Ponchitta Pierce (born August 5, 1942) is a television host and producer, journalist, speech writer and communications expert. Pierce began her journalism career at Ebony magazine, before becoming the New York editor and eventually the New York Bureau Chief of Johnson Publications, Ebony’s parent company.[1]
Pierce became an assistant editor of Ebony and Jet magazines in 1964. By 1965 she had become associate editor. A 1966 piece she wrote for a special issue of Ebony on the "Negro Woman" is remembered by America's Black Holocaust Museum quoting her line "The Negro woman intellectual is easily one of the most misunderstood, underappreciated and problem-ridden of all God’s creatures".[3]
Her broadcast news debut was in 1967. In 1973,[2] she began as a special correspondent at CBS News and hosted programs for New York's PBS station WNET.[1] Pierce additionally worked at WNBC-TV in New York where she hosted and co-produced the daily television show Today in New York from 1982 to 1987.[2]
In 1979 she made the report of the death of former Vice PresidentNelson Rockefeller, who had suffered a heart attack while at the house of an aide, Megan Marshack. Marshack phoned Pierce, who was her friend, who then phoned an ambulance approximately an hour after the heart attack. During that interval Marshack had attempted to dress him as it is believed he died in her arms.[4]