Susan Jean O’Brien
Journalist
March 6, 1939 – August 6, 2003
Inducted 2010
Adopted by CU Boulder School of Journalism and Mass Communication
and Sue O'Brien's Family
Sue O’Brien was a role model and
mentor for aspiring woman journalists in many areas: as a radio
anchor, television news director,
and editorial page editor. She moved easily from politics to academia
to daily newspapers. Her weekly Denver Post columns were touchstones
of Colorado politics and life in general.
From her days as an honors student at Grinnell
College, where she edited the student newspaper, O’Brien displayed an intense
work ethic. As a budding activist in the late 1960s, her first
significant radio reporting was for a Denver station from the 1968
Democratic National Convention in Chicago. By the 1970s, O’Brien
was a leader in Denver radio and television news reporting.
O’Brien led women in her profession by example. She was
the first female television news director in Denver. In the 1980s,
O’Brien was the highest-ranking female voice for two governors:
she was Governor Richard Lamm’s press secretary and Governor
Roy Romer’s campaign manager.
At the same time, O’Brien earned a master’s degree
in public administration from the Kennedy School at Harvard University.
She accepted a professorship in the School of Journalism and Mass
Communication at the University of Colorado at Boulder, also serving
as associate dean and directing the master’s program. Most
remarkably, she was one of the first to achieve tenure without
either a Ph.D. or a tenure-track position.
Yet O’Brien left her tenured position to become the first
woman editor of The Denver Post’s editorial page. Popular
also as a televised panelist in “Colorado Inside Out” weekly
public affairs discussions, she continued to teach as an adjunct.
As a baseball fan, O’Brien even served on the Colorado Baseball
Commission, campaigning for a new stadium.
O’Brien was the quintessential woman in a man’s world.
She was known for salty language, a raspy voice, and working late
hours to produce quality journalism, carefully crafted for fairness.
O’Brien’s heroic efforts to conduct her roles as wife,
mother, journalist, mentor, and educator inspired other women trying
to “have it all,” while she also served as the authoritative
voice in Colorado politics.
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