Ellen Goodman and Lynn Sherr discuss the baby boomer generation and how to find personal fulfillment when children are grown and other responsibilities have waned. They also explore what "me" now means for what once was considered a "me" generation. Ellen Goodman is a Pulitzer Prize-winning columnist for The Boston Globe. Her syndicated column appears in more than 375 newspapers nationwide. She is the author of many books, including Turning Points and Paper Common Sense in Uncommon Times. Lynn Sherr is a correspondent for ABC's 20/20. She collaborated on a biography of Peter Jennings.
Broadcast journalist and writer Lynn Sherr has been swimming since she was a toddler, learning first by watching frogs in a Pennsylvania lake. She has since expanded both her strokes and her waterways. For more than thirty years, she was an award-winning correspondent for ABC News. She is the author of many books, including Tall Blondes: A Book about Giraffes; Outside the Box: A Memoir, and Failure Is Impossible: Susan B. Anthony in Her Own Words. She lives in New York.You can contact her at LynnSwims@gmail.com and follow her on Twitter@LynnSherr and at Facebook.com/SallyRideBio.