The day after graduating college, Williams was named executive producer of news for KSTP. A year later, she held the same role (at WPIX-TV) in New York and then became reporter/ anchor at WNBC-TV.
Accomplishments As one of the primary architects behind the design of the first worldwide television network, Williams oversaw the construction of CNN's New York Bureau at the
World Trade Center prior to the launch of Cable News Network
CNN in 1980. She served as New York Bureau Chief, overseeing the planning and operation of the network's second largest bureau with responsibility for seven hours of original programming per day. She was also one of the channel's principal anchors. In 1982, Williams was appointed Vice president, becoming one of the highest ranking female executives in American television. She was a vital member of CNN's political anchor team, co-hosting
Inside Politics with
Bernard Shaw.
NBC career In 1989, Williams moved to NBC News where she co-hosted
Yesterday, Today & Tomorrow, a series of news magazine specials which were controversial, since they included dramatic reenactments similar to the television show,
Unsolved Mysteries; substitute anchored
NBC Nightly News; and co-hosted
Sunday Today. In 1990, Williams was one of a group of NBC News personnel who won a
News and Documentary Emmy award in the category of Outstanding General Coverage of a Single Breaking News Story (Segments) for "
Romanian Revolution Coverage" on
NBC Nightly News and
Weekend Nightly News. She shared this award with fellow anchors
Tom Brokaw,
Garrick Utley, John Cochran,
Deborah Norville, and
Katie Couric, and correspondents
Dennis Murphy,
George Lewis,
Arthur Kent, and
Tom Aspell. During her tenure with NBC from 1989 to 1993, she also anchored
Sunday Today,
NBC News Special Reports, and NBC's extended coverage of
Desert Storm: War in the Gulf. Williams was a frequent anchor and correspondent for
NBC Nightly News,
NBC News at Sunrise and
Today. In the 1990s, she represented the telecommunications company
NYNEX in a series of commercials.
The Discovery Network Williams has been the host of The Discovery Channel's "Daily Rounds" show and anchored two unprecedented 10-hour live television specials on childbirth for the Discovery Health Channel.
NJPBS She most recently served as the anchor of
NJTV News on New Jersey's public television network,
NJTV, from July 2014 to March 2020 (with her announcement of stepping down as anchor the following month in April 2020). She is also an associate professor of Journalism at
SUNY Purchase. and was previously an adjunct professor at
Seton Hall University.
Ethics reporting For WNET, In the wake of the
September 11th terrorist attacks, she wrote and hosted a 3-hour PBS special Reaching Out to Heal. She also hosted a companion program to Bill Moyers' On Our Own Terms, about death and dying, which aired in Fall 2000 on PBS. As host of Hallmark's weekly True North program on personal ethics, Williams earned the 2001 Gracie Allen Award and the 2001 Donald McGannon Ethics in Media Award. Her 90-minute PBS special on alcoholism and addiction, Within Reach, along with her continuing work as a PBS contributing correspondent and anchor on
Religion & Ethics Newsweekly have established Williams as a significant reporter on broad issues of ethics.
Women's and family reporting One of the highest rated documentaries ever broadcast on Lifetime Television, Picture What Women Do, about women, work and the American family was written and hosted by Williams. That program won the 1995 Exceptional Merit Media Award given by the National Women's Political Caucus. Williams has continued to be a leading voice on the impact of public policy on the American family. In 1995, she appeared in 38 television spots for ABC affiliate stations about women's health issues as part of Women's Health Alliance and Hearst TV. Also for Hearst, she hosted a 40-part Our Show series about issues facing the
baby-boom generation. Williams also hosted States of Faith, an NBC Television special on religion in America.
CBS career She has been a writer for the CBS Evening News with Katie Couric and reporter/anchor at WCBS Radio.
Literary career and children's reporting A published author, Williams adapted her weekly interview program for the Hallmark Channel about strategies for overcoming life's toughest challenges into a book, Quiet Triumphs, published by Harper Collins. As part of the National Cable Television Associations (NCTA) week devoted to programming for and about children, Williams wrote and hosted a television special on children which aired in June 1998.
Programming development Williams has produced and hosted programming for next generation platforms including interactive television and web-based journalism. For INEXTV.com, she developed an interactive show about business and finance in the entrepreneurial spirit and a business series called Amazing Women. For Centerseat.com, she developed a multimedia program in conjunction with Borders Books on reading, writing and literacy.
Pre-CNN career Prior to joining CNN in 1979, Williams was a reporter and anchor at WNBC-TV, the NBC flagship station in New York. As special assignment correspondent, she covered the 1974 and 1978 United States Senate elections and the 1976 Democratic Convention and presidential election. She joined WNBC in 1974. Williams went to WNBC from WPIX in New York where, at age 23, she served as executive producer of news programming. Previously, she was executive producer at KSTP-TV in Minneapolis, Minnesota where she started her career as a reporter at age 18.
Special and guest appearances Mary Alice Williams has made appearances on top-rated national television programs including
Nightline, ''CNN's Crossfire
, The Tonight Show
, The Tom Snyder Show
and Murphy Brown''.
NJTV News She became the anchor of NJTV News starting on July 1, 2014, replacing
Mike Schneider. After about six years in that role, she announced on the April 27, 2020 broadcast of the show that she would be leaving NJTV. When making that announcement, she had been absent since March 13, 2020 to help care for some of her family members who were having health problems. ==Board service==