1989: The Year That Changed Diane's Life

A huge career move in 1989 brought Diane Sawyer to ABC News.

ByABC News via logo
January 13, 2009, 8:32 AM

Jan. 13, 2008 — -- In 1989 Cher's "If I Could Turn Back Time" ruled the music charts, shoulder pads in women's clothes were on their way out and a legal drama called "L.A. Law" was the No. 1 show on television.

At the same time Diane Sawyer, then a "60 Minutes" correspondent, left the popular CBS News show and headed to ABC News to head up a new show called "Primetime Live."

Roone Arledge hired the veteran journalist, who was the first woman to appear on "60 Minutes," to co-anchor the TV magazine alongside Sam Donaldson.

It was a bold move that would help shape her career.

"Diane and I really enjoyed the opportunity to work together and I was looking forward to it," Donaldson said.

But putting "Primetime" atop the ratings was not a simple or easy task.

"We didn't really know what we were going to do so we were kind of winging it," said former "Primetime Live" executive producer Rick Kaplan.

In the beginning, the show had some mishaps including going live to a tree in Texas.

"Tried to interview the tree. The tree said nothing," Donaldson said.

Then there was the instance when Sawyer's earring fell off as she was anchoring.

"Her earring fell off and kind of bounced on the desk and she didn't drop a stitch. I mean she kept right on," Donaldson said.

The mistakes made the show a target for late-night sketch comedy show "Saturday Night Live," which spoofed "Primetime."

"It's like when you see a really, really, really bad movie. And you think, 'Why did they do this?'" Sawyer said of the show's early difficulties.

But it taught her a lesson: Sometimes when you're at the end of your rope, all you can do is tie a knot and laugh.

"We went to huge lengths to try and keep people's spirits up," said Kaplan, who used to bet on the ratings with Sawyer.

"I bet a personal article of my clothing against Diane's bra," he said.

The show's less than stellar start allowed it to refocus and reboot, offering a second lesson -- stop and steer by the stars that used to guide you.