street Journal reporter.
- According to an adapted book excerpt and a lawsuit filed by Redstone, a CBS director grabbed Redstone's face and and acted in a bullying manner.
As vice chair of CBS Corporation and Viacom and president of National Amusements, Shari Redstone is one of the most prominent female media executives in America.
But her significance in the industry doesn't guarantee respect, Keach Hagey reported in an adapted excerpt from her book "The King of Content: Sumner Redstone's Battle for Viacom, CBS, and Everlasting Control of His Media Empire."
In her book, Hagey describes the misogyny and harassment Redstone says she has faced over her decades-long career in the media business.
At the Super Bowl in 2017, for example, Redstone claims she had a problematic interaction with CBS Corp director Charles Gifford. Gifford "acted in an intimidating and bullying manner, including on one occasion by grabbing her face and directing her to listen to him," according to a lawsuit Redstone filed. Gifford later apologized and said that he did the same thing to his daughters when he wanted their attention, the complaint said.
Gifford remembers the interaction differently. "I remember greeting her and giving her a quick hug, just like I would my own family. I am very disappointed Shari felt our encounter was any more than this," he said in a statement to the Wall Street Journal.
But the anecdote in Hagey's book, which charts Redstone's career and the falling out she had with her media mogul father Sumner Redstone, isn't the only instance of such alleged behavior.
Comparing Redstone to Katherine Graham, the former publisher of the Washington Post, Hagey says both women were disrespected by men in the industry.
"Once they got into the boardroom, they were often belittled, talked over and snickered at behind closed doors-in Ms. Redstone's case, sometimes by her own father," she wrote.
Redstone is one of the few female executives in an industry dominated by men. Despite the fact that she controls a $30 billion media empire, her success often came at the expense of personal humiliation, according to Hagey.
"When her father brought her around the executive offices one day, Viacom's then-president sarcastically asked Mr. Redstone if it was 'take-your-daughter-to-work day," Hagey wrote.
The profile of Redstone comes as she is locked in a heated dispute over the future of CBS and Viacom. CBS filed a lawsuit in May to dilute her preferred stock so that she can't make changes to the board and push through a CBS-Viacom deal.